| 
									
										
											  
											
												(core) add machinery for self-managed flavor of Grist
Summary:
Currently, we have two ways that we deliver Grist. One is grist-core,
which has simple defaults and is relatively easy for third parties to
deploy. The second is our internal build for our SaaS, which is the
opposite. For self-managed Grist, a planned paid on-premise version
of Grist, I adopt the following approach:
 * Use the `grist-core` build mechanism, extending it to accept an
   overlay of extra code if present.
 * Extra code is supplied in a self-contained `ext` directory, with
   an `ext/app` directory that is of same structure as core `app`
   and `stubs/app`.
 * The `ext` directory also contains information about extra
   node dependencies needed beyond that of `grist-core`.
 * The `ext` directory is contained within our monorepo rather than
   `grist-core` since it may contain material not under the Apache
   license.
Docker builds are achieved in our monorepo by using the `--build-context`
functionality to add in `ext` during the regular `grist-core` build:
```
docker buildx build --load -t gristlabs/grist-ee --build-context=ext=../ext .
```
Incremental builds in our monorepo are achieved with the `build_core.sh` helper,
like:
```
buildtools/build_core.sh /tmp/self-managed
cd /tmp/self-managed
yarn start
```
The initial `ext` directory contains material for snapshotting to S3.
If you build the docker image as above, and have S3 access, you can
do something like:
```
docker run -p 8484:8484 --env GRIST_SESSION_SECRET=a-secret \
  --env GRIST_DOCS_S3_BUCKET=grist-docs-test \
  --env GRIST_DOCS_S3_PREFIX=self-managed \
  -v $HOME/.aws:/root/.aws -it gristlabs/grist-ee
```
This will start a version of Grist that is like `grist-core` but with
S3 snapshots enabled. To release this code to `grist-core`, it would
just need to move from `ext/app` to `app` within core.
I tried a lot of ways of organizing self-managed Grist, and this was
what made me happiest. There are a lot of trade-offs, but here is what
I was looking for:
 * Only OSS-code in grist-core. Adding mixed-license material there
   feels unfair to people already working with the repo. That said,
   a possible future is to move away from our private monorepo to
   a public mixed-licence repo, which could have the same relationship
   with grist-core as the monorepo has.
 * Minimal differences between self-managed builds and one of our
   existing builds, ideally hewing as close to grist-core as possible
   for ease of documentation, debugging, and maintenance.
 * Ideally, docker builds without copying files around (the new
   `--build-context` functionality made that possible).
 * Compatibility with monorepo build.
Expressing dependencies of the extra code in `ext` proved tricky to
do in a clean way. Yarn/npm fought me every step of the way - everything
related to optional dependencies was unsatisfactory in some respect.
Yarn2 is flexible but smells like it might be overreach. In the end,
organizing to install non-core dependencies one directory up from the
main build was a good simple trick that saved my bacon.
This diff gets us to the point of building `grist-ee` images conveniently,
but there isn't a public repo people can go look at to see its source. This
could be generated by taking `grist-core`, adding the `ext` directory
to it, and pushing to a distinct repository. I'm not in a hurry to do that,
since a PR to that repo would be hard to sync with our monorepo and
`grist-core`. Also, we don't have any licensing text ready for the `ext`
directory. So leaving that for future work.
Test Plan: manual
Reviewers: georgegevoian, alexmojaki
Reviewed By: georgegevoian, alexmojaki
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3415
											
										 
											2022-05-12 15:24:48 +00:00
										 |  |  | ################################################################################
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | ## The Grist source can be extended. This is a stub that can be overridden
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | ## from command line, as:
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | ##   docker buildx build -t ... --build-context=ext=<path> .
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | ## The code in <path> will then be built along with the rest of Grist.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | ################################################################################
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | FROM scratch as ext
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2020-10-10 00:54:23 +00:00
										 |  |  | ################################################################################
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2022-01-07 17:06:04 +00:00
										 |  |  | ## Javascript build stage
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2020-10-10 00:54:23 +00:00
										 |  |  | ################################################################################
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2023-10-11 21:03:02 +00:00
										 |  |  | FROM node:18-buster as builder
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2020-10-10 00:54:23 +00:00
										 |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | # Install all node dependencies.
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
											  
											
												(core) add machinery for self-managed flavor of Grist
Summary:
Currently, we have two ways that we deliver Grist. One is grist-core,
which has simple defaults and is relatively easy for third parties to
deploy. The second is our internal build for our SaaS, which is the
opposite. For self-managed Grist, a planned paid on-premise version
of Grist, I adopt the following approach:
 * Use the `grist-core` build mechanism, extending it to accept an
   overlay of extra code if present.
 * Extra code is supplied in a self-contained `ext` directory, with
   an `ext/app` directory that is of same structure as core `app`
   and `stubs/app`.
 * The `ext` directory also contains information about extra
   node dependencies needed beyond that of `grist-core`.
 * The `ext` directory is contained within our monorepo rather than
   `grist-core` since it may contain material not under the Apache
   license.
Docker builds are achieved in our monorepo by using the `--build-context`
functionality to add in `ext` during the regular `grist-core` build:
```
docker buildx build --load -t gristlabs/grist-ee --build-context=ext=../ext .
```
Incremental builds in our monorepo are achieved with the `build_core.sh` helper,
like:
```
buildtools/build_core.sh /tmp/self-managed
cd /tmp/self-managed
yarn start
```
The initial `ext` directory contains material for snapshotting to S3.
If you build the docker image as above, and have S3 access, you can
do something like:
```
docker run -p 8484:8484 --env GRIST_SESSION_SECRET=a-secret \
  --env GRIST_DOCS_S3_BUCKET=grist-docs-test \
  --env GRIST_DOCS_S3_PREFIX=self-managed \
  -v $HOME/.aws:/root/.aws -it gristlabs/grist-ee
```
This will start a version of Grist that is like `grist-core` but with
S3 snapshots enabled. To release this code to `grist-core`, it would
just need to move from `ext/app` to `app` within core.
I tried a lot of ways of organizing self-managed Grist, and this was
what made me happiest. There are a lot of trade-offs, but here is what
I was looking for:
 * Only OSS-code in grist-core. Adding mixed-license material there
   feels unfair to people already working with the repo. That said,
   a possible future is to move away from our private monorepo to
   a public mixed-licence repo, which could have the same relationship
   with grist-core as the monorepo has.
 * Minimal differences between self-managed builds and one of our
   existing builds, ideally hewing as close to grist-core as possible
   for ease of documentation, debugging, and maintenance.
 * Ideally, docker builds without copying files around (the new
   `--build-context` functionality made that possible).
 * Compatibility with monorepo build.
Expressing dependencies of the extra code in `ext` proved tricky to
do in a clean way. Yarn/npm fought me every step of the way - everything
related to optional dependencies was unsatisfactory in some respect.
Yarn2 is flexible but smells like it might be overreach. In the end,
organizing to install non-core dependencies one directory up from the
main build was a good simple trick that saved my bacon.
This diff gets us to the point of building `grist-ee` images conveniently,
but there isn't a public repo people can go look at to see its source. This
could be generated by taking `grist-core`, adding the `ext` directory
to it, and pushing to a distinct repository. I'm not in a hurry to do that,
since a PR to that repo would be hard to sync with our monorepo and
`grist-core`. Also, we don't have any licensing text ready for the `ext`
directory. So leaving that for future work.
Test Plan: manual
Reviewers: georgegevoian, alexmojaki
Reviewed By: georgegevoian, alexmojaki
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3415
											
										 
											2022-05-12 15:24:48 +00:00
										 |  |  | WORKDIR /grist
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | COPY package.json yarn.lock /grist/
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2022-09-11 23:33:11 +00:00
										 |  |  | RUN yarn install --frozen-lockfile --verbose --network-timeout 600000
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
											  
											
												(core) add machinery for self-managed flavor of Grist
Summary:
Currently, we have two ways that we deliver Grist. One is grist-core,
which has simple defaults and is relatively easy for third parties to
deploy. The second is our internal build for our SaaS, which is the
opposite. For self-managed Grist, a planned paid on-premise version
of Grist, I adopt the following approach:
 * Use the `grist-core` build mechanism, extending it to accept an
   overlay of extra code if present.
 * Extra code is supplied in a self-contained `ext` directory, with
   an `ext/app` directory that is of same structure as core `app`
   and `stubs/app`.
 * The `ext` directory also contains information about extra
   node dependencies needed beyond that of `grist-core`.
 * The `ext` directory is contained within our monorepo rather than
   `grist-core` since it may contain material not under the Apache
   license.
Docker builds are achieved in our monorepo by using the `--build-context`
functionality to add in `ext` during the regular `grist-core` build:
```
docker buildx build --load -t gristlabs/grist-ee --build-context=ext=../ext .
```
Incremental builds in our monorepo are achieved with the `build_core.sh` helper,
like:
```
buildtools/build_core.sh /tmp/self-managed
cd /tmp/self-managed
yarn start
```
The initial `ext` directory contains material for snapshotting to S3.
If you build the docker image as above, and have S3 access, you can
do something like:
```
docker run -p 8484:8484 --env GRIST_SESSION_SECRET=a-secret \
  --env GRIST_DOCS_S3_BUCKET=grist-docs-test \
  --env GRIST_DOCS_S3_PREFIX=self-managed \
  -v $HOME/.aws:/root/.aws -it gristlabs/grist-ee
```
This will start a version of Grist that is like `grist-core` but with
S3 snapshots enabled. To release this code to `grist-core`, it would
just need to move from `ext/app` to `app` within core.
I tried a lot of ways of organizing self-managed Grist, and this was
what made me happiest. There are a lot of trade-offs, but here is what
I was looking for:
 * Only OSS-code in grist-core. Adding mixed-license material there
   feels unfair to people already working with the repo. That said,
   a possible future is to move away from our private monorepo to
   a public mixed-licence repo, which could have the same relationship
   with grist-core as the monorepo has.
 * Minimal differences between self-managed builds and one of our
   existing builds, ideally hewing as close to grist-core as possible
   for ease of documentation, debugging, and maintenance.
 * Ideally, docker builds without copying files around (the new
   `--build-context` functionality made that possible).
 * Compatibility with monorepo build.
Expressing dependencies of the extra code in `ext` proved tricky to
do in a clean way. Yarn/npm fought me every step of the way - everything
related to optional dependencies was unsatisfactory in some respect.
Yarn2 is flexible but smells like it might be overreach. In the end,
organizing to install non-core dependencies one directory up from the
main build was a good simple trick that saved my bacon.
This diff gets us to the point of building `grist-ee` images conveniently,
but there isn't a public repo people can go look at to see its source. This
could be generated by taking `grist-core`, adding the `ext` directory
to it, and pushing to a distinct repository. I'm not in a hurry to do that,
since a PR to that repo would be hard to sync with our monorepo and
`grist-core`. Also, we don't have any licensing text ready for the `ext`
directory. So leaving that for future work.
Test Plan: manual
Reviewers: georgegevoian, alexmojaki
Reviewed By: georgegevoian, alexmojaki
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3415
											
										 
											2022-05-12 15:24:48 +00:00
										 |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | # Install any extra node dependencies (at root level, to avoid having to wrestle
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | # with merging them).
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | COPY --from=ext / /grist/ext
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | RUN \
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |  mkdir /node_modules && \
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |  cd /grist/ext && \
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2022-09-11 23:33:11 +00:00
										 |  |  |  { if [ -e package.json ] ; then yarn install --frozen-lockfile --modules-folder=/node_modules --verbose --network-timeout 600000 ; fi }
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2020-10-10 00:54:23 +00:00
										 |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | # Build node code.
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
											  
											
												(core) add machinery for self-managed flavor of Grist
Summary:
Currently, we have two ways that we deliver Grist. One is grist-core,
which has simple defaults and is relatively easy for third parties to
deploy. The second is our internal build for our SaaS, which is the
opposite. For self-managed Grist, a planned paid on-premise version
of Grist, I adopt the following approach:
 * Use the `grist-core` build mechanism, extending it to accept an
   overlay of extra code if present.
 * Extra code is supplied in a self-contained `ext` directory, with
   an `ext/app` directory that is of same structure as core `app`
   and `stubs/app`.
 * The `ext` directory also contains information about extra
   node dependencies needed beyond that of `grist-core`.
 * The `ext` directory is contained within our monorepo rather than
   `grist-core` since it may contain material not under the Apache
   license.
Docker builds are achieved in our monorepo by using the `--build-context`
functionality to add in `ext` during the regular `grist-core` build:
```
docker buildx build --load -t gristlabs/grist-ee --build-context=ext=../ext .
```
Incremental builds in our monorepo are achieved with the `build_core.sh` helper,
like:
```
buildtools/build_core.sh /tmp/self-managed
cd /tmp/self-managed
yarn start
```
The initial `ext` directory contains material for snapshotting to S3.
If you build the docker image as above, and have S3 access, you can
do something like:
```
docker run -p 8484:8484 --env GRIST_SESSION_SECRET=a-secret \
  --env GRIST_DOCS_S3_BUCKET=grist-docs-test \
  --env GRIST_DOCS_S3_PREFIX=self-managed \
  -v $HOME/.aws:/root/.aws -it gristlabs/grist-ee
```
This will start a version of Grist that is like `grist-core` but with
S3 snapshots enabled. To release this code to `grist-core`, it would
just need to move from `ext/app` to `app` within core.
I tried a lot of ways of organizing self-managed Grist, and this was
what made me happiest. There are a lot of trade-offs, but here is what
I was looking for:
 * Only OSS-code in grist-core. Adding mixed-license material there
   feels unfair to people already working with the repo. That said,
   a possible future is to move away from our private monorepo to
   a public mixed-licence repo, which could have the same relationship
   with grist-core as the monorepo has.
 * Minimal differences between self-managed builds and one of our
   existing builds, ideally hewing as close to grist-core as possible
   for ease of documentation, debugging, and maintenance.
 * Ideally, docker builds without copying files around (the new
   `--build-context` functionality made that possible).
 * Compatibility with monorepo build.
Expressing dependencies of the extra code in `ext` proved tricky to
do in a clean way. Yarn/npm fought me every step of the way - everything
related to optional dependencies was unsatisfactory in some respect.
Yarn2 is flexible but smells like it might be overreach. In the end,
organizing to install non-core dependencies one directory up from the
main build was a good simple trick that saved my bacon.
This diff gets us to the point of building `grist-ee` images conveniently,
but there isn't a public repo people can go look at to see its source. This
could be generated by taking `grist-core`, adding the `ext` directory
to it, and pushing to a distinct repository. I'm not in a hurry to do that,
since a PR to that repo would be hard to sync with our monorepo and
`grist-core`. Also, we don't have any licensing text ready for the `ext`
directory. So leaving that for future work.
Test Plan: manual
Reviewers: georgegevoian, alexmojaki
Reviewed By: georgegevoian, alexmojaki
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3415
											
										 
											2022-05-12 15:24:48 +00:00
										 |  |  | COPY tsconfig.json /grist
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | COPY tsconfig-ext.json /grist
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | COPY test/tsconfig.json /grist/test/tsconfig.json
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2022-07-06 15:13:24 +00:00
										 |  |  | COPY test/chai-as-promised.js /grist/test/chai-as-promised.js
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
											  
											
												(core) add machinery for self-managed flavor of Grist
Summary:
Currently, we have two ways that we deliver Grist. One is grist-core,
which has simple defaults and is relatively easy for third parties to
deploy. The second is our internal build for our SaaS, which is the
opposite. For self-managed Grist, a planned paid on-premise version
of Grist, I adopt the following approach:
 * Use the `grist-core` build mechanism, extending it to accept an
   overlay of extra code if present.
 * Extra code is supplied in a self-contained `ext` directory, with
   an `ext/app` directory that is of same structure as core `app`
   and `stubs/app`.
 * The `ext` directory also contains information about extra
   node dependencies needed beyond that of `grist-core`.
 * The `ext` directory is contained within our monorepo rather than
   `grist-core` since it may contain material not under the Apache
   license.
Docker builds are achieved in our monorepo by using the `--build-context`
functionality to add in `ext` during the regular `grist-core` build:
```
docker buildx build --load -t gristlabs/grist-ee --build-context=ext=../ext .
```
Incremental builds in our monorepo are achieved with the `build_core.sh` helper,
like:
```
buildtools/build_core.sh /tmp/self-managed
cd /tmp/self-managed
yarn start
```
The initial `ext` directory contains material for snapshotting to S3.
If you build the docker image as above, and have S3 access, you can
do something like:
```
docker run -p 8484:8484 --env GRIST_SESSION_SECRET=a-secret \
  --env GRIST_DOCS_S3_BUCKET=grist-docs-test \
  --env GRIST_DOCS_S3_PREFIX=self-managed \
  -v $HOME/.aws:/root/.aws -it gristlabs/grist-ee
```
This will start a version of Grist that is like `grist-core` but with
S3 snapshots enabled. To release this code to `grist-core`, it would
just need to move from `ext/app` to `app` within core.
I tried a lot of ways of organizing self-managed Grist, and this was
what made me happiest. There are a lot of trade-offs, but here is what
I was looking for:
 * Only OSS-code in grist-core. Adding mixed-license material there
   feels unfair to people already working with the repo. That said,
   a possible future is to move away from our private monorepo to
   a public mixed-licence repo, which could have the same relationship
   with grist-core as the monorepo has.
 * Minimal differences between self-managed builds and one of our
   existing builds, ideally hewing as close to grist-core as possible
   for ease of documentation, debugging, and maintenance.
 * Ideally, docker builds without copying files around (the new
   `--build-context` functionality made that possible).
 * Compatibility with monorepo build.
Expressing dependencies of the extra code in `ext` proved tricky to
do in a clean way. Yarn/npm fought me every step of the way - everything
related to optional dependencies was unsatisfactory in some respect.
Yarn2 is flexible but smells like it might be overreach. In the end,
organizing to install non-core dependencies one directory up from the
main build was a good simple trick that saved my bacon.
This diff gets us to the point of building `grist-ee` images conveniently,
but there isn't a public repo people can go look at to see its source. This
could be generated by taking `grist-core`, adding the `ext` directory
to it, and pushing to a distinct repository. I'm not in a hurry to do that,
since a PR to that repo would be hard to sync with our monorepo and
`grist-core`. Also, we don't have any licensing text ready for the `ext`
directory. So leaving that for future work.
Test Plan: manual
Reviewers: georgegevoian, alexmojaki
Reviewed By: georgegevoian, alexmojaki
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3415
											
										 
											2022-05-12 15:24:48 +00:00
										 |  |  | COPY app /grist/app
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | COPY stubs /grist/stubs
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | COPY buildtools /grist/buildtools
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2021-04-02 23:11:27 +00:00
										 |  |  | RUN yarn run build:prod
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2020-10-10 00:54:23 +00:00
										 |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2022-01-07 17:06:04 +00:00
										 |  |  | ################################################################################
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | ## Python collection stage
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | ################################################################################
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2023-08-04 15:59:52 +00:00
										 |  |  | # Fetch python3.11 and python2.7
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | FROM python:3.11-slim-buster as collector
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2022-01-07 17:06:04 +00:00
										 |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2020-10-10 00:54:23 +00:00
										 |  |  | # Install all python dependencies.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | ADD sandbox/requirements.txt requirements.txt
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2022-01-07 17:06:04 +00:00
										 |  |  | ADD sandbox/requirements3.txt requirements3.txt
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2020-10-10 00:54:23 +00:00
										 |  |  | RUN \
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   apt update && \
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2022-04-03 23:43:29 +00:00
										 |  |  |   apt install -y --no-install-recommends python2 python-pip python-setuptools \
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   build-essential libxml2-dev libxslt-dev python-dev zlib1g-dev && \
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   pip2 install wheel && \
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2022-01-07 17:06:04 +00:00
										 |  |  |   pip2 install -r requirements.txt && \
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   pip3 install -r requirements3.txt
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2020-10-10 00:54:23 +00:00
										 |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2022-03-24 20:27:34 +00:00
										 |  |  | ################################################################################
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | ## Sandbox collection stage
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | ################################################################################
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | # Fetch gvisor-based sandbox. Note, to enable it to run within default
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | # unprivileged docker, layers of protection that require privilege have
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | # been stripped away, see https://github.com/google/gvisor/issues/4371
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | FROM gristlabs/gvisor-unprivileged:buster as sandbox
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2020-10-10 00:54:23 +00:00
										 |  |  | ################################################################################
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | ## Run-time stage
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | ################################################################################
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | # Now, start preparing final image.
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2023-10-11 21:03:02 +00:00
										 |  |  | FROM node:18-buster-slim
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2020-10-10 00:54:23 +00:00
										 |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2022-01-07 17:06:04 +00:00
										 |  |  | # Install libexpat1, libsqlite3-0 for python3 library binary dependencies.
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2022-03-24 20:27:34 +00:00
										 |  |  | # Install pgrep for managing gvisor processes.
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2022-01-07 17:06:04 +00:00
										 |  |  | RUN \
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   apt-get update && \
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2022-03-24 20:27:34 +00:00
										 |  |  |   apt-get install -y --no-install-recommends libexpat1 libsqlite3-0 procps && \
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2022-01-07 17:06:04 +00:00
										 |  |  |   rm -rf /var/lib/apt/lists/*
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | # Keep all storage user may want to persist in a distinct directory
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | RUN mkdir -p /persist/docs
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2020-10-10 00:54:23 +00:00
										 |  |  | # Copy node files.
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
											  
											
												(core) add machinery for self-managed flavor of Grist
Summary:
Currently, we have two ways that we deliver Grist. One is grist-core,
which has simple defaults and is relatively easy for third parties to
deploy. The second is our internal build for our SaaS, which is the
opposite. For self-managed Grist, a planned paid on-premise version
of Grist, I adopt the following approach:
 * Use the `grist-core` build mechanism, extending it to accept an
   overlay of extra code if present.
 * Extra code is supplied in a self-contained `ext` directory, with
   an `ext/app` directory that is of same structure as core `app`
   and `stubs/app`.
 * The `ext` directory also contains information about extra
   node dependencies needed beyond that of `grist-core`.
 * The `ext` directory is contained within our monorepo rather than
   `grist-core` since it may contain material not under the Apache
   license.
Docker builds are achieved in our monorepo by using the `--build-context`
functionality to add in `ext` during the regular `grist-core` build:
```
docker buildx build --load -t gristlabs/grist-ee --build-context=ext=../ext .
```
Incremental builds in our monorepo are achieved with the `build_core.sh` helper,
like:
```
buildtools/build_core.sh /tmp/self-managed
cd /tmp/self-managed
yarn start
```
The initial `ext` directory contains material for snapshotting to S3.
If you build the docker image as above, and have S3 access, you can
do something like:
```
docker run -p 8484:8484 --env GRIST_SESSION_SECRET=a-secret \
  --env GRIST_DOCS_S3_BUCKET=grist-docs-test \
  --env GRIST_DOCS_S3_PREFIX=self-managed \
  -v $HOME/.aws:/root/.aws -it gristlabs/grist-ee
```
This will start a version of Grist that is like `grist-core` but with
S3 snapshots enabled. To release this code to `grist-core`, it would
just need to move from `ext/app` to `app` within core.
I tried a lot of ways of organizing self-managed Grist, and this was
what made me happiest. There are a lot of trade-offs, but here is what
I was looking for:
 * Only OSS-code in grist-core. Adding mixed-license material there
   feels unfair to people already working with the repo. That said,
   a possible future is to move away from our private monorepo to
   a public mixed-licence repo, which could have the same relationship
   with grist-core as the monorepo has.
 * Minimal differences between self-managed builds and one of our
   existing builds, ideally hewing as close to grist-core as possible
   for ease of documentation, debugging, and maintenance.
 * Ideally, docker builds without copying files around (the new
   `--build-context` functionality made that possible).
 * Compatibility with monorepo build.
Expressing dependencies of the extra code in `ext` proved tricky to
do in a clean way. Yarn/npm fought me every step of the way - everything
related to optional dependencies was unsatisfactory in some respect.
Yarn2 is flexible but smells like it might be overreach. In the end,
organizing to install non-core dependencies one directory up from the
main build was a good simple trick that saved my bacon.
This diff gets us to the point of building `grist-ee` images conveniently,
but there isn't a public repo people can go look at to see its source. This
could be generated by taking `grist-core`, adding the `ext` directory
to it, and pushing to a distinct repository. I'm not in a hurry to do that,
since a PR to that repo would be hard to sync with our monorepo and
`grist-core`. Also, we don't have any licensing text ready for the `ext`
directory. So leaving that for future work.
Test Plan: manual
Reviewers: georgegevoian, alexmojaki
Reviewed By: georgegevoian, alexmojaki
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3415
											
										 
											2022-05-12 15:24:48 +00:00
										 |  |  | COPY --from=builder /node_modules /node_modules
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | COPY --from=builder /grist/node_modules /grist/node_modules
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | COPY --from=builder /grist/_build /grist/_build
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | COPY --from=builder /grist/static /grist/static-built
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2020-10-10 00:54:23 +00:00
										 |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2022-01-07 17:06:04 +00:00
										 |  |  | # Copy python files.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | COPY --from=collector /usr/bin/python2.7 /usr/bin/python2.7
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | COPY --from=collector /usr/lib/python2.7 /usr/lib/python2.7
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | COPY --from=collector /usr/local/lib/python2.7 /usr/local/lib/python2.7
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2023-08-04 15:59:52 +00:00
										 |  |  | COPY --from=collector /usr/local/bin/python3.11 /usr/bin/python3.11
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | COPY --from=collector /usr/local/lib/python3.11 /usr/local/lib/python3.11
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | COPY --from=collector /usr/local/lib/libpython3.11.* /usr/local/lib/
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2022-01-07 17:06:04 +00:00
										 |  |  | # Set default to python3
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2022-03-24 20:27:34 +00:00
										 |  |  | RUN \
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2023-08-04 15:59:52 +00:00
										 |  |  |   ln -s /usr/bin/python3.11 /usr/bin/python && \
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   ln -s /usr/bin/python3.11 /usr/bin/python3 && \
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2022-03-24 20:27:34 +00:00
										 |  |  |   ldconfig
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | # Copy runsc.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | COPY --from=sandbox /runsc /usr/bin/runsc
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2020-10-10 00:54:23 +00:00
										 |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | # Add files needed for running server.
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
											  
											
												(core) add machinery for self-managed flavor of Grist
Summary:
Currently, we have two ways that we deliver Grist. One is grist-core,
which has simple defaults and is relatively easy for third parties to
deploy. The second is our internal build for our SaaS, which is the
opposite. For self-managed Grist, a planned paid on-premise version
of Grist, I adopt the following approach:
 * Use the `grist-core` build mechanism, extending it to accept an
   overlay of extra code if present.
 * Extra code is supplied in a self-contained `ext` directory, with
   an `ext/app` directory that is of same structure as core `app`
   and `stubs/app`.
 * The `ext` directory also contains information about extra
   node dependencies needed beyond that of `grist-core`.
 * The `ext` directory is contained within our monorepo rather than
   `grist-core` since it may contain material not under the Apache
   license.
Docker builds are achieved in our monorepo by using the `--build-context`
functionality to add in `ext` during the regular `grist-core` build:
```
docker buildx build --load -t gristlabs/grist-ee --build-context=ext=../ext .
```
Incremental builds in our monorepo are achieved with the `build_core.sh` helper,
like:
```
buildtools/build_core.sh /tmp/self-managed
cd /tmp/self-managed
yarn start
```
The initial `ext` directory contains material for snapshotting to S3.
If you build the docker image as above, and have S3 access, you can
do something like:
```
docker run -p 8484:8484 --env GRIST_SESSION_SECRET=a-secret \
  --env GRIST_DOCS_S3_BUCKET=grist-docs-test \
  --env GRIST_DOCS_S3_PREFIX=self-managed \
  -v $HOME/.aws:/root/.aws -it gristlabs/grist-ee
```
This will start a version of Grist that is like `grist-core` but with
S3 snapshots enabled. To release this code to `grist-core`, it would
just need to move from `ext/app` to `app` within core.
I tried a lot of ways of organizing self-managed Grist, and this was
what made me happiest. There are a lot of trade-offs, but here is what
I was looking for:
 * Only OSS-code in grist-core. Adding mixed-license material there
   feels unfair to people already working with the repo. That said,
   a possible future is to move away from our private monorepo to
   a public mixed-licence repo, which could have the same relationship
   with grist-core as the monorepo has.
 * Minimal differences between self-managed builds and one of our
   existing builds, ideally hewing as close to grist-core as possible
   for ease of documentation, debugging, and maintenance.
 * Ideally, docker builds without copying files around (the new
   `--build-context` functionality made that possible).
 * Compatibility with monorepo build.
Expressing dependencies of the extra code in `ext` proved tricky to
do in a clean way. Yarn/npm fought me every step of the way - everything
related to optional dependencies was unsatisfactory in some respect.
Yarn2 is flexible but smells like it might be overreach. In the end,
organizing to install non-core dependencies one directory up from the
main build was a good simple trick that saved my bacon.
This diff gets us to the point of building `grist-ee` images conveniently,
but there isn't a public repo people can go look at to see its source. This
could be generated by taking `grist-core`, adding the `ext` directory
to it, and pushing to a distinct repository. I'm not in a hurry to do that,
since a PR to that repo would be hard to sync with our monorepo and
`grist-core`. Also, we don't have any licensing text ready for the `ext`
directory. So leaving that for future work.
Test Plan: manual
Reviewers: georgegevoian, alexmojaki
Reviewed By: georgegevoian, alexmojaki
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3415
											
										 
											2022-05-12 15:24:48 +00:00
										 |  |  | ADD package.json /grist/package.json
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | ADD bower_components /grist/bower_components
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | ADD sandbox /grist/sandbox
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | ADD plugins /grist/plugins
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | ADD static /grist/static
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | # Finalize static directory
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | RUN \
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   mv /grist/static-built/* /grist/static && \
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   rmdir /grist/static-built
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | WORKDIR /grist
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2020-10-10 00:54:23 +00:00
										 |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | # Set some default environment variables to give a setup that works out of the box when
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | # started as:
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | #   docker run -p 8484:8484 -it <image>
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | # Variables will need to be overridden for other setups.
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2022-04-06 19:52:24 +00:00
										 |  |  | #
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | # GRIST_SANDBOX_FLAVOR is set to unsandboxed by default, because it
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | # appears that the services people use to run docker containers have
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | # a wide variety of security settings and the functionality needed for
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | # sandboxing may not be possible in every case. For default docker
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | # settings, you can get sandboxing as follows:
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | #   docker run --env GRIST_SANDBOX_FLAVOR=gvisor -p 8484:8484 -it <image>
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | #
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2022-03-24 20:27:34 +00:00
										 |  |  | ENV \
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   PYTHON_VERSION_ON_CREATION=3 \
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   GRIST_ORG_IN_PATH=true \
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   GRIST_HOST=0.0.0.0 \
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   GRIST_SINGLE_PORT=true \
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   GRIST_SERVE_SAME_ORIGIN=true \
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   GRIST_DATA_DIR=/persist/docs \
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   GRIST_INST_DIR=/persist \
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   GRIST_SESSION_COOKIE=grist_core \
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   GVISOR_FLAGS="-unprivileged -ignore-cgroups" \
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2022-04-06 19:52:24 +00:00
										 |  |  |   GRIST_SANDBOX_FLAVOR=unsandboxed \
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2022-03-24 20:27:34 +00:00
										 |  |  |   TYPEORM_DATABASE=/persist/home.sqlite3
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2020-10-10 00:54:23 +00:00
										 |  |  | EXPOSE 8484
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2022-03-24 20:27:34 +00:00
										 |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | CMD ./sandbox/run.sh
 |