I have been working on a long-running personal Phoenix project since Phoenix 1.0.2. Over the past year and a half or so, Phoenix and Elixir have undergone numerous changes, and some of them (okay most of them) broke my application code. Things really went south after I found myself working on multiple different projects that were built on different Phoenix versions. This reminded me a lot of the early Ruby and Rails days (and fighting rbenv and bundle).
This project was conceived to deal with the issues of running different Elixir and Phoenix versions and supporting the development of apps built with different Elixir and Phoenix versions.
After cloning this repository, open the folder in Visual Studio Code's Remote Extension to get a full Development Environment (with PostgreSQL Database) spun up automatically.
See https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/remote/containers for more details.
It's so simple: just clone this repository.
You can specify a particular Phoenix version by targeting the corresponding release tag of this repository.
For instance, for a dockerized development environment for Phoenix 1.4.6 you could run:
git clone -b 1.4.6 https://github.com/nicbet/docker-phoenix ~/Projects/hello-phoenix
Navigate the to where you cloned this repository, for example:
cd ~/Projects/hello-phoenix
Initialize a new phoenix application. The following command will create a new Phoenix application called hello
under the src/
directory, which is mounted inside the container under /app
(the default work dir).
./mix phx.new . --app hello
Why does this work? The docker-compose.yml
file specifies that your local src/
directory is mapped inside the docker container as /app
. And /app
in the container is marked as the working directory for any command that is being executed, such as mix phoenix.new
.
NOTE: It is important to specify your app name through the --app <name>
option, as Phoenix will otherwise name your app from the target directory passed in, which in our case is .
NOTE: It is okay to answer Y
when phoenix states that the /app
directory already exists.
NOTE: Starting from 1.3.0 the mix phoenix.new
command has been deprecated. You will have to use the phx.new
command instead of phoenix.new
or mix deps.get
will fail!
Copy your existing code Phoenix application code to the src/
directory in the cloned repository.
NOTE: the src/
directory won't exist so you'll have to create it first.
The docker-compose.yml
file defines a database service container named db
running a PostgreSQL database that is available to the main application container via the hostname db
. By default Phoenix assumes that you are running a database locally.
Modify the Ecto configuration src/config/dev.exs
to point to the DB container:
# Configure your database
config :test, Test.Repo,
adapter: Ecto.Adapters.Postgres,
username: "postgres",
password: "postgres",
database: "test_dev",
hostname: "db",
pool_size: 10
When you first start out, the db
container will have no databases. Let's initialize a development DB using Ecto:
./mix ecto.create
If you copied an existing application, now would be the time to run your database migrations.
./mix ecto.migrate
Starting your application is incredibly easy:
docker-compose up
Once up, it will be available under http://localhost:4000
To run commands other than mix
tasks, you can use the ./run
script.
./run iex -S mix