Add this Docker container to your orchestration and enjoy near-instantaneous package dependency resolutions, courtesy of mixu's lazy npm cache (repository mixu/npm_lazy).
In order to utilize the container's service, you'll have to configure the
server's settings and also direct your local npm
clients to use it as it's
source for registry data.
There are two ways you can use the containerized npm_lazy
server:
- by mapping the server's port locally, exposing it within your host environment
- by linking it to other containers
The server defaults are configured to play nicely with local setups, i.e. when
you want the npm
client from your host to retrieve the packages through the
cache from the running container.
The only important thing you need to do is to map the default exposed port from the container to the same port on your host:
# Start a detached container, mapping the exposed port locally
sudo docker run -d -p 8080:8080 langrisha/npm-lazy
You can verify that the service is then accessible from your host via:
$ curl http://localhost:8080
{"db_name":"registry"}
If you would like containers residing on your host to use the npm_lazy
server,
give your container a hostname and add your configuration module to the
container.
Then, configure the npm
clients on all the linked containers and configure
their registries to point to the npm_lazy
host.
Here's a high-level overview using fig.sh
:
web:
image: google/nodejs
environment:
- npm_config_registry=http://npmlazy
links:
- npmlazy
npmlazy:
image: langrisha/npm-lazy
command: --show-config --port=80 --external-url=http://npmlazy
The npm_lazy/server
is wrapped with a thin client that allows you to
dynamically configure the server from the command-line options on startup.
You can configure the server by passing arguments when starting the container.
$ node index.js --help
Usage: index [options]
Starts a dynamically configured npm_lazy server instance
Options:
-h, --help output usage information
-V, --version output the version number
--show-config display the effective server configuration on startup
--logging-opts_log-to-console [value]
--logging-opts_log-to-file [value]
--logging-opts_filename [value]
--cache-directory [value]
--cache-age [value]
--http-timeout [value]
--max-retries [value]
--reject-unauthorized [value]
--external-url [value]
--remote-url [value]
--port [value]
--host [value]
--proxy_https [value]
--proxy_http [value]
There are several ways you can configure the npm
client, outlined from
official sources.
A few great examples involve configuring the environment:
docker run -e npm_config_registry=http://localhost:8080 nodejsapp
or providing a project-specific npmrc
file:
# myproj/.npmrc
registry = http://localhost:8080/
You'll have to pay attention to the configured server's port and external URL. The server's provided defaults configure the server to listen on 0.0.0.0:8080 and to be accessible from the URL http://localhost:8080.
Make sure the networking requirements for the server are satisfied correctly and that the server running within your container matches the details of how it is accessed externally.
You can pass the --show-config
container command to display the server's
runtime configuration.