cookiecutter-django/docs/developing-locally-docker.rst
2015-10-03 16:35:48 -07:00

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Getting Up and Running with Docker
==================================
.. index:: Docker
The steps below will get you up and running with a local development environment.
All of these commands assume you are in the root of your generated project.
Prerequisites
--------------
* docker
* docker-machine
* docker-compose
* virtualbox
If you don't already have these installed, you can get them at:
* https://github.com/docker/toolbox/releases
Create the Machine
-------------------
::
$ docker-machine create --driver virtualbox dev1
**Note:** If you want to have more than one docker development environment, then
name them accordingly. Instead of 'dev1' you might have 'dev2', 'myproject',
'djangopackages', et al.
Get the IP Address
--------------------
Acquiring the IP Address is good for two reasons:
1. Confirms that the machine is up and running.
2. Tells us the IP address where our Django project is being served.
::
$ docker-machine ip dev1
123.456.789.012
Saving changes
--------------
If you are using OS X or Windows, you need to create a /data partition inside the
virtual machine that runs the docker deamon in order make all changes persistent.
If you don't do that your /data directory will get wiped out on every reboot.
To create a persistent folder, log into the virtual machine by running:
::
$ docker-machine ssh dev1
$ sudo su
$ echo 'ln -sfn /mnt/sda1/data /data' >> /var/lib/boot2docker/bootlocal.sh
In case you are wondering why you can't use a host volume to keep the files on
your mac: As of `boot2docker` 1.7 you'll run into permission problems with mounted
host volumes if the container creates his own user and chown's the directories
on the volume. Postgres is doing that, so we need this quick fix to ensure that
all development data persists.
Build the Stack
---------------
This can take a while, especially the first time you run this particular command
on your development system.
::
$ docker-compose build
Running bash commands (i.e. management commands)
----------------------------------------------------
This is done using the ``docker-compose run`` command. In the following examples
we specify the ``django`` container as the location to run our management commands.
Example:
$ docker-compose run django python manage.py migrate
$ docker-compose run django python manage.py createsuperuser
Boot the System
---------------
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.
Open a terminal at the project root and run the following for local development::
$ docker-compose -f dev.yml up
You can also set the environment variable ``COMPOSE_FILE`` pointing to ``dev.yml`` like this::
$ export COMPOSE_FILE=dev.yml
And then run::
$ docker-compose up
To migrate your app and to create a superuser, run::
$ docker-compose run django python manage.py migrate
$ docker-compose run django python manage.py createsuperuser
Production Mode
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Instead of using `dev.yml`, you would use `docker-compose.yml`.
Other Useful Tips
------------------
Make a machine the active unit
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This tells our computer that all future commands are specifically for the dev1 machine.
Using the ``eval`` command we can switch machines as needed.
::
$ eval "$(docker-machine env dev1)"
Detached Mode
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
If you want to run the stack in detached mode (in the background), use the ``-d`` argument::
::
$ docker-compose up -d