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79 lines
2.6 KiB
Markdown
79 lines
2.6 KiB
Markdown
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# Overleaf Community Edition, development environment
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## Building and running
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In this `develop` directory, build and start the services:
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```shell
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bin/up
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```
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Once the services are running, open <http://localhost/launchpad> to create the first admin account.
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After making any changes to the code, run `bin/up` manually to rebuild the changed Docker images and recreate the changed containers.
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## TeX Live
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Compiling a PDF requires building a TeX Live image to handle the compilation inside Docker:
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```shell
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docker build texlive -t texlive-full
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```
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> **Note**
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> To compile on a macOS host, you'll need to override the path to the Docker socket by creating a `.env` file in this directory, containing
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> `DOCKER_SOCKET_PATH=/var/run/docker.sock.raw`
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## Development
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To avoid running `bin/up` after every code change, you can run Overleaf
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Community Edition in _development mode_, where services will automatically
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update on code changes. To do this, use the included `bin/dev` script:
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```shell
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bin/dev
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```
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This will start all services using `nodemon`, which will automatically monitor
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the code and restart the services as necessary. This will incur a performance
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hit, especially on macOS, so in order to only start a subset of the services,
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provide a space-separated list to the `bin/dev` script.
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```shell
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bin/dev [service1] [service2] ... [serviceN]
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```
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> **Note**
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> Starting the `web` service in _development mode_ will only update the `web`
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> service when backend code changes. In order to automatically update frontend
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> code as well, make sure to start the `webpack` service in _development mode_
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> as well.
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## Debugging
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When run in _development mode_ most services expose a debugging port to which
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you can attach a debugger such as
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[the inspector in Chrome's Dev Tools](chrome://inspect/) or one integrated into
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an IDE. The following table shows the port exposed on the **host machine** for
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each service:
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| Service | Port |
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| ------------------ | ---- |
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| `web` | 9229 |
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| `clsi` | 9230 |
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| `chat` | 9231 |
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| `contacts` | 9232 |
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| `docstore` | 9233 |
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| `document-updater` | 9234 |
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| `filestore` | 9235 |
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| `notifications` | 9236 |
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| `real-time` | 9237 |
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To attach to a service using Chrome's _remote debugging_, go to
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<chrome://inspect/> and make sure _Discover network targets_ is checked. Next
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click _Configure..._ and add an entry `localhost:[service port]` for each of the
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services you want to attach a debugger to.
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After adding an entry, the service will show up as a _Remote Target_ that you
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can inspect and debug.
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