This guide is for developers and newcomers to help them debug and explore Docker.
This page describes how to test and debug your changes once you have set up the project, Product Opener with Docker using dev environment quick start guide.
make log
You will get logs from nginx, mongodb, postgres, etc.
Most logs from perl are not (yet ?) displayed on the docker logs, but are instead available in specific directories.
To see them use:
make tail
It will tail -f
all the files present in the logs/
directory:
apache2/error.log
apache2/log4perl.log
apache2/modperl_error.log
apache2/other_vhosts_access.log
nginx/access.log
nginx/error.log
You can also simply run:
tail -f <FILEPATH>
to check a specific log.
One of the most important is log4perl.log
.
By default, the log4perl
configuration conf/log.conf
matches production
settings. You can tweak that file with your own dev configuration settings and
run make restart
to reload the changes.
A setting useful for local environments is to set TRACE
log level:
log4perl.rootLogger=TRACE, LOGFILE
Run the following to open a bash shell within the backend
container:
docker compose exec backend bash
You should see root@<CONTAINER_ID>:/#
(opened root shell): you are now within the Docker container and can begin typing some commands !
Navigate to the directory the specific directory and run
ls -lrt
It will list all the directories and their permission status.
Navigate to your specific directory using cd
command and run
mkdir directory-name
Minion is a high-performance job queue for Perl. Minion is used in openfoodfacts-server for time-consuming import and export tasks. These tasks are processed and queued using the minion jobs queue. Therefore, they are called minion jobs.
Go to /opt/product-opener/scripts
and run
./minion_producers.pl minion job
The above command will show the status of minion jobs. Run the following command to launch the minion jobs.
./minion_producers.pl minion worker -m production -q pro.openfoodfacts.org
Sometimes restarting the whole backend
container is overkill, and you can just
restart Apache
from inside the container:
apache2ctl -k restart
Use exit
to exit the container.
In the dev environment, any code change to the local directory will be written
on the container. That said, some code changes require a restart of the backend
container, or rebuilding the NPM assets.
make up
is a good command for starters,
but it's not the right one to use if you develop on a daily bases, because it maybe slow,
as it does a full rebuild, which, in dev mode, should only be necessary in a few cases.
On a daily bases you could better run those:
docker compose up
to start and monitor the stack.docker compose restart backend
to account for a code change in a.pm
file (cgipl
files do not need a restart)docker compose stop
to stop them all
If some important file changed (like Dockerfile or cpanfile, etc.), or in case of doubt,
you can run docker compose build
(or maybe it's a good time to use make up
once)
You should explore the docker compose commands most are useful!
To automate the live reload on code changes, you can install the Python package when-changed
:
pip3 install when-changed
when-changed -r docker/ docker-compose.yml .env -c "make restart" # restart backend container on compose changes
when-changed -r lib/ -r docker/ docker-compose.yml -c "docker compose backend restart" # restart Apache on code changes
when-changed -r html/ Dockerfile Dockerfile.frontend package.json -c "make up" # rebuild containers on asset or Dockerfile changes
An alternative to when-changed
is inotifywait
.
docker compose exec mongodb mongo
The above command will open a MongoDB shell, allowing you to use all the mongo
commands to interact with the database:
show dbs
use off
db.products.count()
db.products.find({_id: "5053990155354"})
db.products.deleteOne({_id: "5053990155354"})
See the mongo
shell docs for more commands.
If you need some value to be configurable, it is best to set is as an environment variable.
To add a new environment variable TEST
:
- In
.env
file, addTEST=test_val
[local]. - In
.github/workflows/container-deploy.yml
, addecho "TEST=${{ secrets.TEST }}" >> .env
to the "Set environment variables" build step [remote]. Also add the corresponding GitHub secretTEST=test_val
. - In
docker-compose.yml
file, add it under thebackend
>environment
section. - In
conf/apache.conf
file, addPerlPassEnv TEST
. - In
lib/Config2.pm
, add$test = $ENV{TEST};
. Also add$test
to theEXPORT_OK
list at the top of the file to avoid a compilation error.
The call stack goes like this:
make up
> docker compose
> loads .env
> pass env variables to the backend
container > pass to mod_perl
> initialized in Config2.pm
.
To juggle between multiple local deployments (e.g: to run different flavors of Open Food Facts on the same host), there are different possible strategies.
docker compose takes it settings from, in order of priority:
- the environment
- the
.env
file
So one strategy to have a different instance,
can be to keep same .env
file, but super-seed some env variables to tweak the configuration.
This is a good strategy for the pro plateform.
For this case we have a
setenv-pro.sh
script.
To use it, open a terminal, where you want to be in pro environment and simply use:
. setenv-pro.sh
then you can use whatever docker compose command.
Note: This terminal will remain in pro
mode until you end its session.
See also Developing on the producers platform
This strategy might be the right one if your settings differs a lot.
You will need:
-
Multiple
.env
files (one per deployment), such as:.env.off
: configuration for Open Food Facts dev env..env.off-pro
: configuration for Open Food Facts Producer's Platform dev env..env.obf
: configuration for Open Beauty Facts dev env..env.opff
: configuration for Open Ped Food Facts dev env.
-
COMPOSE_PROJECT_NAME
set to different values in each.env
file, so that container names across deployments are unique. -
FRONTEND_PORT
andMONGODB_PORT
set to different values in each.env
file, so that frontend containers don't port-conflict with each other.
To switch between configurations, set ENV_FILE
before running make
commands,
(or docker compose
command):
ENV_FILE=.env.off-pro make up # starts the OFF Producer's Platform containers.
ENV_FILE=.env.obf make up # starts the OBF containers.
ENV_FILE=.env.opff make up # starts the OPFF containers.
or export it to keep it for a while:
export ENV_FILE=.env.off # going to work on OFF for a while
make up
make restart
make down
make log
A good strategy is to have multiple terminals open, one for each deployment:
-
off
[Terminal 1]:export ENV_FILE=.env.off make up
-
off-pro
[Terminal 2]:export ENV_FILE=.env.off-pro make up
-
obf
[Terminal 3]:export ENV_FILE=.env.obf make up
-
opff
[Terminal 3]:export ENV_FILE=.env.opff make up
Note: the above case of 4 deployments is a bit ambitious, since ProductOpener's backend
container takes about ~6GB of RAM to run, meaning that the above 4 deployments would require a total of 24GB of RAM available.