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Docker and Telescope

Introduction

Telescope uses Docker to deploy all the different parts of our app. If you haven't worked with Docker before, it's worth taking a few minutes to learn how it works.

You'll see Docker used in a few places

Setup

See the environment setup doc for info specific to your platform.

Once installed, Docker uses the following commands:

Running Telescope via Docker

We have a number of docker-compose files that control all the apps that we ship:

  • docker-compose.yml - the development version of our "classic" Telescope app (front-end and back-end)
  • docker-compose-production.yml - the production version of our "classic" Telescope app (front-end and back-end)

We also have files for our new Microservices Back-end:

  • ./src/api/docker-compose-api.yml - the development version
  • ./src/api/docker-compose-api-production.yml - the production version

The docker-compose files define a set of separate servers and services that can be run together with a single command.

# run our development version of the entire Telescope app, building any containers as necessary
docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml up --build

# stop the running containers
docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml down

If you want to run a specific app or apps, you can name them:

# run our development version of the entire Telescope app, building any containers as necessary
docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml up --build login redis telescope

Running the Microservices

See the docs for running the services.