This application provides web services (based on the BrAPI standard) and a web interface with easy to use filters to facilitate the access to plant datasets from a federation of sources.
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Look at the contribution guide.
- Install
node
andyarn
Installation via nvm
is recommended for easier control of installed version:
https://github.com/creationix/nvm
nvm install 16.14.0
nvm use v16.14.0
- Install JS dependencies
cd web
yarn
- Install latest Java JDK8
See latest instructions for your operating system.
- (Optional) Install
docker
If you want to run an Elasticsearch and Kibana instance on your machine. You can use your favorite package manager for that
First make sure you have access to an Elasticsearch HTTP API server on http://127.0.0.1:9200
(either via ssh tunneling or by running a local server).
If you want to run an Elasticsearch server on your development machine you can use the docker
/docker-compose
configuration like so:
docker compose up
This will launch an Elasticsearch server (with port forwarding
9200
) and a Kibana server (with port forwarding5601
)
Warning: This repository does not automatically index data into Elasticsearch, you need to prepare your indices beforehand.
If you just need access to API, you can run:
./gradlew bootRun
If you are developing and need to work on the web
assets (scripts, styles, etc),
you'll need to run the application with the dev
profile:
./gradlew bootRun --args='--spring.profiles.active=dev'
Otherwise, for the complete server (backend APIs + web interface), you can run:
./gradlew assemble && java -jar backend/build/libs/faidare.jar
The server should then be accessible at http://localhost:8380/faidare-dev
The web
directory contains the scripts and styles used by the thymeleaf templates
when a Germplasm, Study or Site page is rendered.
The build process for these assets can be run with the following command:
cd web
yarn watch
yarn watch
automatically picks up the changes in any files,
and rebuild the resulting assets (thanks to Webpack).
Make sure the backend is running with the dev
profile if you do so (see above),
otherwise the changes won't be shown in the browser.
yarn watch:prod
is also available to use production settings,
while yarn build
and yarn build:prod
do the same but without watching the changes.
Before all, take care to get data locally before running any indexing script.
Data indexing to your local Elasticsearch is done using the following command (take care to change the path to local data). Note that your local Elasticsearch instance should be already runing using docker-compose up
:
docker run -t --volume /path/to/local/data:/opt/data/ --network=container:elasticsearch-faidare registry.forgemia.inra.fr/urgi-is/docker-rare/faidare-loader:latest -jsonDir /opt/data/ --help
Remove the --help
parameter to run the loading with default params.
If you depend on committed changes in indexing scripts under a specific branch (the docker image should have been automatically created by the CI), you need to change the tag of the docker image according to the branch name (ie. for branch epic/merge-faidare-dd
, use tag epic-merge-faidare-dd
, see CI_COMMIT_REF_SLUG
Gitlab predefined variable), as following:
docker run -t --volume /path/to/local/data:/opt/data/ --network=container:elasticsearch-faidare registry.forgemia.inra.fr/urgi-is/docker-rare/faidare-loader:epic-merge-faidare-dd` -jsonDir /opt/data/ --help
TL;DR section above expects to have an available docker image on the forgemia docker registry. The Gitlab CI rebuil it when needed, but you can update or push such an image using the following commands:
# build the image
docker build -t registry.forgemia.inra.fr/urgi-is/docker-rare/faidare-loader:latest .
# Login before pushing the image
docker login registry.forgemia.inra.fr/urgi-is/docker-rare -u <your ForgeMIA username>
# push the built image
docker push registry.forgemia.inra.fr/urgi-is/docker-rare/faidare-loader:latest
That should ease the indexing of data without having to craft a dedicated environment.
When creating merge requests on the ForgeMIA GitLab, the GitLab CI will automatically run the tests of the project (no need to do anything).
If you want to run the GitLab CI locally, you have to follow this steps:
- Install gitlab-runner
- Run the following command (with the correct GnpIS security token):
gitlab-runner exec docker test
On bootstrap, the application will try to connect to a remote Spring Cloud config server
to fetch its configuration.
The details of this remote server are filled in the bootstrap.yml
file.
By default, it tries to connect to the remote server on http://localhost:8888
but it can of course be changed, or even configured via the SPRING_CONFIG_URI
environment variable.
It will try to fetch the configuration for the application name faidare
, and the default profile.
If such a configuration is not found, it will then fallback to the local application.yml
properties.
To avoid running the Spring Cloud config server every time when developing the application,
all the properties are still available in application.yml
even if they are configured on the remote Spring Cloud server as well.
The configuration is currently only read on startup, meaning the application has to be rebooted if the configuration is changed on the Spring Cloud server. For a dynamic reload without restarting the application, see http://cloud.spring.io/spring-cloud-static/Finchley.SR1/single/spring-cloud.html#refresh-scope to check what has to be changed.
If you want to use a Spring Cloud configuration server, please refer to https://spring.io/guides/gs/centralized-configuration/