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Django/React template

Testing

Backend

Backend tests are implemented with pytest via tox. From the host system you need to execute the command inside of the django container so docker exec -it django tox -e pytest will accomplish this.

Linting

Backend

We use black to autoformat our code and it is invoked with docker exec -it django tox -e black.

Linting is done using flake8 and invoked with docker exec -it django tox -e flake8.

Frontend

We use prettier to autoformat our code and eslint to lint it. Using the fantastic eslint-prettier plugin you can lint the code using docker exec -it react npm run lint and docker exec -it react npm run lint-fix to apply the formatting to that lint result.

Windows Installation

Firstly, install Docker for Windows and follow the steps. You may need to check for updates for Windows if your installation fails. Once this installs, you want to get Ubuntu. This will allow you to use bash commands, which I prefer over using PowerShell. If you use Visual Studio Code (which I recommend), you'll then want to install the Remote - WSL extension, allowing you to run a terminal in Ubuntu while using your VSCode editor.

Make sure you check whether Ubuntu is set as a WSL 2 Distro by going to Docker's Settings, heading into the Resources tab, clicking on WSL Integration, and confirming that Ubuntu's integration is enabled.

After installing everything, you should be good to go!

Build

The Environment

Save this as a file called .env and put it in the project root next to docker-compose.py:

DB_NAME=somename
DB_PASSWORD=somepassword
DB_USER=someuser
DB_HOST=postgres
DB_PORT=5432

DEBUG=1

This will ensure that both postgres and django are using the same credentials for the database.

First Run

mkdir -p ~/srv/docker/template-postgresql/data to create the directory for your Postgres volume.

docker-compose build && docker-compose up -d build and bring the containers up.

docker-compose logs -f follow the docker logs.

Docker Commands

docker-compose build builds the containers.

docker-compose up brings up the containters (-d flag brings them up detached)

docker-compose logs -f view logs for detached running containers.

docker-compose down bring down the containers.

Docker Tips

Note: The container names you need are in the docker-compose.yml file.

Note: The containers are reading from the host filesystem so editing files locally will propagate changes inside the contaner.

docker-compose stop <container name> stops a particular container.

docker exec -it <container name> <command to execute inside the container> executes scripts inside container.

Ex: docker exec -it django /bin/bash loads you into a bash shell inside the django container.

Ex: docker exec -it django python manage.py shell puts you in the django shell.

File Structure

Docker

All Docker container configuration files of any kind can be found in the conf folder. The folder contains subfolders with names identical to the container name in docker-compose.yml. In this way it is obvious what Dockerfile and/or startup script a given container will be using. I also include other relevant files like requirements.txt in conf/django as the django container is actually the container that cares about requirements. In general our goal is to use startup scripts whenever possible as they are extensible and mean less editing of the docker-compose.yml.

Backend

This project follows typical django style contentions with the main project folder inside core; this contains the settings.py and other relevant folders.

Frontend

The current design is to have a folder in the project root called front to contain all react/frontend files. This folder has two subdirectories called src which contains all .js/.jsx and a folder called public which contains any css/html/png/jpg/etc, basically the static assets.