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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
}
}
Developing Frontend
The frontend is a SPA written in Elm. The UI framework in use is tailwind.
The frontend code is in the sub-project webapp
. Running sbt's
compile
task, compiles elm sources and creates the final CSS file.
Whenever the restserver
module is build by sbt, the webapp
sub-project is built as well and the final files to deliver are
updated. So, when in sbt shell, "watch-compile" the project
restserver
, (via ~ restserver/compile
), re-compiles elm-code on
change. However, it also re-creates the final css, which is a rather
long task.
To speed things up when only developing the frontend, a bash script is
provided in project/dev-ui-build.sh
. Start the restserver
once,
using restserver/reStart
task as described above. Then run this
script in the source root. It will watch elm files and the css file
and re-compiles only on change writing the resulting files in the
correct locations so they get picked up by the restserver.
Now you can edit elm files and the index.css
and then only refresh
the page. Elm compilation is very fast, it's difficult to reach the
refresh button before it is done compiling :). When editing the CSS,
it takes a little longer, but this is hardly necessary, thanks to
tailwind.
There is still a problem: the browser caches the js and css files by
default, so a page refresh is not enough, you need to clear the cache,
too. To avoid this annoyance, set a env variable DOCSPELL_ENV
to the
value dev
. Docspell then adds a response header, preventing the
browser to cache these files. This must be done, obviously, before
starting the restserver:
$ export DOCSPELL_ENV=dev
$ sbt "restserver/reStart"
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"
export QEMU_NET_OPTS "hostfwd=tcp::7880-:7880"
./result/bin/run-docspelltest-vm
Release
The CI and making a release is done via github actions. The workflow is roughly like this:
- each PR is only merged if the
sbt ci
task returns successfully. This is ensured by theci.yml
workflow that triggers on each pull request - each commit to the
master
branch is also going throughsbt ci
and then a prerelease is created. The tagnightly
is used to point to the latest commit inmaster
. Note, that this is discouraged by git, but github doesn't allow to create a release without a tag. So this tag moves (and is not really a tag then…). After the prerelease is created, the docker images are built and pushed to docker hub into the docspell organization. The docker images are also tagged withnightly
at docker hub. This is all done via therealease-nightly.yml
workflow. - A stable release is started by pushing a tag with pattern
v*
to github. This triggers therelease.yml
workflow which builds the packages and creates a release in draft mode. Thesbt ci
task is not run, because it is meant to only release commits already in themaster
branch. After this completes, the release notes need to be added manually and then the release must be published at github. This then triggers thedocker-images.yml
workflow, which builds the corresponding docker images and pushes them to docker hub. The docker images are tagged with the exact version and thelatest
tag is moved to the new images. Another manual step is to set the branchcurrent-docs
to its new state and push it to github. This will trigger a build+publish of the website. - Publishing the website happens automatically on each push to the
branch
current-docs
. Changes to the current website must be based on this branch.
Some notes: I wanted a 2/3 step process when doing a stable release, to be able to add release notes manually (I don't want this to be automated right now) and to do some testing with the packages before publishing the release. However, for the nightly releases, this doesn't matter - everything must be automated here obviously. I also wanted the docker images to be built from the exact same artifacts that have been released at github (in contrast to being built again).
Background Info
There is a list of ADRs containing internal/background info for various topics.