tcarrio / maverick

Orchestrated containerized development for monorepositories
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Maverick

Usage

Usage: maverick [action]

Command your arsenal of Docker containers for ultimate development

Options:
  -V, --version                         output the version number
  -b, --build                           build all or certain services in the docker-compose.yml
  -d, --down                            take down all or certain services in the docker-compose.yml
  -u, --up                              launch a certain or all of the database, redis, and services
  -r, --restart                         restart service name(s)
  -R, --reload                          reload services with updates to env_file and docker-compose.yml
  -s, --setup                           runs the setup script provided by the project (default: false)
  -l, --list [filter]                   list services currently defined for local development
  -p, --ps                              List existing containers
  -n, --ngrok [subdomain] [auth_token]  Persist your subdomain and auth token to the Maverick config
  -g, --generate                        Generate a new Docker Compose using the maverick.yml config
  -i, --init                            Initialize a Maverick configuration in the current directory
  -h, --help                            output usage information

Description

This project offers a configurable and dynamic solution for a local development environment driven by containerized technologies. This version institutes an optional maverick.yml configuration that goes in the root directory of the project. The maverick.yml offers functionality into the dynamically generated docker-compose.yml buffer that is used for the internal docker.compose commands. It segments Docker Compose services into the following categories:

Images

Images exist only as a means of generating a required Docker image that can be referenced later.

Infrastructure

Infrastructure automatically connects to the global generated network, and should be used for definitions that orient around databases, message buses, etc. There are also certain infrastructure services that are supported out of the box. To use the default configuration for a builtin infrastructure, simply specific the key with a null, e.g. mysql:. Any provided configurations will be joined with the defaults, so to set up a database with a specific root password, you only need to specify the environment variable for the password under the mysql.environment: entry.

Batch

Some operations only need to be done once. The batch category is a good location for putting in one-off operations such as database updates, migrations, and more.

Packages / Services

Packages are Docker Compose services that serve only to watch for source code changes to transpile. On the other hand, services incorporate the transpiled source of dependencies. Only direct dependencies are mounted to a service, providing a central location for packages to watch for changes and update when a direct dependency is impacted by a source code change.

Most importantly, the best way to get started with your project is to include the supported commands for automatic detection of packages/services by Maverick. Just add an npm script to get started. With packages, add maverick:watch. For services, add maverick:start. These will be detected when processing your monorepository for packages and automatically fulfilled as packages and services to be included in the Docker Compose.

Features

Initialize your project with maverick -i. This will generate the default Maverick configuration.

Launch the fleet of containers with maverick -u. This can also receive individual service names.

Restart a service or the entire fleet with maverick -r. For changes to environment variables, use the reload (-R) option. Since the environment variables are bound at the creation of the container, only destroying the existing container and creating a new one will provide the updated environment variables.

Tear everything down with maverick -d. Applies to individual services as well.

Build any or all image again with maverick -b. Because the image themselves contain the dependencies, Maverick performs some deterministic magic using the dependencies specified in the package.json and image tags. Thus, a rebuild will happen automatically whenever you are reloading services. An easy way to make sure you have the latest dependencies is to reload your services.

Future Goals