| .. | ||
| app | ||
| fixtures | ||
| chain-state.ipynb | ||
| composer.ipynb | ||
| composer.sh | ||
| Dockerfile | ||
| Makefile | ||
| README.md | ||
| requirements.txt | ||
Testground Composer
This is a work-in-progress UI for configuring and running testground compositions.
The app code lives in ./app, and there's a thin Jupyter notebook shell in composer.ipynb.
Running
You can either run the app in docker, or in a local python virtualenv. Docker is recommended unless you're hacking on the code for Composer itself.
Running with docker
Run the ./composer.sh script to build a container with the latest source and run it. The first build
will take a little while since it needs to build testground and fetch a bunch of python dependencies.
You can skip the build if you set SKIP_BUILD=true when running composer.sh, and you can rebuild
manually with make docker.
The contents of $TESTGROUND_HOME/plans will be sync'd to a temporary directory and read-only mounted
into the container.
After building and starting the container, the script will open a browser to the composer UI.
You should be able to load an existing composition or create a new one from one of the plans in
$TESTGROUND_HOME/plans.
Right now docker only supports the standalone webapp UI; to run the UI in a Jupyter notebook, see below.
Running with local python
To run without docker, make a python3 virtual environment somewhere and activate it:
# make a virtualenv called "venv" in the current directory
python3 -m venv ./venv
# activate (bash/zsh):
source ./venv/bin/activate
# activate (fish):
source ./venv/bin/activate.fish
Then install the python dependencies:
pip install -r requirements.txt
And start the UI:
panel serve composer.ipynb
That will start the standalone webapp UI. If you want a Jupyter notebook instead, run:
jupyter notebook
and open composer.ipynb in the Jupyter file picker.