5.9 KiB
Develop using Docker
Funkwhale can be run in Docker containers for local development. You can work on any part of the Funkwhale codebase and run the container setup to test your changes. To work with Docker:
-
Clone the Funkwhale repository to your system. The
develop
branch is checked out by default::::{tab-set}
:::{tab-item} SSH
git clone git@dev.funkwhale.audio/funkwhale/funkwhale.git cd funkwhale
:::
:::{tab-item} HTTPS
git clone https://dev.funkwhale.audio/funkwhale/funkwhale.git cd funkwhale
:::
::::
Set up your Docker environment
Funkwhale provides a `compose.yml` file following the default file naming convention of a Docker Compose manifest. For Linux users, we assume that you finished the post-install steps to [manage Docker as a non-root user](https://docs.docker.com/engine/install/linux-postinstall/#manage-docker-as-a-non-root-user).
To set up your Docker environment:
-
Create a
.env
file to enable customization of your setup.touch .env
-
Add the following variables to load images and enable access to Django admin pages:
MEDIA_URL=http://localhost:8000/media/ STATIC_URL=http://localhost:8000/staticfiles/
-
Create a network for federation support
sudo docker network create federation
Once you've set everything up, you need to build the containers. Run this command any time there are upstream changes or dependency changes to ensure you're up-to-date.
docker compose build
Set up the database
Funkwhale relies on a postgresql database to store information. To set this up, you need to run the funkwhale-manage migrate
command:
docker compose run --rm api funkwhale-manage migrate
This command creates all the required tables. You need to run this whenever there are changes to the API schema. You can run this at any time without causing issues.
Set up local data
You need to create some local data to mimic a production environment.
-
Create a superuser so you can log in to your local app:
docker compose run --rm api funkwhale-manage fw users create --superuser
-
Add some fake data to populate the database. The following command creates 25 artists with random albums, tracks, and metadata.
artists=25 # Adds 25 fake artists command="from funkwhale_api.music import fake_data; fake_data.create_data($artists)" echo $command | docker compose run --rm -T api funkwhale-manage shell -i python
Manage services
Once you have set up your containers, launch all services to start working on them:
docker compose up -d
This gives you access to the following:
- The Funkwhale webapp on
http://localhost:8000
- The Funkwhale API on
http://localhost:8000/api/v1
- The Django admin interface on
http://localhost:8000/api/admin
Please note that at this stage, login will only work if you choose to run this together with the single-node
overlay:
docker compose -f compose.yml -f compose.single-node.yml up -d
Once you're done with the containers, you can stop them all:
docker compose stop
If you want to destroy your containers, run the following:
docker compose down
To also destroy the state of your containers, run:
docker compose down -v
Set up federation support
Working on federation features requires some additional setup. You need to do the following:
- Update your DNS resolver to resolve all your
.test
hostnames locally - Set up a reverse proxy (such as traefik) to catch
.test
requests with a TLS certificate - Set up two or more local instances
To resolve hostnames locally, run the following:
::::{tab-set}
:::{tab-item} dnsmasq
echo "address=/test/172.17.0.1" | sudo tee /etc/dnsmasq.d/test.conf
sudo systemctl restart dnsmasq
:::
:::{tab-item} NetworkManager
echo "address=/test/172.17.0.1" | sudo tee /etc/NetworkManager/dnsmasq.d/test.conf
sudo systemctl restart NetworkManager
:::
:::{tab-item} dnsmasq in Docker
docker compose -f docker/dnsmasq.yml up -d
sudo resolvectl domain docker0 '~funkwhale.test.'
sudo resolvectl dns docker0 172.17.0.1
:::
::::
To add a wildcard certificate, copy the test certificate from the docker/ssl
folder to your system store. This certificate is a wildcard for *.funkwhale.test
.
For Debian-based systems, like Ubuntu, run:
sudo cp docker/ssl/test.crt /usr/local/share/ca-certificates/
sudo update-ca-certificates
For RHEL-based systems, like Fedora, run:
sudo cp docker/ssl/test.crt /etc/pki/ca-trust/source/anchors/
sudo update-ca-trust
To run a reverse proxy for your app:
-
Add the following configuration to your
.env
file:cat >> .env <<< " # Remove any port binding so you can specify this per-instance VUE_PORT_BINDING= # Disable certificate validation EXTERNAL_REQUESTS_VERIFY_SSL=false # Ensure all links use https FUNKWHALE_PROTOCOL=https # Disable host ports binding for the nginx container so that traefik handles everything NGINX_PORTS_MAPPING=80"
-
Launch traefik using the bundled configuration:
docker compose -f docker/traefik.yml up -d
Your previous instance is now reachable at https://funkwhale.funkwhale.test
-
Set up as many different projects as you need. Make sure the
COMPOSE_PROJECT_NAME
andVUE_PORT
variables are unique per instanceexport COMPOSE_PROJECT_NAME=node2 # VUE_PORT this has to be unique for each instance export VUE_PORT=1234 docker compose run --rm api funkwhale-manage migrate docker compose run --rm api funkwhale-manage fw users create --superuser docker compose up -d
You can access your project at
https://{COMPOSE_PROJECT_NAME}.funkwhale.test
.