For most people getting started with Frappe development, the best solution is to use [VSCode Remote - Containers extension](https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=ms-vscode-remote.remote-containers).
Before opening the folder in container, determine the database that you want to use. The default is MariaDB.
If you want to use PostgreSQL instead, edit `.devcontainer/docker-compose.yml` and uncomment the section for `postgresql` service, and you may also want to comment `mariadb` as well.
- clicking on the Install button in the Vistual Studio Marketplace: [Remote - Containers](https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=ms-vscode-remote.remote-containers)
- View: Extensions command in VSCode (Windows: Ctrl+Shift+X; macOS: Cmd+Shift+X) then search for extension `ms-vscode-remote.remote-containers`
- Launch the command, from Command Palette (Ctrl + Shift + P) `Execute Remote Containers : Reopen in Container`. You can also click in the bottom left corner to access the remote container menu.
- The `development` directory is ignored by git. It is mounted and available inside the container. Create all your benches (installations of bench, the tool that manages frappe) inside this directory.
Note : With the option '--skip-redis-config-generation' during bench init, these actions are no more needed. But at least, take a look to ProcFile to see what going on when bench launch honcho on start command
Honcho is the tool used by Bench to manage all the processes Frappe requires. Usually, these all run in localhost, but in this case, we have external containers for Redis. For this reason, we have to stop Honcho from trying to start Redis processes.
To setup site with PostgreSQL as database use option `--db-type postgres` and `--db-host postgresql`. (Available only v12 onwards, currently NOT available for ERPNext).
To develop a new app, the last step will be setting the site into developer mode. Documentation is available at [this link](https://frappe.io/docs/user/en/guides/app-development/how-enable-developer-mode-in-frappe).
To enable Python debugging inside Visual Studio Code, you must first install the `ms-python.python` extension inside the container. This should have already happened automatically, but depending on your VSCode config, you can force it by:
- Click on `Install on Dev Container: Frappe Bench`
- Click on 'Reload'
We need to start bench separately through the VSCode debugger. For this reason, **instead** of running `bench start` you should run the following command inside the frappe-bench directory:
This command starts all processes with the exception of Redis (which is already running in separate container) and the `web` process. The latter can can finally be started from the debugger tab of VSCode by clicking on the "play" button.
You can now login with user `Administrator` and the password you choose when creating the site, if you followed this guide's unattended install that password is going to be `admin`.
Launch VSCode command palette (cmd+shift+p or ctrl+shift+p), run the command `Python: Select interpreter to start Jupyter server` and select `/workspace/development/frappe-bench/env/bin/python`.
The first step is installing and updating the required software. Usually the frappe framework may require an older version of Jupyter, while VSCode likes to move fast, this can [cause issues](https://github.com/jupyter/jupyter_console/issues/158). For this reason we need to run the following command.
For any reason after rebuilding the container if you are not be able to access MariaDB correctly with the previous configuration. Follow these instructions.