LiteFarm's packages and deployments
This guide introduces the app structure and deployment environments to new LiteFarm contributors.
The LiteFarm monorepo defines two packages: webapp
and api
. As we will see, there is a kind of a third package, embedded within the api folder, that provides a certification export service, variously known as "exports", "scheduler", or "job scheduler".
The webapp
package
This is the React-based frontend application. If you haven't seen React before we strongly recommend you go through the React Documentation and the tutorial. They are both extremely helpful getting started sources.
We use Redux for state management. If you haven't heard about Redux before, we strongly recommend you study the materials on their site. Or if you are more of a visual learner, Redux creator Dan Abramov has a free tutorial.
Conceptually, we divide the frontend into three categories.
“Pure” components are found in packages/webapp/src/components
. These simple React components hold no logic and simply control the layout and rendering of their props.
“Container” components, sometimes called “smart” components, are found in packages/webapp/src/containers
. These complex React components hold logic, connect to the Redux store, dispatch actions, and render the pure components with the required props. Within the container folders we will also define sagas, actions and reducers in case there are any of those that relate to that particular component logic.
Finally we have stories, which are tests of our containers that are rendered through Storybook. A story can import both pure and container components. In the case of testing isolated views, the most likely scenario is importing pure components. When rendering complete flows, however, you might use container components to test user interactions with the store or to test changes on events.
To do that, create a new folder and corresponding file that ends in ".stories.js" in the stories
folder, and import the pure component in that file.
The api
package
The API uses Node along with Express. Under packages/api/src
there are folders for routes, middleware, controllers, and models.
Express defines the approach used for routes and middleware. Our routes and middleware generally follow RESTful API conventions for URLs and response codes.
Controllers and models are concepts borrowed from the MVC architecture pattern.
Controllers act as a kind of translator between the model(s) and the user interface. (The V in MVC is for View, an older approach to UI issues that React handles for us.) In general terms, a controller accepts input from the UI, converts it to commands to the model(s), transforms the results and responds to the UI. In terms specific to LiteFarm, a controller is a group of Express route handler functions that handle all routes related to a type of entity, such as farms. Via Express, the controller receives requests from the frontend in HTTP, following REST conventions. The farm controller makes appropriate calls to the farm model (and perhaps other models) to retrieve and/or modify database contents. The controller then sends the results back to the frontend via Express, usually in HTTP/JSON format.
A model is a dynamic data structure that directly manages the data, logic and rules of the application. We use ObjectionJS to define the models. Objection builds on Knex, a query builder for multiple SQL database platforms. We use the PostgreSQL database management system.
The exports “package”
The file packages/api/src/jobs/index.js
is the entry point for a Node service that is run separately, as if it were a third package. This service monitors Redis-based work queues to receive and process requests for exports of certification information.
Deployments
Each of the three packages is deployed to the LiteFarm production environment, and to a pre-production environment generally known as “beta” (though it is not used for traditional beta testing).
These deployments share some components.
The production environment consists of:
litefarmapp
, a Digital Ocean Droplet that:runs the
webapp
package (behind an Nginx reverse proxy) inlitefarm-web
, a Docker container assigned the hostnameapp.litefarm.org
runs the
api
package inlitefarm-api
, a Docker container assigned the hostnameapi.app.litefarm.org
runs PostgreSQL in a Docker container named
litefarm-db
provides file storage for the database contents and backups
litefarm-imaginary
, a Digital Ocean Droplet that:provides file storage for ? images
runs the “exports package” jobs scheduler Node service
runs the Redis-based work queues used by the API server to submit export jobs to the scheduler
runs the image manipulation microservice imaginary in a Docker container
runs an Nginx web server, hostname
image.litefarm.org
, that reverse proxies access to a Docker container running the image manipulation microservice imaginary
Object storage “buckets” (Digital Ocean Spaces) that store images and documents uploaded by users, as well as certification exports for users to download.
The pre-production environment consists of:
liteformbeta
, a Droplet that duplicates the services onlitefarmapp
, with hostnamesbeta.litefarm.org
andapi.beta.litefarm.org
export-beta
, a Droplet that duplicates the services of onlitefarm-imaginary
, with one exceptionBuckets that duplicate those in the production environment.
Individual developers run local instances of the the litefarm-web
, litefarm-api
, and litefarm-db
Docker containers. There are buckets dedicated to object storage for development setups.
All deployments-- production, pre-production, and individual developers-- use the single instance of the imaginary microservice on image.litefarm.org