10 KiB
Getting Started
Prerequisites
In order to start developing you need to satisfy the following prerequisites:
- Docker
- docker-compose
- user added to docker group
It is recommended you allocate at least 4GB of RAM to docker:
Bootstrap Containers for development
Clone and change directory to frappe_docker directory
git clone https://github.com/frappe/frappe_docker.git
cd frappe_docker
Copy example devcontainer config from devcontainer-example
to .devcontainer
cp -R devcontainer-example .devcontainer
Copy example vscode config for devcontainer from development/vscode-example
to development/.vscode
. This will setup basic configuration for debugging.
cp -R development/vscode-example development/.vscode
Use VSCode Remote Containers extension
For most people getting started with Frappe development, the best solution is to use VSCode Remote - Containers extension.
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.
VSCode should automatically inquire you to install the required extensions, that can also be installed manually as follows:
- Install Remote - Containers for VSCode
- through command line
code --install-extension ms-vscode-remote.remote-containers
- clicking on the Install button in the Vistual Studio Marketplace: Remote - Containers
- View: Extensions command in VSCode (Windows: Ctrl+Shift+X; macOS: Cmd+Shift+X) then search for extension
ms-vscode-remote.remote-containers
- through command line
After the extensions are installed, you can:
- Open frappe_docker folder in VS Code.
code .
- Launch the command, from Command Palette (Ctrl + Shift + P)
Remote-Containers: Reopen in Container
. You can also click in the bottom left corner to access the remote container menu.
Notes:
- 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. - Node v14 and v10 are installed. Check with
nvm ls
. Node v14 is used by default.
Setup first bench
Run the following commands in the terminal inside the container. You might need to create a new terminal in VSCode.
bench init --skip-redis-config-generation --frappe-branch version-13 frappe-bench
cd frappe-bench
Note: For version 12 use Python 3.7 by passing option to bench init
command, e.g. bench init --skip-redis-config-generation --frappe-branch version-12 --python python3.7 frappe-bench
Setup hosts
We need to tell bench to use the right containers instead of localhost. Run the following commands inside the container:
bench set-mariadb-host mariadb
bench set-redis-cache-host redis-cache:6379
bench set-redis-queue-host redis-queue:6379
bench set-redis-socketio-host redis-socketio:6379
Edit Honcho's Procfile
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.
Open the Procfile file and remove the three lines containing the configuration from Redis, either by editing manually the file:
code Procfile
Or running the following command:
sed -i '/redis/d' ./Procfile
Create a new site with bench
You can create a new site with the following command:
bench new-site sitename --no-mariadb-socket
sitename MUST end with .localhost for trying deployments locally.
for example:
bench new-site mysite.localhost --no-mariadb-socket
The same command can be run non-interactively as well:
bench new-site mysite.localhost --mariadb-root-password 123 --admin-password admin --no-mariadb-socket
The command will ask the MariaDB root password. The default root password is 123
.
This will create a new site and a mysite.localhost
directory under frappe-bench/sites
.
The option --no-mariadb-socket
will configure site's database credentials to work with docker.
You may need to configure your system /etc/hosts if you're on Linux, Mac, or its Windows equivalent.
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).
Example:
bench new-site mypgsql.localhost --db-type postgres --db-host postgresql
To avoid entering postgresql username and root password, set it in common_site_config.json
,
bench config set-common-config -c root_login postgres
bench config set-common-config -c root_password '"123"'
Note: If PostgreSQL is not required, the postgresql service / container can be stopped.
Set bench developer mode on the new site
To develop a new app, the last step will be setting the site into developer mode. Documentation is available at this link.
bench --site mysite.localhost set-config developer_mode 1
bench --site mysite.localhost clear-cache
Install an app
To install an app we need to fetch it from the appropriate git repo, then install in on the appropriate site:
You can check VSCode container remote extension documentation regarding git credential sharing.
To install custom app
# --branch is optional, use it to point to branch on custom app repository
bench get --branch version-12 https://github.com/myusername/myapp
bench --site mysite.localhost install-app myapp
To install ERPNext (from the version-12 branch):
bench get --branch version-12 erpnext
bench --site mysite.localhost install-app erpnext
Note: Both frappe and erpnext must be on branch with same name. e.g. version-12
Start Frappe without debugging
Execute following command from the frappe-bench
directory.
bench start
You can now login with user Administrator
and the password you choose when creating the site.
Your website will now be accessible at location mysite.localhost:8000
Note: To start bench with debugger refer section for debugging.
Start Frappe with Visual Studio Code Python Debugging
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 the extension icon inside VSCode
- Search
ms-python.python
- 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:
honcho start \
socketio \
watch \
schedule \
worker_short \
worker_long \
worker_default
Alternatively you can use the VSCode launch configuration "Honcho SocketIO Watch Schedule Worker" which launches the same command as above.
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
.
To debug workers, skip starting worker with honcho and start it with VSCode debugger.
For advance vscode configuration in the devcontainer, change the config files in development/.vscode
.
Developing using the interactive console
You can launch a simple interactive shell console in the terminal with:
bench --site mysite.localhost console
More likely, you may want to launch VSCode interactive console based on Jupyter kernel.
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. For this reason we need to run the following command.
/workspace/development/frappe-bench/env/bin/python -m pip install --upgrade jupyter ipykernel ipython
Then, run the command Python: Show Python interactive window
from the VSCode command palette.
Replace mysite.localhost
with your site and run the following code in a Jupyter cell:
import frappe
frappe.init(site='mysite.localhost', sites_path='/workspace/development/frappe-bench/sites')
frappe.connect()
frappe.local.lang = frappe.db.get_default('lang')
frappe.db.connect()
The first command can take a few seconds to be executed, this is to be expected.
Manually start containers
In case you don't use VSCode, you may start the containers manually with the following command:
Running the containers
docker-compose -f .devcontainer/docker-compose.yml up -d
And enter the interactive shell for the development container with the following command:
docker exec -e "TERM=xterm-256color" -w /workspace/development -it devcontainer_frappe_1 bash