- yarn
- Node v14
- Postgresql 11
- Redis
- (wal2json)
We do not advise that you build your own projects on top of this project until you're comfortable with the various tools it uses (Node.js, Fastify, PostgreSQL, GraphQL, PostGraphile, Graphile Worker, Graphile Migrate, TypeScript, React, Urql GraphQL client, GraphQL Code Generator, ESLint, Prettier, Jest, Cypress, etc).
This is an advanced project with deeply integrated tooling across the full stack. The project is called "Starter" because it helps you to start new projects with all these technologies, tools and techniques already in place. If you're not already familiar with these things then you'll probably find the project overwhelming, it is not intended to be your first experience of any of these tools.
If you're just getting started with PostGraphile, before you dive into this project make sure you check out the PostGraphile required knowledge and especially the schema design tutorial. This repository takes a slightly different approach to schema design than the aforementioned tutorial, but it's still an incredibly valuable resource.
- Prerequisites
- Getting Started
- Running
- Docker development
- Production build
- Deploying to Heroku
- License
You can either work with this project locally (directly on your machine) or use a pre-configured Docker environment. We'll differentiate this in the README with a table like this one:
Local mode | OR | Docker mode |
---|---|---|
command for local development | or | command for docker-compose development |
Be careful not to mix and match Docker-mode vs local-mode for development.
You should make a choice and stick to it. (Developing locally but deploying with
production.Docker
is absolutely fine.)
IMPORTANT: If you choose the Docker mode, be sure to read docker/README.md.
For users of Visual Studio Code (VSCode), a .vscode
folder is included with
editor settings and debugger settings provided, plus a list of recommended
extensions. Should you need it, there is also a .devcontainer
folder which
enables you to use
VSCode's remote containers
giving you a local-like development experience whilst still using docker
containers.
Requires:
- Node.js v10+ must be installed (v12 recommended)
- PostgreSQL v10+ server must be available
pg_dump
command must be available (or you can remove this functionality)- VSCode is recommended, but any editor will do
This software has been developed under Mac and Linux, and should work in a
bash
environment.
Requires:
docker
docker-compose
- Ensure you've allocated Docker at least 4GB of RAM; significantly more
recommended
- (Development only, production is much more efficient)
Has been tested on Windows and Linux (Ubuntu 18.04LTS).
This project is designed to work with yarn
. If you don't have yarn
installed, you can install it with npm install -g yarn
. The Docker setup
already has yarn
& npm
installed and configured.
To get started, please run:
Local mode | OR | Docker mode |
---|---|---|
yarn setup |
or | export UID; yarn docker setup |
This command will lead you through the necessary steps, and create a .env
file
for you containing your secrets.
NOTE: export UID
is really important on Linux Docker hosts, otherwise the
files and folders created by Docker will end up owned by root, which is
non-optimal. We recommend adding export UID
to your ~/.profile
or
~/.bashrc
or similar so you don't have to remember it.
Do not commit .env
to version control!
You can bring up the stack with:
Local mode | OR | Docker mode |
---|---|---|
yarn start |
or | export UID; yarn docker start |
After a short period you should be able to load the application at http://localhost:5678
This main command runs a number of tasks:
- uses
graphile-migrate
to watch themigrations/current.sql
file for changes, and automatically runs it against your database when it changes - watches the TypeScript source code of the server, and compiles it from
@app/*/src
to@app/*/dist
so node/graphile-worker
/etc. can run the compiled code directly - runs the node server (includes PostGraphile and Next.js middleware)
- runs
graphile-worker
to execute your tasks (e.g. sending emails) - watches your GraphQL files and your PostGraphile schema for changes and generates your TypeScript React hooks for you automatically, leading to strongly typed code with minimal effort
NOTE: docker compose up server
also runs the PostgreSQL server that the
system connects to.
You may also choose to develop locally, but use the PostgreSQL server via
docker compose up -d db
.
Then for development you may need a console; you can open one with:
Local mode | OR | Docker mode |
---|---|---|
bash |
or | export UID; yarn docker bash |
To shut everything down:
Local mode | OR | Docker mode |
---|---|---|
Ctrl-c | or | export UID; yarn docker down |
Be sure to read docker/README.md.
To build the production image, use docker build
as shown below. You should
supply the ROOT_URL
build variable (which will be baked into the client code,
so cannot be changed as envvars); if you don't then the defaults will apply
(which likely will not be suitable).
To build the worker, pass --target worker
instead of the default
--target server
.
docker build \
--file ./docker/dockerfiles/Dockerfile.prod \
--build-arg ROOT_URL="http://localhost:5678" \
--target server \
.
When you run the image you must pass it the relevant environmental variables, for example:
docker run --rm -it --init -p 5678:5678 \
-e SECRET="$SECRET" \
-e JWT_SECRET="$JWT_SECRET" \
-e DATABASE_VISITOR="$DATABASE_VISITOR" \
-e DATABASE_URL="$DATABASE_URL" \
-e AUTH_DATABASE_URL="$AUTH_DATABASE_URL" \
docker-image-id-here
Currently if you miss required envvars weird things will happen; we don't currently have environment validation (PRs welcome!).
Use yarn run build
to generate a production build of the project
This is open source software; you may use, modify and distribute it under the terms of the MIT License, see LICENSE.md.