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mirror of https://github.com/frappe/frappe_docker.git synced 2024-12-23 18:48:58 +00:00
frappe_docker/custom_app
Lev f86b389466
Simplify Dockerfiles and custom app guide (#714)
* Add assets builder image

* Use assets builder in custom_app tutorial

* Use erpnext in custom app tutorial

* Add info about base images (frappe or erpnext)

* Add assets-builder image to frappe group so it is built in CI

* Update backend image:
- Fix mounted caching
- Uncomplicate ERPNext build
- Fix root-frappe permissions

* Add build-assets script for simpler frontend build

* Add install-app script for backend build

* Rename build-assets to install-app for frontend build

* Update custom app builds according to new main dockerfiles

* Cache pip packages in custom app example backend dockerfile

* Update custom app guide

* Fix typo in backend dockerfile

* Add info about install-app scripts in readme
2022-03-23 11:43:47 +03:00
..
backend.Dockerfile Simplify Dockerfiles and custom app guide (#714) 2022-03-23 11:43:47 +03:00
compose.override.yaml Global refactoring (#617) 2022-03-14 11:23:03 +05:30
docker-bake.hcl Simplify Dockerfiles and custom app guide (#714) 2022-03-23 11:43:47 +03:00
frontend.Dockerfile Simplify Dockerfiles and custom app guide (#714) 2022-03-23 11:43:47 +03:00
README.md Simplify Dockerfiles and custom app guide (#714) 2022-03-23 11:43:47 +03:00

This is basic configuration for building images and testing custom apps that use Frappe.

You can see that there's four files in this folder:

  • backend.Dockerfile,
  • frontend.Dockerfile,
  • docker-bake.hcl,
  • compose.override.yaml.

Python code will backend.Dockerfile. JS and CSS (and other fancy frontend stuff) files will be built in frontend.Dockerfile if required and served from there.

docker-bake.hcl is reference file for cool new Buildx Bake. It helps to build images without having to remember all build arguments.

compose.override.yaml is Compose override that replaces images from main compose file so it would use your own images.

To get started, install Docker and Buildx. Then copy all content of this folder (except this README) to your app's root directory. Also copy compose.yaml in the root of this repository.

Before the next step—to build images—replace "custom_app" with your app's name in docker-bake.hcl. After that, let's try to build:

FRAPPE_VERSION=... ERPNEXT_VERSION=... docker buildx bake

💡 We assume that majority of our users use ERPNext, that's why images in this tutorial are based on ERPNext images. If don't want ERPNext, change base image in Dockerfiles and remove ERPNEXT_VERSION from bake file.

If something goes wrong feel free to leave an issue.

To test if site works, setup .env file (check example) and run:

docker-compose -f compose.yaml -f overrides/compose.noproxy.yaml -f overrides/compose.mariadb.yaml -f overrides/compose.redis.yaml -f custom_app/compose.override.yaml up -d
docker-compose exec backend \
  bench new-site 127.0.0.1 \
    --mariadb-root-password 123 \
    --admin-password admin \
    --install-app <Name of your app>
docker-compose restart backend

Cool! You just containerized your app!

Installing multiple apps

Both backend and frontend builds contain install-app script that places app where it should be. Each call to script installs given app. Usage: install-app [APP_NAME] [BRANCH?] [GIT_URL?].