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layout | title | permalink |
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docs | Development | dev |
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Building
Sbt is used to build the application. Clone the sources and run:
make
to compile all sources (Elm + Scala)make-zip
to create zip packagesmake-deb
to create debian packagesmake-tools
to create a zip containing the script intools/
make-pkg
for a clean compile + building all packages (zip + deb)
The zip files can be found afterwards in:
modules/restserver/target/universal
modules/joex/target/universal
Starting Servers with reStart
When developing, it's very convenient to use the revolver sbt plugin. Start the sbt console and then run:
sbt:docspell-root> restserver/reStart
This starts a REST server. Once this started up, type:
sbt:docspell-root> joex/reStart
if also a joex component is required. Prefixing the commads with ~
,
results in recompile+restart once a source file is modified.
It is possible to start both in the root project:
sbt:docspell-root> reStart
Custom config file
The sbt build is setup such that a file dev.conf
in the directory
local
(at root of the source tree) is picked up as config file, if
it exists. So you can create a custom config file for development. For
example, a custom database for development may be setup this way:
#jdbcurl = "jdbc:h2:///home/dev/workspace/projects/docspell/local/docspell-demo.db;MODE=PostgreSQL;DATABASE_TO_LOWER=TRUE;AUTO_SERVER=TRUE"
jdbcurl = "jdbc:postgresql://localhost:5432/docspelldev"
#jdbcurl = "jdbc:mariadb://localhost:3306/docspelldev"
docspell.server {
backend {
jdbc {
url = ${jdbcurl}
user = "dev"
password = "dev"
}
}
}
docspell.joex {
jdbc {
url = ${jdbcurl}
user = "dev"
password = "dev"
}
scheduler {
pool-size = 1
}
}
Nix Expressions
The directory /nix
contains nix expressions to install docspell via
the nix package manager and to integrate it into NixOS.
Testing NixOS Modules
The modules can be build by building the configuration-test.nix
file
together with some nixpkgs version. For example:
nixos-rebuild build-vm -I nixos-config=./configuration-test.nix \
-I nixpkgs=https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs-channels/archive/nixos-19.09.tar.gz
This will build all modules imported in configuration-test.nix
and
create a virtual machine containing the system. After that completes,
the system configuration can be found behind the ./result/system
symlink. So it is possible to look at the generated systemd config for
example:
cat result/system/etc/systemd/system/docspell-joex.service
And with some more commands (there probably is an easier way…) the config file can be checked:
cat result/system/etc/systemd/system/docspell-joex.service | grep ExecStart | cut -d'=' -f2 | xargs cat | tail -n1 | awk '{print $NF}'| sed 's/.$//' | xargs cat | jq
To see the module in action, the vm can be started (the first line sets more memory for the vm):
export QEMU_OPTS="-m 2048"
./result/bin/run-docspelltest-vm