In addition to running Open edX in production, Tutor can be used for local development of Open edX. This means that it is possible to hack on Open edX without setting up a Virtual Machine. Essentially, this replaces the devstack provided by edX.
Note that the local.overhang.io `domain <https://dnschecker.org/#A/local.overhang.io>`__ and its `subdomains <https://dnschecker.org/#CNAME/studio.local.overhang.io>`__ all point to 127.0.0.1. This is just a domain name that was setup to conveniently access a locally running Open edX platform.
Finally, you should build the ``openedx-dev`` docker image::
tutor images build openedx-dev
This ``openedx-dev`` development image differs from the ``openedx`` production image:
- The user that runs inside the container has the same UID as the user on the host, in order to avoid permission problems inside mounted volumes (and in particular in the edx-platform repository).
- Additional python and system requirements are installed for convenient debugging: `ipython <https://ipython.org/>`__, `ipdb <https://pypi.org/project/ipdb/>`__, vim, telnet.
- The edx-platform `development requirements <https://github.com/edx/edx-platform/blob/open-release/koa.master/requirements/edx/development.in>`__ are installed.
To run any command inside one of the containers, run ``tutor dev run [OPTIONS] SERVICE [COMMAND] [ARGS]...``. For instance, to open a bash shell in the LMS or CMS containers::
tutor dev run lms bash
tutor dev run cms bash
To open a python shell in the LMS or CMS, run::
tutor dev run lms ./manage.py lms shell
tutor dev run cms ./manage.py cms shell
You can then import edx-platform and django modules and execute python code.
It may sometimes be convenient to mount container directories on the host, for instance: for editing and debugging. Tutor provides different solutions to this problem.
Bind-mount from the "volumes/" directory
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Tutor makes it easy to create a bind-mount from an existing container. First, copy the contents of a container directory with the ``bindmount`` command. For instance, to copy the virtual environment of the "lms" container::
This command recursively copies the contents of the ``/opendedx/venv`` directory to ``$(tutor config printroot)/volumes/venv``. The code of any Python dependency can then be edited -- for instance, you can then add a ``import ipdb; ipdb.set_trace()`` statement for step-by-step debugging, or implement a custom feature.
Notice how the ``--volume=/openedx/venv`` option differs from `Docker syntax <https://docs.docker.com/storage/volumes/#choose-the--v-or---mount-flag>`__? Tutor recognizes this syntax and automatically converts this option to ``--volume=/path/to/tutor/root/volumes/venv:/openedx/venv``, which is recognized by Docker.
The ``bindmount`` command and the ``--volume=/...`` option syntax are available both for the ``tutor local`` and ``tutor dev`` commands.
Manual bind-mount to any directory
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The above solution may not work for you if you already have an existing directory, outside of the "volumes/" directory, which you would like mounted in one of your containers. For instance, you may want to mount your copy of the `edx-platform <https://github.com/edx/edx-platform/>`__ repository. In such cases, you can simply use the ``-v/--volume```Docker option <https://docs.docker.com/storage/volumes/#choose-the--v-or---mount-flag>`__::
tutor dev run --volume=/path/to/edx-platform:/openedx/edx-platform lms bash
Override docker-compose volumes
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The above solutions require that you explicitly pass the ``-v/--volume`` to every ``run`` or ``runserver`` command, which may be inconvenient. Also, these solutions are not compatible with the ``start`` command. To address these issues, you can create a ``docker-compose.override.yml`` file that will specify custom volumes to be used with all ``dev`` commands::
This override file will be loaded when running any ``tutor dev ..`` command. The edx-platform repo mounted at the specified path will be automatically mounted inside all LMS and CMS containers. With this file, you should no longer specify the ``-v/--volume`` option from the command line with the ``run`` or ``runserver`` commands.
The ``tutor local`` commands loads the ``docker-compose.override.yml`` file from the ``$(tutor config printroot)/env/local/docker-compose.override.yml`` directory.
Point to a local edx-platform
-----------------------------
Following the instructions :ref:`above <bind_mounts>` on how to bind-mount directories from the host above, you may mount your own `edx-platform <https://github.com/edx/edx-platform/>`__ fork in your containers by running either::
# Mount from the volumes/ directory
tutor dev bindmount lms /openedx/edx-platform
tutor dev runserver --volume=/openedx/edx-platform lms
# Mount from an arbitrary directory
tutor dev runserver --volume=/path/to/edx-platform:/openedx/edx-platform lms
# Add your own volumes to $(tutor config printroot)/env/dev/docker-compose.override.yml
First of all, you should make sure that you are working off the ``open-release/koa.3`` tag. See the :ref:`fork edx-platform section <edx_platform_fork>` for more information.
In some cases you will have to develop features for packages that are pip-installed next to edx-platform. This is quite easy with Tutor. Just add your packages to the ``$(tutor config printroot)/env/build/openedx/requirements/private.txt`` file. To avoid re-building the openedx Docker image at every change, you should add your package in editable mode. For instance::
You should then run the development server as usual, with ``runserver``. Every change made to the ``mypackage`` folder will be picked up and the development server will be automatically reloaded.
With Tutor, it's pretty easy to develop your own themes. Start by placing your files inside the ``env/build/openedx/themes`` directory. For instance, you could start from the ``edx.org`` theme present inside the ``edx-platform`` repository::
You should not create a soft link here. If you do, it will trigger a ``Theme not found in any of the themes dirs`` error. This is because soft links are not properly resolved from inside docker containers.
The LMS can then be accessed at http://local.overhang.io:8000. You will then have to :ref:`enable that theme <settheme>` for the development domain names::
Make changes to some of the files inside the theme directory: the theme assets should be automatically recompiled and visible at http://local.overhang.io:8000.
By default, tutor settings files are mounted inside the docker images at ``/openedx/edx-platform/lms/envs/tutor/`` and ``/openedx/edx-platform/cms/envs/tutor/``. In the various ``dev`` commands, the default ``edx-platform`` settings module is set to ``tutor.development`` and you don't have to do anything to set up these settings.
For instance, let's assume you have created the ``/path/to/edx-platform/lms/envs/mysettings.py`` and ``/path/to/edx-platform/cms/envs/mysettings.py`` modules. These settings should be pretty similar to the following files::
It's possible to run the full set of unit tests that ship with `edx-platform <https://github.com/edx/edx-platform/>`__. To do so, you should first build the "test" target of the "openedx-dev" Docker image::
tutor images build --target=test openedx-dev
..warning::
Don't forget to re-build the development image afterwards if you'd like to run ``dev`` commands again! To do so, run ``tutor images build openedx-dev`` after you are done testing.
Then, run unit tests with ``pytest`` commands::
# Run a test container
tutor dev run lms bash
# Run tests on common apps
unset DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE
export EDXAPP_TEST_MONGO_HOST=mongodb
pytest common
pytest openedx
# Run tests on LMS
export DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE=lms.envs.tutor.test
pytest lms
# Run tests on CMS
export DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE=cms.envs.tutor.test
pytest cms
..note::
Getting all edx-platform unit tests to pass on Tutor is currently a work-in-progress. Some unit tests are still failing. If you manage to fix some of these, please report your findings in the `Tutor forums <https://discuss.overhang.io>`__.