Skip to content

cxu0421/nodejs-ex

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

74 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Node.js sample app on OpenShift!

This example will serve a welcome page and the current hit count as stored in a database to http://host:8080.

OpenShift setup

One option is to use the Docker all-in-one launch as described in the OpenShift Origin project.

The project

After logging in with oc login, if you don't have a project setup all ready, go ahead and take care of that

    $ oc new-project nodejs-echo --display-name="nodejs" --description="Sample Node.js app"

That's it, project has been created. Though it would probably be good to set your current project to this (thought new-project does it automatically as well), such as:

    $ oc project nodejs

The app

Now let's pull in the app source code from GitHub repo (fork if you like).

create

    $ oc new-app https://github.com/openshift/nodejs-ex -l name=myapp

That should be it, this form of new-app will locate an appropriate image on DockerHub, create an ImageStream for that image, and then create the right build configuration, deployment configuration and service definition. Next you'll be able to kick off the build, though new-app will kick off a build once all required dependencies are confirmed. The -l flag will apply a label of "name=myapp" to all the resources created by new-app, for easy management later.

Note, you can follow along with the web console (located at https://ip-address:8443/console) to see what new resources have been created and watch the progress of the build and deployment.

build

If the build is not started (you can check by running "oc get builds"), start one and stream the logs with:

    $ oc start-build nodejs-ex --follow

You can alternatively leave off --follow and use oc build-logs nodejs-ex-n where n is the number of the build to track the output of the build.

deploy

Deployment happens automatically once the new application image is available. To monitor its status either watch the web console or execute oc get pods to see when the pod is up. Another helpful command is

    $ oc status

This will help indicate what IP address the service is running, the default port for it to deploy at is 8080.

enjoy

Determine the service ip for the application by running

	$ oc get svc

Run/test your app by browsing to

    $ curl service-ip-address:8080

update

Assuming you used the URL of your own forked report, we can easily push changes to that hosted repo and simply repeat the steps above to build which will trigger the new built image to be deployed.

delete

	$ oc delete all -l name=myapp

To remove all the resources with the label "name=myapp".

###Debugging Unexpected Failures

Review some of the common tips and suggestions here.

Web UI

To run this example from the Web UI, you can same steps following done on the CLI as defined above by The project. Here's a video showing it in motion:

OpenShift 3: Node.js Sample

About

node.js example

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • HTML 93.8%
  • JavaScript 6.2%