Open-source blogs and content websites platform, made for the 21st century.
- Node.js
- NPM
- Docker / MongoDB
- (Optional: Redis)
- Docker
- Docker Compose
$ npm install
$ npm run build
$ npm start
// In case you have separated MongoDB instance on your local machine:
$ npm run dev
// In case you don't:
$ npm run dev --x=all
Before running a docker-compose environment, you'll need an .env
file and the compose
library.
You can just copy the .env.example
and call it .env
(manually), but you can also do it on command line:
$ cd compose
# for linux or mac:
$ cp .env.example .env
# for all operation systems (including windows):
$ npm run create-env
Running Greenpress via Docker-Compose is a very simple task. You might need to pre-install Docker and Docker Compose, and then run these commands:
$ cd compose
$ docker-compose up
When using dockerized solution, you can choose to run each service separately, and scale each service according to your needs. To run a composition that is more suitable to those cases, use the "scaled" yaml:
$ cd compose
$ docker-compose -f docker-compose.scaled.yml up
If you're using a small machine, such as shared hosting packages, or low cpu or memory cloud services, you should probably use the basic environment, such as the regular compose file, or directly using Node.js.
There are 2 ways to extend the default Greenpress configurations.
Basic way is by environment variables, and the second part is to add a greenpress.config.js
file to your project's root folder.
The greenpress.config.js
can either export the configuration object, or export a function that will get the base configuration object, and expected to return a new configuration object.
Note that the base configuration object passed to the function will include data that calculated by environment variables before.