This folder contains a Dart based backend for Cocoon.
- Install the Google Cloud Developer Tools Command Line Interface
(
gcloud
). Then initialize it and authenticate yourself by running:
gcloud auth login
gcloud init
export PATH="$PATH":"path/to/flutter/bin/"
flutter upgrade
flutter pub get
export PATH="$PATH":"path/to/flutter/bin/cache/dart-sdk/bin/"
$ dart test
To update the JSON serialization generated code, run:
$ dart run build_runner build
Any updates should be checked into source control.
To update the Protocol Buffer generated code:
-
Download and install the protocol buffer compiler (
protoc
). Once installed, update yourPATH
to include the path to theprotoc
binary.On Linux, use
sudo apt-get install protocol-compiler
to install. On macOS, usebrew install protobuf
-
Install the
protoc_plugin
Dart package. Once installed, update yourPATH
to include the path to theprotoc_plugin/bin
directory (or$HOME/.pub-cache/bin
if you usedpub global activate protoc_plugin
). -
Run the following command:
$ protoc --dart_out=. lib/src/model/proto/**/*.proto
-
Remove the unused generated files:
$ find . -regex '.*\.\(pbjson\|pbserver\)\.dart' -delete
(you can remove the
*.pbenum.dart
files too, except for protobuffers that actually define enums, likebuild_status_response.proto
)
To update the indexes in the App Engine project, run:
$ gcloud datastore indexes create index.yaml
- Setting up the environment
export COCOON_USE_IN_MEMORY_CACHE=true
This environment is needed as you don't have access to the remote redis instance during local development.
- Starting server
export COCOON_USE_IN_MEMORY_CACHE=true
dart bin/server.dart
If you see Serving requests at 0.0.0.0:8080 the dev server is working.
- Running a local development instance
Once you've installed Docker and have the docker
command-line tool in
your path, then you can use the following commands to build, run, stop,
and kill a local development instance.
# Build the docker image
$ docker build -t local .
# Start the local container, clearing the console buffer and tailing the logs
$ container_id="$(docker run -d -p 8080:8080 local)" && \
clear && \
printf '\e[3J' && \
docker logs $container_id -f
# Stop the local Docker container
$ docker container ls|grep local|tr -s ' '|cut -d' ' -f1|xargs docker container stop
# Remove the local Docker image
$ docker images|grep local|tr -s ' '|cut -d' ' -f3|xargs docker rmi -f
- ssh into instance
$ docker exec -it <container name> /bin/bash
Cocoon auto deployment has been set up via Google Cloud Build daily on Workdays.
- Using the cloud build
This is easy to deploy if you simply want a new version based on the latest commit. Open Cloud Build dashboard and click run in the push-master trigger (example)
- Using a cocoon checkout
Let
PROJECT_ID
be the Google Cloud Project ID andVERSION
be the version you're deploying to App Engine. Visit https://console.cloud.google.com/appengine/versions?project=flutter-dashboard for the list of current versions.
$ dart dev/deploy.dart --version version-$(git rev-parse --short HEAD) --project flutter-dashboard
The deploy script will build the Flutter project and copy it over for deployment. Then it will use the Google Cloud CLI to deploy the project to AppEngine.
For more options run:
$ dart dev/deploy.dart --help