You might want to use something different than localhost
as the domain. For example, if you are having problems with cookies that need a subdomain, and Chrome is not allowing you to use localhost
.
In that case, you have two options: you could use the instructions to modify your system hosts
file with the instructions below in Development with a custom IP or you can just use localhost.tribe.com
, it is set up to point to localhost
(to the IP 127.0.0.1
) and all its subdomains too. And as it is an actual domain, the browsers will store the cookies you set during development, etc.
If you used the default CORS enabled domains while generating the project, localhost.tribe.com
was configured to be allowed. If you didn't, you will need to add it to the list in the variable BACKEND_CORS_ORIGINS
in the .env
file.
To configure it in your stack, follow the section Change the development "domain" below, using the domain localhost.tribe.com
.
After performing those steps you should be able to open: http://localhost.tribe.com and it will be served by your stack in localhost
.
Check all the corresponding available URLs in the section at the end.
If you are running Docker in an IP address different than 127.0.0.1
(localhost
), you will need to perform some additional steps. That will be the case if you are running a custom Virtual Machine or your Docker is located in a different machine in your network.
In that case, you will need to use a fake local domain (dev.example.com
) and make your computer think that the domain is served by the custom IP (e.g. 192.168.99.150
).
If you have a custom domain like that, you need to add it to the list in the variable BACKEND_CORS_ORIGINS
in the .env
file.
-
Open your
hosts
file with administrative privileges using a text editor:- Note for Windows: If you are in Windows, open the main Windows menu, search for "notepad", right click on it, and select the option "open as Administrator" or similar. Then click the "File" menu, "Open file", go to the directory
c:\Windows\System32\Drivers\etc\
, select the option to show "All files" instead of only "Text (.txt) files", and open thehosts
file. - Note for Mac and Linux: Your
hosts
file is probably located at/etc/hosts
, you can edit it in a terminal runningsudo nano /etc/hosts
.
- Note for Windows: If you are in Windows, open the main Windows menu, search for "notepad", right click on it, and select the option "open as Administrator" or similar. Then click the "File" menu, "Open file", go to the directory
-
Additional to the contents it might have, add a new line with the custom IP (e.g.
192.168.99.150
) a space character, and your fake local domain:dev.example.com
.
The new line might look like:
192.168.99.150 dev.example.com
- Save the file.
- Note for Windows: Make sure you save the file as "All files", without an extension of
.txt
. By default, Windows tries to add the extension. Make sure the file is saved as is, without extension.
- Note for Windows: Make sure you save the file as "All files", without an extension of
...that will make your computer think that the fake local domain is served by that custom IP, and when you open that URL in your browser, it will talk directly to your locally running server when it is asked to go to dev.example.com
and think that it is a remote server while it is actually running in your computer.
To configure it in your stack, follow the section Change the development "domain" below, using the domain dev.example.com
.
After performing those steps you should be able to open: http://dev.example.com and it will be server by your stack in 192.168.99.150
.
Check all the corresponding available URLs in the section at the end.
If you need to use your local stack with a different domain than localhost
, you need to make sure the domain you use points to the IP where your stack is set up.
To simplify your Docker Compose setup, for example, so that the API docs (Swagger UI) knows where is your API, you should let it know you are using that domain for development.
- Open the file located at
./.env
. It would have a line like:
DOMAIN=localhost
- Change it to the domain you are going to use, e.g.:
DOMAIN=localhost.tribe.com
That variable will be used by the Docker Compose files.
After that, you can restart your stack with:
docker compose up -d
and check all the corresponding available URLs in the section at the end.
There is a main docker-compose.yml
file with all the configurations that apply to the whole stack, it is used automatically by docker compose
.
And there's also a docker-compose.override.yml
with overrides for development, for example to mount the source code as a volume. It is used automatically by docker compose
to apply overrides on top of docker-compose.yml
.
These Docker Compose files use the .env
file containing configurations to be injected as environment variables in the containers.
They also use some additional configurations taken from environment variables set in the scripts before calling the docker compose
command.
The .env
file is the one that contains all your configurations, generated keys and passwords, etc.
Depending on your workflow, you could want to exclude it from Git, for example if your project is public. In that case, you would have to make sure to set up a way for your CI tools to obtain it while building or deploying your project.
One way to do it could be to add each environment variable to your CI/CD system, and updating the docker-compose.yml
file to read that specific env var instead of reading the .env
file.
we are using a tool called pre-commit for code linting and formatting.
When you install it, it runs right before making a commit in git. This way it ensures that the code is consistent and formatted even before it is committed.
You can find a file .pre-commit-config.yaml
with configurations at the root of the project.
pre-commit
is already part of the dependencies of the project, but you could also install it globally if you prefer to, following the official pre-commit docs.
After having the pre-commit
tool installed and available, you need to "install" it in the local repository, so that it runs automatically before each commit.
Using Poetry, you could do it with:
❯ poetry run pre-commit install
pre-commit installed at .git/hooks/pre-commit
Now whenever you try to commit, e.g. with:
git commit
...pre-commit will run and check and format the code you are about to commit, and will ask you to add that code (stage it) with git again before committing.
Then you can git add
the modified/fixed files again and now you can commit.
you can also run pre-commit
manually on all the files, you can do it using Poetry with:
❯ poetry run pre-commit run --all-files
check for added large files..............................................Passed
check toml...............................................................Passed
check yaml...............................................................Passed
ruff.....................................................................Passed
ruff-format..............................................................Passed
eslint...................................................................Passed
prettier.................................................................Passed
The production or staging URLs would use these same paths, but with your own domain.
Development URLs, for local development.
Frontend: http://localhost
Backend: http://localhost/api/
Automatic Interactive Docs (Swagger UI): http://localhost/docs
Automatic Alternative Docs (ReDoc): http://localhost/redoc
Adminer: http://localhost:8080
Traefik UI: http://localhost:8090
Flower: http://localhost:5555
Development URLs, for local development.
Frontend: http://localhost.tribe.com
Backend: http://localhost.tribe.com/api/
Automatic Interactive Docs (Swagger UI): http://localhost.tribe.com/docs
Automatic Alternative Docs (ReDoc): http://localhost.tribe.com/redoc
Adminer: http://localhost.tribe.com:8080
Traefik UI: http://localhost.tribe.com:8090
Flower: http://localhost.tribe.com:5555