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529 lines
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529 lines
25 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. _packaging-example:
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=========================
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Service Packaging Example
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=========================
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.. contents::
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:depth: 4
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:local:
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A rough walkthrough of how to package a service using our example `hello-world-wrapper <https://github.com/Start9Labs/hello-world-wrapper>`_.
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Welcome! The following guide will provide the prerequisites, introduce a brief overview of the packaging process, use an example demonstrating how to package a service, and finally, describe the submission process. This essentially describes how you can take an existing app (or one you have written yourself), and wrap it up into an ``s9pk`` such that it can be added to an EmbassyOS (EOS) Marketplace! The ``s9pk`` is the final product, which is the portable version of a package that is understood by EOS, and can be distributed to any EOS users either directly, or via a Marketplace.
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Pre-requisites
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--------------
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EmbassyOS (EOS)
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===============
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It is **HIGHLY RECOMMENDED** to have a copy of EmbassyOS for testing your packaged service.
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There are 3 options for this:
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#. Build from `source <https://github.com/Start9Labs/embassy-os/build>`_
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#. Follow the :ref:`DIY guide <diy>` to build on a Raspberry Pi
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#. :ref:`Purchase <purchasing>` a device or copy of the OS
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Development Environment
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=======================
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Once you have EOS installed, you'll want to set up your development system set up with the necessary software.
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At minimum you will need the following:
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#. `Docker <https://docs.docker.com/get-docker>`_
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#. `Docker-buildx <https://docs.docker.com/buildx/working-with-buildx/>`_
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#. `Embassy-SDK <https://github.com/Start9Labs/embassy-os/tree/master/backend>`_
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The following are recommended:
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#. `Cargo <https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/>`_
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#. `yq <https://mikefarah.gitbook.io/yq/>`_ (version 4)
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#. `make <https://www.gnu.org/software/make/>`_
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#. `rust-musl-cross <https://github.com/Start9Labs/rust-musl-cross>`_ (For cross compiling Rust to Alpine, not needed otherwise)
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Overview
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--------
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Components
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==========
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Simply, the package is made up of the following parts:
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1. Image - Each service is running in a Docker image. Best results will come from an arm based linux; [Alpine](https://www.alpinelinux.org/) is highly recommended.
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2. Volume - Each service gets a volume, allocated by EOS. This is the filesystem where the service data will be stored and mounted by the container. The volume directory within EOS (for seeding data into the volume) is located at `/embassy-data/package-data/volumes/<service-id>`
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3. Dependencies - Rules and requirements of your service, which appear as UI elements, such as inputs, toggles, and drop-downs. These are enforced by validations and clear user instructions. EmbassyOS has a unique and powerful system for managing dependencies which allows anyone to have the power of systems administrators without an advanced skillset.
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4. Manifest - Describes the service and its requirements. This file describes the marketplace listing, installation considerations, configuration and dependency requirements, health checks, backups and additional info.
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5. Config - EOS makes a service's configuration available to the user in the GUI and must be valid regardless of user skill.
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6. .s9pk Bundle - The image, manifest, license, icon, and instruction files get bundled into a .s9pk package. Optional additional assets for use with system images can also be bundled. This is the file a user downloads from the Marketplace, at which point EOS uses to unpack assets and install the service.
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Check :ref:`here <service_package_overview>` for a detailed overview of package components.
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Service Wrapper Repo and Submodules
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===================================
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See :ref:`here <service_wrapper>` for how to structure your service wrapper's git repository.
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Git submodules allow the use of another project while in the working project directory. In this case, you can use an existing app's git repo in order to source its code into your service wrapper.
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Simply run:
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.. code:: bash
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git submodule add <link_to_source_project>
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Example - Hello World
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---------------------
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Okay, let's actually package a service! For this example, we're going to use an example service `Hello World <https://github.com/Start9Labs/hello-world>`_. This repository can also be used as a template to quickly get started with your service. The guide will provide good overview of service packaging, but obviously your app will be different, so don't hesitate to reach out to our community `dev chat <https://matrix.to/#/#community-dev:matrix.start9labs.com>`_ with questions.
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The commands below assume a Linux development environment with all the recommended dependencies listed above installed. To get started quickly, we'll use Start9's wrapper template.
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Clone the Template Repo and Edit the Manifest
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=============================================
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1. Clone and rename the repo (or alternatively, use the template generation button found on the github `repo <https://github.com/Start9Labs/hello-world-wrapper>`_)
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.. code-block:: bash
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git clone https://github.com/Start9Labs/hello-world-wrapper
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cd hello-world-wrapper
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2. Edit the ``README.md`` to explain what the service is, what dependencies are required, build/install/contribute instructions, and any other information you'd like.
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3. Edit the ``manifest`` file. This must be in ``.json``, ``.toml``, or ``.yaml`` format and in ``kebab-case`` style. You can see descriptions of each key (and some notes) in our 'Hello World' example ``manifest.yaml`` below:
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Manifest example
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================
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.. code-block:: yaml
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id: hello-world
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title: "Hello World"
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version: 0.2.0 # Service version
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release-notes: "Upgrade to EmbassyOS 2.16.0 and then to v0.3.0"
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license: mit
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wrapper-repo: "https://github.com/Start9Labs/hello-world-wrapper"
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upstream-repo: "https://github.com/Start9Labs/hello-world-wrapper" # There is no upstream repo in this example
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support-site: "https://docs.start9.com/"
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marketing-site: "https://start9.com/"
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build: ["make"] # Series of commands to build into an s9pk, in this case we are using make and all the build commands are in the makefile
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min-os-version: "0.3.0" # Minimum required version of EmbassyOS
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description:
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short: Example service
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long: |
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Hello World is a simple example of a service wrapper that launches a web interface to say hello and nothing more.
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assets:
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license: LICENSE # default = LICENSE.md
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icon: icon.png # default = icon.png
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instructions: docs/instructions.md # default = INSTRUCTIONS.md
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docker-images: image.tar # default = image.tar
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main:
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type: docker
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image: main
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entrypoint: "/usr/local/bin/docker_entrypoint.sh"
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args: []
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mounts: {} # Specifies where to put volumes, if there are any. Empty in this example
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health-checks: {} # Health check config would go here
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config: ~ # Configuration options, none for hello-world, but see below example for format:
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# get:
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# type: docker
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# image: compat
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# entrypoint: compat
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# args:
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# - "config"
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# - "get"
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# - "/root/.hello-world/start9/config.yaml"
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# - "/mnt/assets/config_spec.yaml"
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# mounts:
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# compat: "/mnt/assets"
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# main: "/root"
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# io-format: yaml
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# set:
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# type: docker
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# image: compat
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# entrypoint: compat
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# args:
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# - "config"
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# - "set"
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# - "/root/.hello-world/start9/config.yaml"
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# mounts:
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# main: "/root"
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# io-format: yaml
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dependencies: {} # Service pre-requisites, none for hello-world, but see below example (which would make BTC Proxy a dependency) for format:
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# btc-rpc-proxy:
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# version: ">=0.3.2.1 <0.4.0"
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# recommended: true
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# critical: false
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# optional: Can alternatively configure an external bitcoin node.
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# description: Used to fetch validated blocks.
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# config:
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# check:
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# type: docker
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# image: compat
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# system: true
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# # the compat image will contain a tool to check the config rules against the specified dependency
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# entrypoint: compat
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# args:
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# - "dependency"
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# - "check"
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# - "/mnt/assets/btc-rpc-proxy.rules.yaml"
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# mounts:
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# compat: "/mnt/assets"
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# auto-configure:
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# type: docker
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# image: compat
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# # if true, the denoted image is prebuilt and comes stock with EOS
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# # uncommon: if you want something not prebuilt with EOS, you can bundle multiple docker images into the `image.tar` during the `make` build process
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# system: true
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# entrypoint: compat
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# args:
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# - "dependency"
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# - "auto-configure"
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# - "/mnt/assets/btc-rpc-proxy.rules.yaml"
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# mounts:
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# compat: "/mnt/assets"
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volumes: # this is the image where data will go from 0.2.x
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main:
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type: data # this is the image where files from the project asset directory will go
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compat:
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type: assets
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interfaces:
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main:
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name: Network Interface
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description: Specifies the interface to listen on for HTTP connections.
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tor-config:
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port-mapping:
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80: "80"
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lan-config:
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80:
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ssl: false
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mapping: 80
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ui: true
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protocols:
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- tcp
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- http
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alerts: {}
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backup:
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create:
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type: docker
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image: compat # default backup process of the compat docker image is duplicity - EOS will have access to the image defined here
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system: true
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entrypoint: compat # command to run the backup executable, in this case, duplicity
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args: # arguments to pass into the entrypoint, in this case duplicity - in this example, the full command run will be: `duplicity hello-world file:///mnt/backup /root`
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- duplicity
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- hello-world
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- /mnt/backup
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- /root
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mounts:
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# BACKUP is the default volume that is used for backups. This is whatever backup drive is mounted to the defice, or a network filesystem.
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# The value here donates where the data mount point will be. Backup drive is mounted to this location, which contains previous backups.
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BACKUP: "/mnt/backup"
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main: "/root"
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restore:
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type: docker
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image: compat
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system: true
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entrypoint: compat
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args:
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- duplicity
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- hello-world
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- /root
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- /mnt/backup
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mounts:
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# See above comments under `backup: -> mounts:`
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BACKUP: "/mnt/backup"
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main: "/root"
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actions: {} # Commands that can be issued from the UI. None for hello-world, but see below example (resetting a root user) for format:
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# reset-root-user:
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# name: Reset Root User
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# description: Resets your root user (the first user) to username "admin" and a random password; restores any lost admin privileges.
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# warning: This will invalidate existing sessions and password managers if you have them set up.
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# allowed-statuses:
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# - stopped
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# implementation:
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# type: docker
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# image: main
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# system: true
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# entrypoint: docker_entrypoint.sh
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# args: ["reset-root-user"]
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# mounts:
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# main: "/root"
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Note the ``dependencies`` and ``volumes`` sections, which may access another service, e.g. File Browser, such that files stored on a user's Embassy can be accessed in your service.
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For details on all the different possible dependency, type, and subtype definitions available for the ``manifest`` file, please see :ref:`here <service_manifest>`.
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Edit the Dockerfile and Entrypoint
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==================================
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Next, it's time to edit the ``Dockerfile``. This defines how to build the image for the package by declaring the environment, building stages, and copying any binaries or assets needed to run the service or its health checks to the image filesystem.
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1. We start by importing a base image, in this case Alpine, as recommended.
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.. code:: docker
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FROM arm64v8/alpine:3.12
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2. Next we issue some commands, which in this example simply updates repositories, installs required software, and finally creates a directory for nginx.
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.. code:: docker
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RUN apk update
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RUN apk add tini
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RUN mkdir /run/nginx
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3. Next we will add the cross-compiled binary of ``hello-world`` to ``/usr/local/bin/`` and add the ``docker_entrypoint.sh`` file from the repository. Then we set permissions for ``docker_entrypoint.sh``.
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.. code:: docker
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ADD ./hello-world/target/aarch64-unknown-linux-musl/release/hello-world /usr/local/bin/hello-world
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ADD ./docker_entrypoint.sh /usr/local/bin/docker_entrypoint.sh
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RUN chmod a+x /usr/local/bin/docker_entrypoint.sh
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1. Next, we set a working directory, and set the location of the entrypoint. Exposing ports is not necessary for EOS, but its often useful to leave this line for clarity.
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.. code:: docker
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WORKDIR /root
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EXPOSE 80
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ENTRYPOINT ["/usr/local/bin/docker_entrypoint.sh"]
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5. Great, let's take a look at our final Embassy Pages ``Dockerfile``:
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.. code:: docker
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FROM arm64v8/alpine:3.12
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RUN apk update
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RUN apk add tini
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ADD ./hello-world/target/aarch64-unknown-linux-musl/release/hello-world /usr/local/bin/hello-world
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ADD ./docker_entrypoint.sh /usr/local/bin/docker_entrypoint.sh
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RUN chmod a+x /usr/local/bin/docker_entrypoint.sh
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WORKDIR /root
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EXPOSE 80
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ENTRYPOINT ["/usr/local/bin/docker_entrypoint.sh"]
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Docker Entrypoint
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=================
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1. Okay, let's move on to our ``docker_entrypoint.sh`` file. This is a script that defines what to do when the service starts, and often acts as an init system. It will need to complete any environment setup (such as folder substructure), set any environment variables, and execute the run command. It's also PID 1 in the docker container, so it does all of the signal handling and container exits when it is stopped/exits. If you have built a ``configurator``, this will also need to be called to execute here. Let's take a look at our (extremely basic) Hello World example:
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.. code:: bash
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#!/bin/sh
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export HOST_IP=$(ip -4 route list match 0/0 | awk '{print $3}')
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exec tini hello-world
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2. We've defined the file, exported the IP address of the Embassy (host), and run the program.
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For a more detailed ``docker_entrypoint.sh``, please check out the `filebrowser-wrapper <https://github.com/Start9Labs/filebrowser-wrapper/blob/master/docker_entrypoint.sh>`_. Additional details on the ``Dockerfile`` and ``docker_entrypoint`` can be found `here <https://docs.start9.com/contributing/services/docker.html>`_.
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Makefile (Optional)
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===================
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Here, we will create a ``Makefile``, which is optional, but recommended as it outlines the build and streamlines additional developer contributions. Alternatively, you could use ``nix``, ``bash``, ``python``, ``perl``, ``ruby``, etc instead of ``make`` for build orchestration.
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Our example ``Makefile`` is again fairly simple for Hello World. Let's take a look:
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.. code-block:: Makefile
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ASSETS := $(shell yq e '.assets.[].src' manifest.yaml)
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ASSET_PATHS := $(addprefix assets/,$(ASSETS))
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VERSION := $(shell toml get hello-world/Cargo.toml package.version)
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HELLO_WORLD_SRC := $(shell find ./hello-world/src) hello-world/Cargo.toml hello-world/Cargo.lock
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S9PK_PATH=$(shell find . -name hello-world.s9pk -print)
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.DELETE_ON_ERROR:
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all: verify
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verify: hello-world.s9pk $(S9PK_PATH)
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embassy-sdk verify $(S9PK_PATH)
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# embassy-sdk pack errors come from here, check your manifest, config, instructions, and icon
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hello-world.s9pk: manifest.yaml assets/compat/config_spec.yaml config_rules.yaml image.tar docs/instructions.md $(ASSET_PATHS)
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embassy-sdk pack
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image.tar: Dockerfile docker_entrypoint.sh hello-world/target/aarch64-unknown-linux-musl/release/hello-world
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DOCKER_CLI_EXPERIMENTAL=enabled docker buildx build --tag start9/hello-world --platform=linux/arm64 -o type=docker,dest=image.tar .
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hello-world/target/aarch64-unknown-linux-musl/release/hello-world: $(HELLO_WORLD_SRC)
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docker run --rm -it -v ~/.cargo/registry:/root/.cargo/registry -v "$(shell pwd)"/hello-world:/home/rust/src start9/rust-musl-cross:aarch64-musl cargo +beta build --release
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docker run --rm -it -v ~/.cargo/registry:/root/.cargo/registry -v "$(shell pwd)"/hello-world:/home/rust/src start9/rust-musl-cross:aarch64-musl musl-strip target/aarch64-unknown-linux-musl/release/hello-world
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manifest.yaml: hello-world/Cargo.toml
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yq e -i '.version = $(VERSION)' manifest.yaml
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1. The first 5 lines set environment variables.
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2. The next line simply removes the progress of a ``make`` process if it fails.
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.. code-block:: Makefile
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.DELETE_ON_ERROR:
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3. The ``all`` step is run when the ``make`` command is issued. This attempts the ``verify`` step, which requires that the ``hello-world.s9pk`` must first be built, which first requires the ``image.tar``, and so on. In this case, each step requires the next and each step indicates the necessary existence of a file. If an indicated file has been altered, such as the `docker_entrypoint.sh`, then any step that contains this file will be rebuilt.
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4. So the ``.s9pk`` is created with the ``embassy-sdk pack`` command, supplied with the ``manifest``, ``config_spec``, previously created ``image.tar``, and ``instructions.md``. Your project may likely also contain a ``config_rules`` file. Some of these files we have not yet edited, but that will come shortly.
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5. The ``image.tar`` is built below this, the cross-compiled ``hello-world`` source code, and ``manifest`` at the bottom.
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For more details on creating a ``Makefile`` for your project, please check :ref:`here <service_makefile>`.
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Service Config Specification and Rules
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======================================
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Most self-hosted packages require a configuration. With EmbassyOS, these config options are provided to the user in a friendly GUI, and invalid configs are not permitted. This allows the user to manage their software without a lot of technical skill, and minimal risk of borking their software.
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In the config section of the `manifest`, you can
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Two files are created in this process:
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``config_spec.yaml`` for specifying all the config options your package depends on to run
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``config_rules.yaml`` for defining the ruleset that defines dependencies between config variables
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These are stored in ``assets/compat/`` for 0.2.x compatibility, and in ``/assets/`` for anything built for v0.3.0 and up (almost certainly what you're doing). These files contain a detailed mapping of configuration options with acceptable values, defaults, and relational rule-sets. Hello World has no configuration, as you can see `here <https://github.com/Start9Labs/hello-world-wrapper/blob/0.3.0/assets/compat/config_spec.yaml>`_. Instead, let's take a look at our ``config_spec`` for Embassy Pages, which actually has some config options:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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homepage:
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name: Homepage
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description: The page that will be displayed when your Embassy Pages .onion address is visited. Since this page is technically publicly accessible, you can choose to which type of page to display.
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type: union
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default: welcome
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tag:
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id: type
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name: Type
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variant-names:
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welcome: Welcome
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index: Subdomain Index
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filebrowser: Web Page
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redirect: Redirect
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fuck-off: Fuck Off
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variants:
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welcome: {}
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index: {}
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filebrowser:
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directory:
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type: string
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name: Directory Path
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description: The path to the directory in File Browser that contains the static files of your website. For example, a value of "websites/resume_site" would tell Embassy Pages to look for that directory in File Browser.
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pattern: "^(\\.|[a-zA-Z0-9_ -][a-zA-Z0-9_ .-]*|([a-zA-Z0-9_ .-][a-zA-Z0-9_ -]+\\.*)+)(/[a-zA-Z0-9_ -][a-zA-Z0-9_ .-]*|/([a-zA-Z0-9_ .-][a-zA-Z0-9_ -]+\\.*)+)*/?$"
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pattern-description: Must be a valid relative file path
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nullable: false
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redirect:
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target:
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type: string
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name: Target Subdomain
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description: The name of the subdomain to redirect users to. This must be a valid subdomain site within your Embassy Pages.
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pattern: '^[a-z-]+$'
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pattern-description: May contain only lowercase characters and hyphens.
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|
nullable: false
|
|
fuck-off: {}
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|
subdomains:
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|
type: list
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|
name: Subdomains
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|
description: The websites you want to serve.
|
|
default: []
|
|
range: '[0, *)'
|
|
subtype: object
|
|
spec:
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|
unique-by: name
|
|
display-as: "{{name}}"
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|
spec:
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|
name:
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|
type: string
|
|
nullable: false
|
|
name: Subdomain name
|
|
description: The subdomain of your Embassy Pages .onion address to host the website on. For example, a value of "me" would produce a website hosted at http://me.myaddress.onion.
|
|
pattern: "^[a-z-]+$"
|
|
pattern-description: "May contain only lowercase characters and hyphens"
|
|
settings:
|
|
type: union
|
|
name: Settings
|
|
description: The desired behavior you want to occur when the subdomain is visited. You can either redirect to another subdomain, or load a web page from File Browser.
|
|
default: filebrowser
|
|
tag:
|
|
id: type
|
|
name: Type
|
|
variant-names:
|
|
filebrowser: Web Page
|
|
redirect: Redirect
|
|
variants:
|
|
filebrowser:
|
|
directory:
|
|
type: string
|
|
name: Directory Path
|
|
description: The path to the directory in File Browser that contains the static files of your website. For example, a value of "websites/resume_site" would tell Embassy Pages to look for that directory in File Browser.
|
|
pattern: "^(\\.|[a-zA-Z0-9_ -][a-zA-Z0-9_ .-]*|([a-zA-Z0-9_ .-][a-zA-Z0-9_ -]+\\.*)+)(/[a-zA-Z0-9_ -][a-zA-Z0-9_ .-]*|/([a-zA-Z0-9_ .-][a-zA-Z0-9_ -]+\\.*)+)*/?$"
|
|
pattern-description: Must be a valid relative file path
|
|
nullable: false
|
|
redirect:
|
|
target:
|
|
type: string
|
|
name: Target Subdomain
|
|
description: The subdomain of your Embassy Pages .onion address to redirect to. This should be the name of another subdomain on Embassy Pages. Leave empty to redirect to the homepage.
|
|
pattern: '^[a-z-]+$'
|
|
pattern-description: May contain only lowercase characters and hyphens.
|
|
nullable: false
|
|
|
|
We essentially have 2 config options (homepage and subdomains), with all of their specifications nested below them. Looking at the homepage, it contains a ``union`` type, which is a necessary dependency, which can be of 5 variants (welcome, index, filebrowser, redirect, or fuck-off). The below images show how this is displayed in the UI.
|
|
|
|
.. figure:: /_static/images/dev/pages0.svg
|
|
:width: 60%
|
|
:alt: Pages Config
|
|
|
|
.. figure:: /_static/images/dev/pages1.svg
|
|
:width: 60%
|
|
:alt: Pages Union
|
|
|
|
For all the possible types, please check our :ref:`Service Config Spec <service_config>`.
|
|
|
|
In our example, there is *no need* for a ``config_rules`` file. This is because there is not a rule-set required to define dependencies between config variables. An example of when this would be required would be the following code, from the [LND wrapper](https://github.com/Start9Labs/lnd-wrapper/blob/master/config_rules.yaml):
|
|
|
|
.. code-block:: yaml
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
- rule: '!(max-chan-size?) OR !(min-chan-size?) OR (#max-chan-size > #min-chan-size)'
|
|
description: "Maximum Channel Size must exceed Minimum Channel Size"
|
|
|
|
Here we see that a Maximum Channel Size **MUST** be one of 3 possible options in order to be a valid config.
|
|
|
|
Properties
|
|
==========
|
|
|
|
Next we need to create the Properties section for our package, to display any relevant info. The result of this step is a ``stats.yaml`` file, which is only populated at runtime. These commands will be issued in the ``docker_entrypoint`` file (or ``configurator``, if you are using one).
|
|
|
|
.. ***STATS.YAML IS APPARENTLY BEING DEPRECATED, THIS SECTION NEEDS COMMENT*** Possibly this is not actually the case?
|
|
|
|
Instructions
|
|
============
|
|
|
|
Instructions are the basic directions or any particular details that you would like to convey to the user to help get them on their way. Each wrapper repo should contain a ``docs`` directory which can include anything you'd like, but specifically if you include an ``instructions.md`` file, formatted in Markdown language, it will be displayed simply for the user as shown below.
|
|
|
|
.. figure:: /_static/images/dev/instructions.svg
|
|
:width: 60%
|
|
:alt: Instructions
|
|
|
|
You can find the ``instructions.md`` file for Embassy Pages `here <https://github.com/Start9Labs/embassy-pages-wrapper/tree/master/docs>`_ if you are interested.
|
|
|
|
Backups
|
|
=======
|
|
|
|
Everything in the root folder of the mounted system directory will be stored in an EOS backup. If you want to ignore any particular files for backup, you can create a ``.backupignore`` file and add the relative paths of any directories you would like ignored.
|
|
|
|
Submission Process
|
|
------------------
|
|
|
|
When you have built and tested your project for EmbassyOS, please send Start9 a submission with the project repository to dev@start9labs.com. After being reviewed for security and compatibility, the service will be deployed to the marketplace and available for all EmbassyOS users to download.
|
|
|
|
If you are deploying to an alternative marketplace, please shout it out in our community channels!
|