Setting Up AWS, Mechanical Turk, and Heroku

Before you can use Dallinger, you will need accounts with Amazon Web Services, Amazon Mechanical Turk, and Heroku. You will then need to create a configuration file and set up your environment so that Dallinger can access your accounts.

Create the configuration file

The first step is to create the Dallinger configuration file in your home directory. You can do this using the Dallinger command-line utility through

dallinger setup

which will prepopulate a hidden file .dallingerconfig in your home directory. Alternatively, you can create this file yourself and fill it in like so:

[AWS Access]
aws_access_key_id = ???
aws_secret_access_key = ???
aws_region = us-east-1

In the next steps, we’ll fill in your config file with keys.

Note: The .dallingerconfig can be configured with many different parameters, see Configuration for detailed explanation of each configuration option.

Amazon Web Services API Keys

There are two ways to get API keys for Amazon Web Services. If you are the only user in your AWS account, the simplest thing to do is generate root user access keys, by following these instructions. You might be presented a dialog box with options to continue to security credentials, or get started with IAM users. If you are the only user, or you are otherwise certain that this is what you want to do (see the following note), choose “Continue to Security Credentials”.

N.B. One feature of AWS API keys is that they are only displayed once, and though they can be regenerated, doing so will render invalid previously generated keys. If you are running experiments using a laboratory account (or any other kind of group-owned account), regenerating keys will stop other users who have previously generated keys from being able to use the AWS account. Unless you are sure that you will not be interrupting others’ workflows, it is advised that you do not generate new API keys. If you are not the primary user of the account, see if you can obtain these keys from others who have successfully used AWS.

If you are not the primary user of your AWS account, or are part of a working group that shares the account, the recommended way to create the access keys is by creating AIM users and generating keys for them. If someone else manages the AWS account, ask them to generate the user and keys for you. If you need to manage the users and keys by yourself, follow these instructions.

After you have generated and saved your AWS access keys, fill in the following lines of .dallingerconfig, replacing ??? with your keys:

[AWS Access]
aws_access_key_id = ???
aws_secret_access_key = ???

Amazon Mechanical Turk

It’s worth signing up for Amazon Mechanical Turk (perhaps using your AWS account from above), both as a requester and as a worker. You’ll use this to test and monitor experiments. You should also sign in to each sandbox, requester and worker using the same account. Store this account and password somewhere, but you don’t need to tell it to Dallinger.

Heroku

Next, sign up for a Heroku account.

You should see an interface that looks something like the following:

This is the interface with the Heroku app

This is the interface with the Heroku app

Then, log in from the command line:

heroku login

Open Science Framework (optional)

There is an optional integration that uses the Open Science Framework (OSF) to register experiments. First, create an account on the OSF. Next create a new OSF personal access token on the OSF settings page. Since experiment registration requires writing to the OSF account, be sure to grant the full write scope when creating the token, by checking the osf.full_write box before creation.

Finally, fill in the appropriate section of .dallingerconfig:

[OSF]
osf_access_token = ???

Done?

Done. You’re now all set up with the tools you need to work with Dallinger.

Next, we’ll test Dallinger to make sure it’s working on your system.