770eefcd08
## Issue being fixed or feature implemented Upgraded version of cppcheck ## What was done? ## How Has This Been Tested? Ran cppcheck ## Breaking Changes None ## Checklist: _Go over all the following points, and put an `x` in all the boxes that apply._ - [ ] I have performed a self-review of my own code - [ ] I have commented my code, particularly in hard-to-understand areas - [ ] I have added or updated relevant unit/integration/functional/e2e tests - [ ] I have made corresponding changes to the documentation - [x] I have assigned this pull request to a milestone _(for repository code-owners and collaborators only)_ |
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ci | ||
deploy | ||
develop | ||
README.md |
Containers
This directory contains configuration files for containerization utilities.
Currently two Docker containers exist, ci
defines how Dash's GitLab CI container is built and the dev
builds on top of the ci
to provide a containerized development environment that is as close as possible to CI for contributors!
Usage Guide
We utilise edrevo's dockerfile-plus, a syntax extension that leverages Docker BuildKit to reduce the amount of repetitive code.
As BuildKit is opt-in within many currently supported versions of Docker (as of this writing), you need to
set the following environment variables before continuing. While not needed after the initial docker-compose build
(barring updates to the Dockerfile
), we recommend placing this in your ~/.bash_profile
/~/.zshrc
or equivalent
export DOCKER_BUILDKIT=1
export COMPOSE_DOCKER_CLI_BUILD=1
After that, it's simply a matter of building and running your own development container. You can use extensions for your IDE like Visual Studio Code's Remote Containers to run terminal commands from inside the terminal and build Dash Core.
cd contrib/containers/develop
docker-compose build
docker-compose run container