Make docs/schema a little more container agnostic / less Docker specific.

This commit is contained in:
Dan Helfman 2023-04-16 15:41:17 -07:00
parent 991e08f16d
commit 9f5769f87b
4 changed files with 27 additions and 24 deletions

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@ -836,25 +836,25 @@ properties:
Command to use instead of "pg_dump" or
"pg_dumpall". This can be used to run a specific
pg_dump version (e.g., one inside a running
docker container). Defaults to "pg_dump" for
single database dump or "pg_dumpall" to dump
all databases.
container). Defaults to "pg_dump" for single
database dump or "pg_dumpall" to dump all
databases.
example: docker exec my_pg_container pg_dump
pg_restore_command:
type: string
description: |
Command to use instead of "pg_restore". This
can be used to run a specific pg_restore
version (e.g., one inside a running docker
container). Defaults to "pg_restore".
version (e.g., one inside a running container).
Defaults to "pg_restore".
example: docker exec my_pg_container pg_restore
psql_command:
type: string
description: |
Command to use instead of "psql". This can be
used to run a specific psql version (e.g.,
one inside a running docker container).
Defaults to "psql".
one inside a running container). Defaults to
"psql".
example: docker exec my_pg_container psql
options:
type: string

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@ -138,7 +138,7 @@ hooks:
### Containers
If your database is running within a Docker container and borgmatic is too, no
If your database is running within a container and borgmatic is too, no
problem—simply configure borgmatic to connect to the container's name on its
exposed port. For instance:
@ -154,10 +154,10 @@ hooks:
But what if borgmatic is running on the host? You can still connect to a
database container if its ports are properly exposed to the host. For
instance, when running the database container with Docker, you can specify
`--publish 127.0.0.1:5433:5432` so that it exposes the container's port 5432
to port 5433 on the host (only reachable on localhost, in this case). Or the
same thing with Docker Compose:
instance, when running the database container, you can specify `--publish
127.0.0.1:5433:5432` so that it exposes the container's port 5432 to port 5433
on the host (only reachable on localhost, in this case). Or the same thing
with Docker Compose:
```yaml
services:

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@ -87,19 +87,20 @@ tox -e codespell
borgmatic additionally includes some end-to-end tests that integration test
with Borg and supported databases for a few representative scenarios. These
tests don't run by default when running `tox`, because they're relatively slow
and depend on Docker containers for runtime dependencies. These tests tests do
run on the continuous integration (CI) server, and running them on your
developer machine is the closest thing to CI test parity.
and depend on containers for runtime dependencies. These tests do run on the
continuous integration (CI) server, and running them on your developer machine
is the closest thing to CI-test parity.
If you would like to run the full test suite, first install Docker and [Docker
Compose](https://docs.docker.com/compose/install/). Then run:
If you would like to run the full test suite, first install Docker (or Podman;
see below) and [Docker Compose](https://docs.docker.com/compose/install/).
Then run:
```bash
scripts/run-end-to-end-dev-tests
```
Note that this scripts assumes you have permission to run Docker. If you
don't, then you may need to run with `sudo`.
This script assumes you have permission to run `docker`. If you don't, then
you may need to run with `sudo`.
#### Podman
@ -119,6 +120,7 @@ some key points to double-check:
* Create a non-root Podman socket for that user:
```bash
systemctl --user enable --now podman.socket
systemctl --user start --now podman.socket
```
Then you'll be able to run end-to-end tests as per normal, and the test script
@ -161,11 +163,12 @@ To build and view a copy of the documentation with your local changes, run the
following from the root of borgmatic's source code:
```bash
sudo scripts/dev-docs
scripts/dev-docs
```
This requires Docker to be installed on your system. You may not need to use
sudo if your non-root user has permissions to run Docker.
This requires Docker (or Podman; see below) to be installed on your system.
This script assumes you have permission to run `docker`. If you don't, then
you may need to run with `sudo`.
After you run the script, you can point your web browser at
http://localhost:8080 to view the documentation with your changes.

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@ -82,8 +82,8 @@ on a relatively dedicated system, then a global install can work out fine.
Besides the approaches described above, there are several other options for
installing borgmatic:
* [Docker image with scheduled backups](https://hub.docker.com/r/b3vis/borgmatic/) (+ Docker Compose files)
* [Docker image with multi-arch and Docker CLI support](https://hub.docker.com/r/modem7/borgmatic-docker/)
* [container image with scheduled backups](https://hub.docker.com/r/b3vis/borgmatic/) (+ Docker Compose files)
* [container image with multi-arch and Docker CLI support](https://hub.docker.com/r/modem7/borgmatic-docker/)
* [Debian](https://tracker.debian.org/pkg/borgmatic)
* [Ubuntu](https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/borgmatic)
* [Fedora official](https://bodhi.fedoraproject.org/updates/?search=borgmatic)