# Deploying an OpenBikeSensor Portal with Docker ## Introduction The main idea of this document is to provide an easy docker-based production-ready setup of the openbikesensor portal. It uses the [the traefik proxy](https://doc.traefik.io/traefik/) as a reverse proxy, which listens on port 80 and 443. Based on some labels, traefik routes the domains to the corresponding docker containers. ## Before Getting Started The guide and example configuration assumes one domain, which points to the server's IP address. This documentation uses `portal.example.com` as an example. The API is hosted at `https://portal.example.com/api`, while the main frontend is reachable at the domain root. ## Setup instructions ### Clone the repository First create a folder somewhere in your system, in the example we use `/opt/openbikesensor` and export it as `$ROOT` to more easily refer to it. Clone the repository to `$ROOT/source`. ```bash export ROOT=/opt/openbikesensor mkdir -p $ROOT cd $ROOT git clone --recursive https://github.com/openbikesensor/portal source/ # If you accidentally cloned without --recursive, fix it by running: # git submodule update --init --recursive ``` Unless otherwise mentioned, commands below assume your current working directory to be `$ROOT`. ### Configure `traefik.toml` ```bash mkdir -p config/ cp source/deployment/examples/traefik.toml config/traefik.toml vim config/traefik.toml ``` Configure your email in the `config/traefik.toml`. This email is used by *Let's Encrypt* to send you some emails regarding your certificates. ### Configure `docker-compose.yaml` ```bash cp source/deployment/examples/docker-compose.yaml docker-compose.yaml vim docker-compose.yaml ``` * Change the domain where it occurs, such as in `Host()` rules. * Generate a secure password for the PostgreSQL database user. You will need to configure this in the application later. ### Create a keycloak instance Follow the [official guides](https://www.keycloak.org/documentation) to create your own keycloak server. You can run the keycloak in docker and include it in your `docker-compose.yaml`, if you like. Documenting the details of this is out of scope for our project. Please make sure to configure: * An admin account for yourself * A realm for the portal * A client in that realm with "Access Type" set to "confidential" and a redirect URL of this pattern: `https://portal.example.com/login/redirect` ### Prepare database Follow the procedure outlined in [README.md](../README.md) under "Prepare database". ### Import OpenStreetMap data Follow the procedure outlined in [README.md](../README.md) under "Import OpenStreetMap data". ### Configure portal ```bash cp source/api/config.py.example config/config.py ``` Then edit `config/config.py` to your heart's content (and matching the configuration of the keycloak). Do not forget to generate a secure secret string. Also set `PROXIES_COUNT = 1` in your config, even if that option is not included in the example file. Read the [Sanic docs](https://sanicframework.org/en/guide/advanced/proxy-headers.html) for why this needs to be done. If your reverse proxy supports it, you can also use a forwarded secret to secure your proxy target from spoofing. This is not required if your application server does not listen on a public interface, but it is recommended anyway, if possible. ### Build container and run them ```bash docker-compose build portal docker-compose up -d portal ``` ## Running a dedicated worker Extend your `docker-compose.yaml` with the following service: ```yaml worker: image: openbikesensor-portal build: context: ./source volumes: - ./data/api-data:/data - ./config/config.py:/opt/obs/api/config.py restart: on-failure links: - postgres networks: - backend command: - python - tools/process_track.py ``` Change the `DEDICATED_WORKER` option in your config to `True` to stop processing tracks in the portal container. Then restart the `portal` service and start the `worker` service. ## Miscellaneous ### Logs To read logs, run ```bash docker-compose logs -f ``` If something went wrong, you can reconfigure your config files and rerun: ```bash docker-compose build docker-compose up -d ``` ### Updates Before updating make sure that you have properly backed-up your instance so you can always roll back to a pre-update state. ### Backups To backup your instances private data you only need to backup the ``$ROOT`` folder. This should contain everything needed to start your instance again, no persistent data lives in docker containers. You should stop the containers for a clean backup. This backup contains the imported OSM data as well. That is of course a lot of redundant data, but very nice to have for a quick restore operation. If you want to generate smaller, nonredundant backups, or backups during live operation of the database, use a tool like `pg_dump` and extract only the required tables: * `overtaking_event` * `track` * `user` (make sure to reference `public.user`, not the postgres user table) * `comment` You might also instead use the `--exclude-table` option to ignore the `road` table only (adjust connection parameters and names): ```bash pg_dump -h localhost -d obs -U obs -n public -T road -f backup-`date +%F`.sql ``` Also back up the raw uploaded files, i.e. the `local/api-data/tracks` directory. The processed data can be regenerated, but you can also back that up, from `local/api-data/processing-output`. Finally, make sure to create a backup of your keycloak instance. Refer to the keycloak documentation for how to export its data in a restorable way. This should work very well if you are storing keycloak data in the PostgreSQL and exporting that with an exclusion pattern instead of an explicit list. And then, please test your backup and restore strategy before going live, or at least before you need it!