This repository contains the Docker configuration for Google's PubSub emulator. It's mainly the dockerization and documentation of https://github.com/prep/pubsubc
A pre-built Docker container is available for Docker Hub:
docker run --rm -ti -p 8681:8681 apoex/gcloud-pubsub-emulator:latest
Or, you can build this repository yourself:
docker build -t gcloud-pubsub-emulator:latest .
docker run --rm -ti -p 8681:8681 gcloud-pubsub-emulator:latest
After you've ran the above-mentioned docker run
command, you should be able to use any app that has PubSub implemented and point it to your Docker container by specifying the PUBSUB_EMULATOR_HOST
environment variable.
env PUBSUB_EMULATOR_HOST=localhost:8681 ./myapp
or
export PUBSUB_EMULATOR_HOST=localhost:8681
./myapp
This image also provides the ability to create topics and subscriptions in projects on startup by specifying the PUBSUB_PROJECT
environment variable with a sequentual number appended to it, starting with 1. The format of the environment variable is relatively simple:
PROJECTID,TOPIC1,TOPIC2:SUBSCRIPTION1:SUBSCRIPTION2,TOPIC3:SUBSCRIPTION3
A comma-separated list where the first item is the project ID and the rest are topics. The topics themselves are colon-separated where the first item is the topic ID and the rest are subscription IDs. A topic doesn't necessarily need to specify subscriptions.
For example, if you have project ID company-dev
, with topic invoices
that has a subscription invoice-calculator
, another topic chats
with subscriptions slack-out
and irc-out
and a third topic notifications
without any subscriptions, you'd define it this way:
PUBSUB_PROJECT1=company-dev,invoices:invoice-calculator,chats:slack-out:irc-out,notifications
So the full command would look like:
docker run --rm -ti -p 8681:8681 -e PUBSUB_PROJECT1=company-dev,invoices:invoice-calculator,chats:slack-out:irc-out,notifications messagebird/gcloud-pubsub-emulator:latest
If you want to define more projects, you'd simply add a PUBSUB_PROJECT2
, PUBSUB_PROJECT3
, etc.
If you're using this Docker image in a docker-compose setup or something similar, you might have leveraged scripts like wait-for or wait-for-it to detect when the PubSub service comes up before starting a container that depends on it being up. If you're not using the above-mentioned PUBSUB_PROJECT environment variable, you can simply check if port 8681
is available. If you do depend on one or more PUBSUB_PROJECT environment variables, you should check for the availability of port 8682
as that one will become available once all the topics and subscriptions have been created.