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Gongfu

Gitter

Gongfu is a mashup of Go and (ng) Angular used together to build a website. This template will get you started to build a Smart Angular Client and a RESTful API Go server with a Postgres database. This template uses Vagrant/VirtualBox to build a virtual environment and NodeJS/Grunt to do task building. The app is a simple Twitter clone that does registration and chirps (tweets). It uses a third-party muxer and implements TLS. Feel free to email me if you have an questions.

This is the source code to a presentation I gave at the SF Golang meetup in Sept. Here's the link to it: http://www.hakkalabs.co/articles/angularjs-go-lean-combination#!

VIDEO

App Stack

Dev Stack

  • Vagrant
    • vagrant up | halt | destroy | ssh
  • Grunt
    • build
    • package
    • test
    • deploy

Gongfu setup

Step 1: Build a Vagrant instance Step 2: Configure instance Step 3: Compile Gongfu app Step 4: Launch Gongfu app

Step 1: Build a Vagrant/Virtualbox instance

On your host/dev machine you will need to install

The devops directory will be will home directory for Vagrant and your admin tools and scripts. In the directory you will start the instance with:

  • vagrant up

The Vagrantfile

VAGRANTFILE_API_VERSION = "2"

Vagrant.configure(VAGRANTFILE_API_VERSION) do |config|
  # Ubuntu-13.10
  config.vm.box = "Ubuntu-13.10"
  config.vm.box_url = "http://opscode-vm-bento.s3.amazonaws.com/vagrant/virtualbox/opscode_ubuntu-13.10_chef-provisionerless.box"
  config.vm.synced_folder "../.", "/home/vagrant/code"
  config.ssh.forward_x11 = true
  config.vm.network "forwarded_port", guest: 8000, host: 8000, auto_correct: true
  config.vm.network "forwarded_port", guest: 3000, host: 3000, auto_correct: true
  config.vm.network "forwarded_port", guest: 5432, host: 5432, auto_correct: true
  config.vm.network "private_network", ip: "192.168.10.10"
  config.vm.provider :virtualbox do |virtualbox|
    virtualbox.customize ["modifyvm", :id, "--name", "gongfu"] # Name the INSTANCE (app), make unique
    virtualbox.customize ["modifyvm", :id, "--memory", "2048"]
  end
  config.vm.provision :shell, :path => "ubuntu-13.10-64-install.sh"
end

Step2: Configure instance

This application and installation was designed to driven by one config file cfg.json. The ubuntu-13.10-64-install.sh script will configure your Postgres database with these settings. The Grunt build tool will also use this cfg file for its settings. As well as the Gongfu app. I would modify all the "gongfu" to your app's name and of course change the "db_password".

cfg.json

{
   "appname" : "gongfu",
   "http_port" : "",
   "server" : "localhost",
   "db_server" : "localhost",
   "db_name" : "gongfu",
   "db_user" : "gongfu",
   "db_password" : "kungfupanda"
}
  • vagrant ssh will log you into the instance
  • In the instance you will see that /home/vagrant/code is a sym-link to your host's repo
  • So if you, cd ~/code/devops, you will be in the devops dir in your instance and you can run
  • ubuntu-13.10-64-install.sh to configure the instance
  • Use sys-check.sh to see your status and version of software installed
  • Use go-packages.sh to install the Go packages

Step 3: Compile Gongfu app

  • cd back to cd ~/code to get back to the source root directory
  • sudo npm install will install the NodeJS packages for the Grunt build tool
  • You can use devops/sys-check.sh to check your installation
  • From here you want to look in the Gruntfile.js for the tasks available

partial Gruntfile.js

  grunt.registerTask('dev', ['files', 'shell:gotest', 'go:build:myapp', 'shell:run']);
  grunt.registerTask('production', ['files', 'shell:gotest', 'go:build:myapp']);

  // database tasks
  grunt.registerTask('pgusers', ['shell:psqlusers']);
  grunt.registerTask('pgcreate', ['shell:psqlcreate']);
  grunt.registerTask('pgdrop', ['shell:psqldrop']);
  grunt.registerTask('pgdump', ['shell:psqldump']);
  grunt.registerTask('pglist', ['shell:psqllist']);
  grunt.registerTask('pgrebuild', ['shell:psqldrop', 'shell:psqlcreate']);
  grunt.registerTask('pgrestore', ['shell:psqlrestore']);

  // default build is dev
  grunt.registerTask('build', ['dev']);
  grunt.registerTask('test', ['e2e', 'unit']);
  grunt.registerTask('run', ['build', 'shell:run']);
  grunt.registerTask('got', ['shell:gotest']);
  grunt.registerTask('pack', ['compress:main']);
  • You can use grunt build that will launch a "dev" task, that a macro for "grunt.registerTask('dev', ['files', 'shell:gotest', 'go:build:myapp', 'shell:run']);". This one task will concat files, run the go unit tests, build the go executable and run that executable.

Step 4: Running the Gongfu app

  • You can also just run the app by using the executable sh gongfuServer
  • From your host machine you can reach the Gongfu instance at 192.168.10.10, this address can be changed in your Vagrantfile.
  • When you want to terminate the instance, just exit back out to the host and run vagrant halt in the "devops" directory.

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