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feat: auto-mount edx-platform python requirements
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These changes make to possible to run:

    tutor mounts add /path/to/my-xblock

The xblock directory with then be auto-magically bind-mounted in the
"openedx" image at build time, and the lms*/cms* containers at run time.

This makes it effectively possible to work as a developer on
edx-platform requirements.

We take the opportunity to move some openedx-specific code to a
dedicated module.

Close openedx-unsupported/wg-developer-experience#177
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regisb committed Dec 10, 2023
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@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
- [Feature] Make it easy to work on 3rd-party edx-platform Python packages with `tutor mounts add /path/to/my/package`. (by @regisb)
- [Feature] The ``iter_mounts`` template function can now take multiple image names as argument. This should concern only very advanced users. (by @regisb)
75 changes: 6 additions & 69 deletions docs/dev.rst
Expand Up @@ -5,14 +5,16 @@ Open edX development

In addition to running Open edX in production, Tutor can be used for local development of Open edX. This means that it is possible to hack on Open edX without setting up a Virtual Machine. Essentially, this replaces the devstack provided by edX.

For detailed explanations on how to work on edx-platform and its dependencies, see the :ref:`edx_platform` tutorial.

.. _edx_platform_dev_env:

First-time setup
----------------

Firstly, either :ref:`install Tutor <install>` (for development against the named releases of Open edX) or :ref:`install Tutor Nightly <nightly>` (for development against Open edX's master branches).

Then, optionally, tell Tutor to use a local fork of edx-platform.::
Then, optionally, tell Tutor to use a local fork of edx-platform::

tutor mounts add ./edx-platform

Expand All @@ -28,7 +30,6 @@ This will perform several tasks. It will:
* disable HTTPS,
* set ``LMS_HOST`` to `local.overhang.io <http://local.overhang.io>`_ (a convenience domain that simply `points at 127.0.0.1 <https://dnschecker.org/#A/local.overhang.io>`_),
* prompt for a platform details (with suitable defaults),
* build an ``openedx-dev`` image,
* start LMS, CMS, supporting services, and any plugged-in services,
* ensure databases are created and migrated, and
* run service initialization scripts, such as service user creation and Waffle configuration.
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -83,20 +84,6 @@ Finally, the platform can also be started back up with ``launch``. It will take

tutor dev launch --pullimages

Debugging with breakpoints
--------------------------

To debug a local edx-platform repository, first, start development in detached mode (with ``-d``), add a `python breakpoint <https://docs.python.org/3/library/functions.html#breakpoint>`__ with ``breakpoint()`` anywhere in the code. Then, attach to the applicable service's container by running ``start`` (without ``-d``) followed by the service's name::

# Start in detached mode:
tutor dev start -d

# Debugging LMS:
tutor dev start lms

# Or, debugging CMS:
tutor dev start cms

Running arbitrary commands
--------------------------

Expand Down Expand Up @@ -234,7 +221,7 @@ You can then edit the files in ``~/venv`` on your local filesystem and see the c
Manual bind-mount to any directory
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

.. warning:: Manually bind-mounting volumes with the ``--volume`` option makes it difficult to simultaneously bind-mount to multiple containers. Also, the ``--volume`` options are not compatible with ``start`` commands. For an alternative, see the :ref:`persistent mounts <persistent_mounts>`.
.. warning:: Manually bind-mounting volumes with the ``--volume`` option makes it difficult to simultaneously bind-mount to multiple containers. Also, the ``--volume`` options are not compatible with ``start`` commands. As an alternative, you should consider following the instructions above: :ref:`persistent_mounts`.

The above solution may not work for you if you already have an existing directory, outside of the "volumes/" directory, which you would like mounted in one of your containers. For instance, you may want to mount your copy of the `edx-platform <https://github.com/openedx/edx-platform/>`__ repository. In such cases, you can simply use the ``-v/--volume`` `Docker option <https://docs.docker.com/storage/volumes/#choose-the--v-or---mount-flag>`__::

Expand All @@ -243,6 +230,8 @@ The above solution may not work for you if you already have an existing director
Override docker-compose volumes
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

.. warning:: While the option described below "works", it will only bind-mount directories at run-time. In many cases you really want to bind-mount directories at build-time. For instance: when working on edx-platform requirements. As an alternative, you should consider following the instructions above: :ref:`persistent_mounts`.

Adding items to the ``MOUNTS`` setting effectively adds new bind-mount volumes to the ``docker-compose.yml`` files. But you might want to have more control over your volumes, such as adding read-only options, or customising other fields of the different services. To address these issues, you can create a ``docker-compose.override.yml`` file that will specify custom volumes to be used with all ``dev`` commands::

vim "$(tutor config printroot)/env/dev/docker-compose.override.yml"
Expand All @@ -268,55 +257,3 @@ This override file will be loaded when running any ``tutor dev ..`` command. The

.. note::
The ``tutor local`` commands load the ``docker-compose.override.yml`` file from the ``$(tutor config printroot)/env/local/docker-compose.override.yml`` directory. One-time jobs from initialisation commands load the ``local/docker-compose.jobs.override.yml`` and ``dev/docker-compose.jobs.override.yml``.

Common tasks
------------

XBlock and edx-platform plugin development
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

In some cases, you will have to develop features for packages that are pip-installed next to the edx-platform. This is quite easy with Tutor. Just add your packages to the ``$(tutor config printroot)/env/build/openedx/requirements/private.txt`` file. To avoid re-building the openedx Docker image at every change, you should add your package in editable mode. For instance::

echo "-e ./mypackage" >> "$(tutor config printroot)/env/build/openedx/requirements/private.txt"

The ``requirements`` folder should have the following content::

env/build/openedx/requirements/
private.txt
mypackage/
setup.py
...

You will have to re-build the openedx Docker image once::

tutor images build openedx

You should then run the development server as usual, with ``start``. Every change made to the ``mypackage`` folder will be picked up and the development server will be automatically reloaded.

Running edx-platform unit tests
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

It's possible to run the full set of unit tests that ship with `edx-platform <https://github.com/openedx/edx-platform/>`__. To do so, run a shell in the LMS development container::

tutor dev run lms bash

Then, run unit tests with ``pytest`` commands::

# Run tests on common apps
unset DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE
unset SERVICE_VARIANT
export EDXAPP_TEST_MONGO_HOST=mongodb
pytest common
pytest openedx
pytest xmodule

# Run tests on LMS
export DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE=lms.envs.tutor.test
pytest lms

# Run tests on CMS
export DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE=cms.envs.tutor.test
pytest cms

.. note::
Getting all edx-platform unit tests to pass on Tutor is currently a work-in-progress. Some unit tests are still failing. If you manage to fix some of these, please report your findings in the `Open edX forum <https://discuss.openedx.org/tag/tutor>`__.
6 changes: 6 additions & 0 deletions docs/reference/api/hooks/catalog.rst
Expand Up @@ -16,3 +16,9 @@ The underlying Python hook classes and API are documented :ref:`here <hooks_api>

.. autoclass:: tutor.hooks.Contexts
:members:

Open edX hooks
--------------

.. automodule:: tutor.plugins.openedx.hooks
:members:
177 changes: 177 additions & 0 deletions docs/tutorials/edx-platform.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,177 @@
.. _edx_platform:

Working on edx-platform as a developer
======================================

Tutor supports running in development with ``tutor dev`` commands. Developers frequently need to work on a fork of some repository. The question then becomes: how to make their changes available within the "openedx" Docker container?

For instance, when troubleshooting an issue in `edx-platform <https://github.com/openedx/edx-platform>`__, we would like to make some changes to a local fork of that repository, and then apply these changes immediately in the "lms" and the "cms" containers (but also "lms-worker", "cms-worker", etc.)

Similarly, when developing a custom XBlock, we would like to hot-reload any change we make to the XBlock source code within the containers.

Tutor provides a simple solution to these questions. In both cases, the solution takes the form of a ``tutor mounts add ...`` command.

Working on the "edx-platform" repository
----------------------------------------

Download the code from the upstream repository::

cd /my/workspace/edx-plaform
git clone https://github.com/openedx/edx-platform .

Check out the right version of the upstream repository. If you are working on the `current "zebulon" release <https://docs.openedx.org/en/latest/community/release_notes/index.html>`__ of Open edX, then you should checkout the corresponding branch::

# "zebulon" is an example. You should put the actual release name here.
# I.e: aspen, birch, cypress, etc.
git checkout open-release/zebulon.master

On the other hand, if you are working on the Tutor :ref:`"nightly" <nightly>` branch then you should checkout the master branch::

git checkout master

Then, mount the edx-platform repository with Tutor::

tutor mounts add /my/workspace/edx-plaform

This command does a few "magical" things 🧙 behind the scenes:

1. Mount the edx-platform repository in the image at build-time. This means that when you run ``tutor images build openedx``, your custom repository will be used instead of the upstream. In particular, any change you've made to the installed requirements, static assets, etc. will be taken into account.
2. Mount the edx-platform repository at run time. Thus, when you run ``tutor dev start``, any change you make to the edx-platform repository will be hot-reloaded.

You can get a glimpse of how these auto-mounts work by running ``tutor mounts list``. It should output something similar to the following::

$ tutor mounts list
- name: /home/data/regis/projets/overhang/repos/edx/edx-platform
build_mounts:
- image: openedx
context: edx-platform
- image: openedx-dev
context: edx-platform
compose_mounts:
- service: lms
container_path: /openedx/edx-platform
- service: cms
container_path: /openedx/edx-platform
- service: lms-worker
container_path: /openedx/edx-platform
- service: cms-worker
container_path: /openedx/edx-platform
- service: lms-job
container_path: /openedx/edx-platform
- service: cms-job
container_path: /openedx/edx-platform

Working on edx-platform Python dependencies
-------------------------------------------

Quite often, developers don't want to work on edx-platform directly, but on a dependency of edx-platform. For instance: an XBlock. This works the same way as above. Let's take the example of the `"edx-ora2" <https://github.com/openedx/edx-ora2>`__ package, for open response assessments. First, clone the Python package::

cd /my/workspace/edx-ora2
git clone https://github.com/openedx/edx-ora2 .

Then, check out the right version of the package. This is the version that is indicated in the `edx-platform/requirements/edx/base.txt <https://github.com/openedx/edx-platform/blob/open-release/palm.master/requirements/edx/base.txt>`__. Be careful that the version that is currently in use in your version of edx-platform is **not necessarily the head of the master branch**::

git checkout <my-version-tag-or-branch>

Then, mount this repository::

tutor mounts add /my/workspace/edx-ora2

Verify that your repository is properly bind-mounted by running ``tutor mounts list``::

$ tutor mounts list
- name: /my/workspace/edx-ora2
build_mounts:
- image: openedx
context: mnt-edx-ora2
- image: openedx-dev
context: mnt-edx-ora2
compose_mounts:
- service: lms
container_path: /mnt/edx-ora2
- service: cms
container_path: /mnt/edx-ora2
- service: lms-worker
container_path: /mnt/edx-ora2
- service: cms-worker
container_path: /mnt/edx-ora2
- service: lms-job
container_path: /mnt/edx-ora2
- service: cms-job
container_path: /mnt/edx-ora2

You should then re-build the "openedx" Docker image to pick up your changes::

tutor images build openedx-dev

Then, whenever you run ``tutor dev start``, the "lms" and "cms" container should automatically hot-reload your changes.

To push your changes in production, you should do the same with ``tutor local`` and the "openedx" image::

tutor images build openedx
tutor local start -d

Debugging with breakpoints
--------------------------

To debug a local edx-platform repository, first, start development in detached mode (with ``-d``), add a `python breakpoint <https://docs.python.org/3/library/functions.html#breakpoint>`__ with ``breakpoint()`` anywhere in the code. Then, attach to the applicable service's container by running ``start`` (without ``-d``) followed by the service's name::

# Start in detached mode:
tutor dev start -d

# Debugging LMS:
tutor dev start lms

# Or, debugging CMS:
tutor dev start cms

Running edx-platform unit tests
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

It's possible to run the full set of unit tests that ship with `edx-platform <https://github.com/openedx/edx-platform/>`__. To do so, run a shell in the LMS development container::

tutor dev run lms bash

Then, run unit tests with ``pytest`` commands::

# Run tests on common apps
unset DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE
unset SERVICE_VARIANT
export EDXAPP_TEST_MONGO_HOST=mongodb
pytest common
pytest openedx
pytest xmodule

# Run tests on LMS
export DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE=lms.envs.tutor.test
pytest lms

# Run tests on CMS
export DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE=cms.envs.tutor.test
pytest cms

.. note::
Getting all edx-platform unit tests to pass on Tutor is currently a work-in-progress. Some unit tests are still failing. If you manage to fix some of these, please report your findings in the `Open edX forum <https://discuss.openedx.org/tag/tutor>`__.

What if my edx-platform package is not automatically bind-mounted?
------------------------------------------------------------------

It is quite possible that your package is not automatically recognized and bind-mounted by Tutor. Out of the box, Tutor defines a set of regular expressions: if your package name matches this regular expression, it will be automatically bind-mounted. But if it does not, you have to tell Tutor about it.

To do so, you will need to create a :ref:`Tutor plugin <plugin_development_tutorial>` that implements the :py:data:`tutor.hooks.Filters.MOUNTED_DIRECTORIES` filter::

import tutor import hooks
hooks.Filters.MOUNTED_DIRECTORIES.add_item(("openedx", "my-package"))

After you implement and enable that plugin, ``tutor mounts list`` should display your directory among the bind-mounted directories.

Do I have to re-build the "openedx" Docker image after every change?
--------------------------------------------------------------------

No, you don't. Re-building the "openedx" Docker image may take a while, and you don't want to run this command every time you make a change to your local repositories. Because your host directory is bind-mounted in the containers at runtime, your changes will be automatically applied to the container. If you run ``tutor dev`` commands, then your changes will be automatically picked up.

If you run ``tutor local`` commands (for instance: when debugging a production instance) then your changes will *not* be automatically picked up. In such a case you should manually restart the containers::

tutor local restart lms cms lms-worker cms-worker

Re-building the "openedx" image should only be necessary when you want to push your changes to a Docker registry, then pull them on a remote server.
1 change: 1 addition & 0 deletions docs/tutorials/index.rst
Expand Up @@ -9,6 +9,7 @@ Open edX customization

plugin
theming
edx-platform
edx-platform-settings
google-smtp
nightly
Expand Down
9 changes: 1 addition & 8 deletions tests/test_bindmount.py
Expand Up @@ -53,13 +53,6 @@ def test_parse_implicit(self) -> None:
import tutor.commands.compose

self.assertEqual(
[
("lms", "/path/to/edx-platform", "/openedx/edx-platform"),
("cms", "/path/to/edx-platform", "/openedx/edx-platform"),
("lms-worker", "/path/to/edx-platform", "/openedx/edx-platform"),
("cms-worker", "/path/to/edx-platform", "/openedx/edx-platform"),
("lms-job", "/path/to/edx-platform", "/openedx/edx-platform"),
("cms-job", "/path/to/edx-platform", "/openedx/edx-platform"),
],
[("openedx", "/path/to/edx-platform", "/openedx/edx-platform")],
bindmount.parse_implicit_mount("/path/to/edx-platform"),
)
4 changes: 2 additions & 2 deletions tutor/bindmount.py
Expand Up @@ -12,7 +12,7 @@ def get_mounts(config: types.Config) -> list[str]:
return types.get_typed(config, "MOUNTS", list)


def iter_mounts(user_mounts: list[str], name: str) -> t.Iterable[str]:
def iter_mounts(user_mounts: list[str], *names: str) -> t.Iterable[str]:
"""
Iterate on the bind-mounts that are available to any given compose service. The list
of bind-mounts is parsed from `user_mounts` and we yield only those for service
Expand All @@ -23,7 +23,7 @@ def iter_mounts(user_mounts: list[str], name: str) -> t.Iterable[str]:
"""
for user_mount in user_mounts:
for service, host_path, container_path in parse_mount(user_mount):
if service == name:
if service in names:
yield f"{host_path}:{container_path}"


Expand Down
32 changes: 0 additions & 32 deletions tutor/commands/compose.py
Expand Up @@ -426,38 +426,6 @@ def dc_command(
context.job_runner(config).docker_compose(command, *args)


@hooks.Filters.COMPOSE_MOUNTS.add()
def _mount_edx_platform(
volumes: list[tuple[str, str]], name: str
) -> list[tuple[str, str]]:
"""
When mounting edx-platform with `tutor mounts add /path/to/edx-platform`,
bind-mount the host repo in the lms/cms containers.
"""
if name == "edx-platform":
path = "/openedx/edx-platform"
volumes += [
("lms", path),
("cms", path),
("lms-worker", path),
("cms-worker", path),
("lms-job", path),
("cms-job", path),
]
return volumes


@hooks.Filters.APP_PUBLIC_HOSTS.add()
def _edx_platform_public_hosts(
hosts: list[str], context_name: t.Literal["local", "dev"]
) -> list[str]:
if context_name == "dev":
hosts += ["{{ LMS_HOST }}:8000", "{{ CMS_HOST }}:8001"]
else:
hosts += ["{{ LMS_HOST }}", "{{ CMS_HOST }}"]
return hosts


hooks.Filters.ENV_TEMPLATE_VARIABLES.add_item(("iter_mounts", bindmount.iter_mounts))


Expand Down

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