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188 lines
6.6 KiB
ReStructuredText
188 lines
6.6 KiB
ReStructuredText
Getting Up and Running Locally With Docker
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==========================================
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.. index:: Docker
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The steps below will get you up and running with a local development environment.
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All of these commands assume you are in the root of your generated project.
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Prerequisites
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-------------
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* Docker; if you don't have it yet, follow the `installation instructions`_;
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* Docker Compose; refer to the official documentation for the `installation guide`_.
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.. _`installation instructions`: https://docs.docker.com/install/#supported-platforms
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.. _`installation guide`: https://docs.docker.com/compose/install/
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Build the Stack
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---------------
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This can take a while, especially the first time you run this particular command on your development system::
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$ docker-compose -f local.yml build
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Generally, if you want to emulate production environment use ``production.yml`` instead. And this is true for any other actions you might need to perform: whenever a switch is required, just do it!
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Run the Stack
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-------------
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This brings up both Django and PostgreSQL. The first time it is run it might take a while to get started, but subsequent runs will occur quickly.
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Open a terminal at the project root and run the following for local development::
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$ docker-compose -f local.yml up
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You can also set the environment variable ``COMPOSE_FILE`` pointing to ``local.yml`` like this::
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$ export COMPOSE_FILE=local.yml
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And then run::
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$ docker-compose up
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To run in a detached (background) mode, just::
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$ docker-compose up -d
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Execute Management Commands
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---------------------------
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As with any shell command that we wish to run in our container, this is done using the ``docker-compose -f local.yml run --rm`` command: ::
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$ docker-compose -f local.yml run --rm django python manage.py migrate
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$ docker-compose -f local.yml run --rm django python manage.py createsuperuser
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Here, ``django`` is the target service we are executing the commands against.
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(Optionally) Designate your Docker Development Server IP
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--------------------------------------------------------
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When ``DEBUG`` is set to ``True``, the host is validated against ``['localhost', '127.0.0.1', '[::1]']``. This is adequate when running a ``virtualenv``. For Docker, in the ``config.settings.local``, add your host development server IP to ``INTERNAL_IPS`` or ``ALLOWED_HOSTS`` if the variable exists.
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.. _envs:
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Configuring the Environment
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---------------------------
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This is the excerpt from your project's ``local.yml``: ::
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# ...
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postgres:
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build:
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context: .
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dockerfile: ./compose/production/postgres/Dockerfile
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volumes:
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- local_postgres_data:/var/lib/postgresql/data
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- local_postgres_data_backups:/backups
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env_file:
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- ./.envs/.local/.postgres
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# ...
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The most important thing for us here now is ``env_file`` section enlisting ``./.envs/.local/.postgres``. Generally, the stack's behavior is governed by a number of environment variables (`env(s)`, for short) residing in ``envs/``, for instance, this is what we generate for you: ::
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.envs
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├── .local
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│ ├── .django
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│ └── .postgres
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└── .production
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├── .django
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└── .postgres
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By convention, for any service ``sI`` in environment ``e`` (you know ``someenv`` is an environment when there is a ``someenv.yml`` file in the project root), given ``sI`` requires configuration, a ``.envs/.e/.sI`` `service configuration` file exists.
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Consider the aforementioned ``.envs/.local/.postgres``: ::
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# PostgreSQL
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# ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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POSTGRES_HOST=postgres
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POSTGRES_DB=<your project slug>
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POSTGRES_USER=XgOWtQtJecsAbaIyslwGvFvPawftNaqO
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POSTGRES_PASSWORD=jSljDz4whHuwO3aJIgVBrqEml5Ycbghorep4uVJ4xjDYQu0LfuTZdctj7y0YcCLu
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The three envs we are presented with here are ``POSTGRES_DB``, ``POSTGRES_USER``, and ``POSTGRES_PASSWORD`` (by the way, their values have also been generated for you). You might have figured out already where these definitions will end up; it's all the same with ``django`` service container envs.
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One final touch: should you ever need to merge ``.envs/production/*`` in a single ``.env`` run the ``merge_production_dotenvs_in_dotenv.py``: ::
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$ python merge_production_dotenvs_in_dotenv.py
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The ``.env`` file will then be created, with all your production envs residing beside each other.
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Tips & Tricks
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-------------
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Activate a Docker Machine
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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This tells our computer that all future commands are specifically for the dev1 machine. Using the ``eval`` command we can switch machines as needed.::
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$ eval "$(docker-machine env dev1)"
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Debugging
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~~~~~~~~~
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ipdb
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"""""
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If you are using the following within your code to debug: ::
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import ipdb; ipdb.set_trace()
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Then you may need to run the following for it to work as desired: ::
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$ docker-compose -f local.yml run --rm --service-ports django
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django-debug-toolbar
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""""""""""""""""""""
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In order for ``django-debug-toolbar`` to work designate your Docker Machine IP with ``INTERNAL_IPS`` in ``local.py``.
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Mailhog
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~~~~~~~
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When developing locally you can go with MailHog_ for email testing provided ``use_mailhog`` was set to ``y`` on setup. To proceed,
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#. make sure ``mailhog`` container is up and running;
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#. open up ``http://127.0.0.1:8025``.
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.. _Mailhog: https://github.com/mailhog/MailHog/
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.. _`CeleryTasks`:
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Celery tasks in local development
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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When not using docker Celery tasks are set to run in Eager mode, so that a full stack is not needed. When using docker the task
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scheduler will be used by default.
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If you need tasks to be executed on the main thread during development set CELERY_TASK_ALWAYS_EAGER = True in config/settings/local.py.
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Possible uses could be for testing, or ease of profiling with DJDT.
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.. _`CeleryFlower`:
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Celery Flower
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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`Flower`_ is a "real-time monitor and web admin for Celery distributed task queue".
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Prerequisites:
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* ``use_docker`` was set to ``y`` on project initialization;
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* ``use_celery`` was set to ``y`` on project initialization.
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By default, it's enabled both in local and production environments (``local.yml`` and ``production.yml`` Docker Compose configs, respectively) through a ``flower`` service. For added security, ``flower`` requires its clients to provide authentication credentials specified as the corresponding environments' ``.envs/.local/.django`` and ``.envs/.production/.django`` ``CELERY_FLOWER_USER`` and ``CELERY_FLOWER_PASSWORD`` environment variables. Check out ``localhost:5555`` and see for yourself.
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.. _`Flower`: https://github.com/mher/flower
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