purescript-docker
Purescript build for docker
Build Locally
You can build the image locally by cloning the repo and running docker build .
in the project root.
Usage
Note: You may need to run docker comands as a superuser (sudo) depending on how it's configured on your system.
Pull the version you want to use:
$ docker pull gyeh/purescript:0.9.1
Check to see that your image was created:
$ docker images
REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED SIZE
gyeh/purescript 0.9.1 b09608732ec8 0 minutes ago 831.9 MB
Try the Purescript REPL (you need to run it in interactive mode with a pseudo-teletype):
$ docker run --rm -it b09608732ec8
____ ____ _ _
| _ \ _ _ _ __ ___/ ___| ___ _ __(_)_ __ | |_
| |_) | | | | '__/ _ \___ \ / __| '__| | '_ \| __|
| __/| |_| | | | __/___) | (__| | | | |_) | |_
|_| \__,_|_| \___|____/ \___|_| |_| .__/ \__|
|_|
:? shows help
> import Prelude
> 2 + 2
4
> :t "Foo"
String
>
See ya!
To start doing real work with it, you need to mount a volume to your docker container when you run it. Clone the Purescript By Example code as an initial example:
$ git clone https://github.com/paf31/purescript-book
Cloning into 'purescript-book'...
Checking connectivity... done.
Then mount the volume using the absolute path of the cloned repo to the /home/pureuser/src
folder in the container:
$ docker run --rm -itv ~/git/purescript/tmp/purescript-book/:/home/pureuser/src b09608732ec8 bash
pureuser@1ddb0b0ed568:~$ ls
src tmp
pureuser@1ddb0b0ed568:~$ cd src/
pureuser@1ddb0b0ed568:~/src$ ls
CONTRIBUTING.md README.md chapter11 chapter13 chapter2 chapter4 chapter6 chapter8
LICENSE.md chapter10 chapter12 chapter14 chapter3 chapter5 chapter7 chapter9
pureuser@1ddb0b0ed568:~/src$ cd chapter3/
pureuser@1ddb0b0ed568:~/src/chapter3$ bower install
pureuser@1ddb0b0ed568:~/src/chapter3$ pulp build
It should have built successfully. You can also run the tests:
pureuser@1ddb0b0ed568:~/src/chapter3$ pulp test
* Build successful.
* Running tests...
Nothing
Just ("Smith, John: 123 Fake St., Faketown, CA")
* Tests OK.
Since you mounted the volume, you can actually edit the code outside of the running docker instance and it will update inside the container!
Open up chapter3/test/Main.purs
using your favorite editor, and update example.address.street
in the example
record to "123 Foobar St."
. Now rerun the tests, and you'll see that it updated!
pureuser@1ddb0b0ed568:~/src/chapter3$ pulp test
* Build successful.
* Running tests...
Nothing
Just ("Smith, John: 123 Foobar St., Faketown, CA")
* Tests OK.
This docker image creates a user called pureuser
that it logs in as so that bower
and pulp
don't yell at you. If you want to add more stuff as you go along, switch to the superuser (su
), or add pureuser to sudoers.