osulp / Scholars-Archive

ScholarsArchive@OSU, institutional repository for Oregon State University
https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/
15 stars 3 forks source link

Development with Docker

Requirements

The details provided assume that the official Docker daemon is running in the background. Download and install Docker Community Edition from https://www.docker.com/community-edition.

Suggested: If using ohmyzsh (http://ohmyz.sh/), add the docker-compose plugin to the .zshrc for better command-line aliases and integration.

Docker notes

Docker Compose basics

Build the base application container

Important: Rebuilding the docker container is required whenever Gemfile or Dockerfile updates affect the application.

$ docker-compose build server

Start all of the services

Create admin set and collection types, load workflows, create admin role

Create an administrator

$ docker-compose exec server bundle exec rails c

# within the Rails Console;
Role.create(name: 'admin')
User.first.roles << Role.first

Run any command on the server application container

$ docker-compose exec server [COMMAND]

Running commands that alter the local filesystem

When you do anything that changes the filesystem (rake tasks or otherwise), you may want to pass through your user ID so that on your local filesystem you still own the files:

$ docker-compose exec -u `id -u` workers rake -T (id -u will return your user id. Note the use of backticks ` rather than quotes)

Ohmyzsh with the docker-compose plugin makes executing these types of commands easier:

$ dce server bundle exec rails c : Equivalent for docker-compose exec ...

Local development

Use Docker to expose the app to localhost (so you can just visit http://localhost instead of finding the app's IP address assigned by Docker), do this:

$ cp docker-compose.override.example.yml docker-compose.override.yml

Some values in this override will be necessary for certain functionality. Ask a developer for these values.

You can also customize that file to expose ports for things like Solr or Fedora, Redis, etc.

Attaching a debugger to the web application

$ cp docker-compose.override.example.yml docker-compose.override.yml

Uncomment the line that runs the application using rdebug-ide:

#command: bash -c "rm -f tmp/pids/server.pid && bundle exec rdebug-ide --host 0.0.0.0 --port 1234 -- bin/rails server -p 3000 -b 0.0.0.0"

Attach the debugger to the container, the steps to do this are specific to the IDE;

{
  "name": "Listen for rdebug-ide",
  "type": "Ruby",
  "request": "attach",
  "cwd": "${workspaceRoot}",
  "remoteHost": "localhost",
  "remotePort": "1234",
  "remoteWorkspaceRoot": "/data",
  "showDebuggerOutput": true
},

Running specs

Docker and local configurations are structured such that setting RAILS_ENV=test before bringing up the docker services will set SOLR and Fedora connections to use the proper index/repository. There are two database services configured (best practice for MySQL in docker), and the other services are configured to handle both development and test environments properly.

Bring up docker in the test environment

$ docker-compose down
$ docker-compose up test

# after the services have finished booting, in another window

$ docker-compose exec test bundle exec rspec
# ... watch the tests run

Help? Something is broken.

There are no workflows in the system.

This can happen if the rake task fails to load because there are no permission templates in the database to match those in Fedora. At minimum, the Default Admin Set must exist and can be created manually in the Rails console;

Hyrax::PermissionTemplate.create!(source_id: AdminSet::DEFAULT_ID)

Following this fix, run the workflow load rake task:

$ docker-compose exec server bundle exec rails hyrax:workflow:load

The server container logged ERROR: Default admin set exists but it does not have an associated permission template.

This can happen if the database volume was removed but the Fedora volume was not, these two are out of sync. This can be fixed in a couple of ways on the Rails console:

    You could manually create the permission template in the rails console (non-destructive):

      Hyrax::PermissionTemplate.create!(source_id: AdminSet::DEFAULT_ID)

    OR you could start fresh by clearing Fedora and Solr (destructive):

      require 'active_fedora/cleaner'
      ActiveFedora::Cleaner.clean!

    FINALLY you could destroy all volumes and start from scratch (aggressively destructive)

    docker-compose down -v && docker-compose up server

Following this fix, run the workflow load rake task:

$ docker-compose exec server bundle exec rails hyrax:workflow:load

Fedora reports 403 Unauthorized error

This is likely due to the Fedora repo address passed to the Rails app being incorrect. Earlier local standards used local_env.yml which overrode ENV variables passed in. If Fedora is running and the Rails app can't interact with it, check the ENV value that is passed to Rails. From the console, run ENV.fetch('SCHOLARSARCHIVE_FEDORA_URL')