Tracks hours billed to clients - different to total hours actually spent on a project.
Check out a demo at https://kristian-94.github.io/logbook
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Install docker CE: https://docs.docker.com/install/linux/docker-ce/ubuntu/
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Install docker-compose https://docs.docker.com/compose/install/
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Clone this code
git clone [email protected]:kristian-94/logbook.git
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Spin up environment
cd logbook docker-compose up
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Now you should be able to visit the site in your browser at
localhost
and log in with username = 'admin' and password = 'admin'
- Ubuntu 1804 apache webserver for the API
- Ubuntu 1804 node sever for the front end
- Postgres database
Use the following command to enter the bash shell of each container. Replaces using the docker exec function. Enter web container (react, frontend app):
./control web
Enter postgres database shell:
./control db
Enter yii PHP backend container (eg. to run yii commands from command line):
./control api
Prod & dev share the same db
container service as the database.
Development uses the client
and api
containers specified in the docker-compose.yml
file.
We separate the backend and frontend into separate containers and mount the front end react
directory ./client:/siteroot
inside the client, so that we can take advantage of hot reloading.
We don't use npm run build
.
In production, we need the back and front end served from the same origin. This is
achieved with a reverse proxy, some special nginx config to serve the backend at localhost/api
, and the
front end at localhost
. This config is found in docker/build/nginx-site.conf
.
We need to also create the build folder expected in the nginx config at
root /var/www/site/client/build;
. To create that we manually exec into
the build container and run npm run build
to build a prod react app.
The reason we wouldn't do development using this build
container is because we have
no hot reloading.