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ConsenSource docker-compose

This application runs using separate Docker containers for the various components. These Docker images may be run together using the docker-compose.yaml file included within the repository.

Setup

Repo structure with Git Submodules

Each of the services required to run ConsenSource lives in it's own repo with it's own Dockerfile. In order to simplify the development process, our docker-compose pattern takes an opinionated approach and assumes that the developer is using Git submodules to create a mono-repo like structure.

To get started with submodules, clone this repo with the following command:

$ git clone --recurse-submodules https://github.com/target/consensource-compose.git

If you already cloned but want submodules, run:

$ git submodule update --init --recursive

Running ConsenSource

With local images

If you would like to run an image that you have built locally, you need to specify the additional docker-compose.<service-name>.yaml file that will build and run images with the :local tag. For example, to run using a local build for the REST API:

$ docker-compose -f docker-compose.yaml -f docker-compose.api.yaml up

To make this simpler you can use docker-helper.sh with either a --build or --run flag followed by the service names. The previous command then becomes

$ ./docker-helper.sh --run api

To rebuild any local image:

$ ./docker-helper.sh --build <service-name>

To run using only locally built images:

$ ./docker-helper.sh --build local

With Docker Hub images

To start the ConsenSource application using the latest images from Docker Hub, run the following command in the project's root directory:

$ ./docker-run.sh --run

By default, the docker-compose.yaml file will run containers for images with the :latest tag. On your first run, these will be pulled down from Docker Hub.

To pull the most recent images from Docker Hub:

$ docker-compose pull --ignore-pull-failures

To run local images that have a :local tag:

$ ./docker-helper.sh --run <service-name>

To run with all local images:

$ ./docker-helper.sh --run local

Running the UI

The UI needs to be ran separately from the compose network. Please refer to the UI ReadMe for instructions.

Working with Git Submodules

Manual Update of a Single Submodule

To update a single submodule to the latest commit in master manually, cd subdirectory and run normal commands such as git fetch, git pull, and git merge origin/master. If you commit this after updating, the submodule will be tied to the newest commit in the remote, and will update for others when they pull.

Less Manual Update

Run git submodule update --remote $submodule_name. This fetches and updates.

Even more fun, run

git submodule foreach git pull

to update all submodules.

Note: The command after foreach can be any arbitrary shell command.

For better logs when diffing, add a config: git config --global diff.submodule log.

Reference | Git Book

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