A script to painlessly set up a Docker environment for development of Wagtail - inspired by vagrant-wagtail-develop
Initial work in Bristol sprint January 2020 by esperk and saevarom.
Requirements: Docker and Docker Compose (Docker Compose is included with Docker Desktop for Mac and Windows).
Open a terminal and follow those instructions:
# 1. Decide where to put the project. We use "~/Development" in our examples.
cd ~/Development
# 2. Clone the docker-wagtail-develop repository in a new "wagtail-dev" folder.
git clone https://github.com/wagtail/docker-wagtail-develop.git wagtail-dev
# 3. Move inside the new folder.
cd wagtail-dev/
# 4. Run the setup script. This will check out the bakerydemo project and local copies of wagtail and its dependencies.
./setup.sh
# 5. Build the containers
docker-compose buildIt can take a while (typically 15-20 minutes) to fetch and build all dependencies and containers.
Here is the resulting folder structure:
.
├── libs # Supporting libraries to develop Wagtail against.
├── wagtail # Wagtail repository / codebase.
└── bakerydemo # Wagtail Bakery project used for development.Once the build is complete:
# 6. Start your containers and wait for them to finish their startup scripts.
docker-compose upYou might see a message like this the first time you run your containers. This is normal because the frontend container has not finished building the assets for the Wagtail admin. Just wait a few seconds for the frontend container to finish building (you should see a message like webpack compiled successfully in 15557 ms and then stop and start your containers again (Ctrl+C + docker-compose up).
WARNINGS:
?: (wagtailadmin.W001) CSS for the Wagtail admin is missing
HINT:
Most likely you are running a development (non-packaged) copy of
Wagtail and have not built the static assets -
see https://docs.wagtail.org/en/latest/contributing/developing.html
File not found: /code/wagtail/wagtail/admin/static/wagtailadmin/css/normalize.css```
# 7. Now in a new shell, run the database setup script. The database will be persisted across container executions by Docker's Volumes system so you will only need to run this command the first time you start the database.
./setup-db.sh
# Success!If you're running this on Linux you might get into some privilege issues that can be solved using this command (tested on Ubuntu):
CURRENT_UID=$(id -u):$(id -g) docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml -f docker-compose.linux.yml upAlternatively, if you're using VSCode and have the "Remote - Containers" extension, you can open the command palette and select "Remote Containers - Reopen in Container" to attach VSCode to the container. This allows for much deeper debugging.
- Visit your site at http://localhost:8000
- The admin interface is at http://localhost:8000/admin/ - log in with
admin/changeme.
$ docker-compose ps
Name Command State Ports
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
db docker-entrypoint.sh postgres Up 5432/tcp
frontend docker-entrypoint.sh /bin/ ... Up
web ./manage.py runserver 0.0. ... Up 0.0.0.0:8000->8000/tcpmake buildor
docker-compose build webmake startor
docker-compose upmake stopor
docker-compose stopmake downor
docker-compose downmake testor
docker-compose exec -w /code/wagtail web python runtests.pymake test file=wagtail.admin.tests.test_name.pyor
docker-compose exec -w /code/wagtail web python runtests.py wagtail.admin.tests.{test_file_name_here}make format-wagtailor
docker-compose exec -w /code/wagtail web make format-server
docker-compose exec frontend make format-clientmake lint-wagtailor
docker-compose exec -w /code/wagtail web make lint-server
docker-compose exec -w /code/wagtail web make lint-docs
docker-compose exec frontend make lint-clientmake ssh-shellor
docker-compose exec web python manage.py shellmake ssh-dbor
docker-compose exec web python manage.py dbshellmake sshor
docker-compose exec web bashmake ssh-feor
docker-compose exec frontend bashmake ssh-feor
docker-compose exec -w /code/wagtail web bashmake migrationsor
docker-compose exec web python manage.py makemigrationsmake migrateor
docker-compose exec web python manage.py migrateHere are other actions you will likely need to do to make your first contribution to Wagtail.
Set up git remotes to Wagtail forks (run these lines outside of the Docker instances, on your machine):
cd ~/Development/wagtail-dev/wagtail
# Change the default origin remote to point to your fork.
git remote set-url origin git@github.com:<USERNAME>/wagtail.git
# Add wagtail/wagtail as the "upstream" remote.
git remote add upstream git@github.com:wagtail/wagtail.git
# Pull latest changes from all remotes / forks.
git pull --allYou can use the same setup to contribute to Willow. You simply do the same operations to fork the Willow project and point your local copy of Willow to your fork.