Gitpod
With Gitpod, you can get a full development environment in your browser with the click of a button or link, and you can write code right away.
Gitpod is an open-source Kubernetes application (GitHub repository address: https://github.com/gitpod-io/gitpod) for direct-to-code development environments, which spins up fresh, automated development environments for each task, in the cloud, in seconds. It enables you to describe your development environment as code and start instant, remote and cloud-based development environments directly from your browser or your Desktop IDE.
Quick start
Fork the example code repository pingcap-inc/tidb-example-java for TiDB application development.
Start your Gitpod workspace by prefixing the URL of the sample code repository with
https://gitpod.io/#
in the address bar of your browser.For example,
https://gitpod.io/#https://github.com/pingcap-inc/tidb-example-java
.You can configure environment variables in the URL. For example,
https://gitpod.io/#targetFile=spring-jpa-hibernate_Makefile,targetMode=spring-jpa-hibernate/https://github.com/pingcap-inc/tidb-example-java
.
Log in and start the workspace using one of the providers listed. For example,
Github
.
Use the default Gitpod configuration and environment
After completing the quick-start steps, it will take a while for Gitpod to set up your workspace.
Take the Spring Boot Web application as an example. You can create a new workspace by the https://gitpod.io/#targetFile=spring-jpa-hibernate_Makefile,targetMode=spring-jpa-hibernate/https://github.com/pingcap-inc/tidb-example-java
URL.
After that, you will see a page similar to the following:
This scenario in the page uses TiUP to build a TiDB Playground. You can check the progress on the left side of the terminal area.
Once the TiDB Playground is ready, another Spring JPA Hibernate
task will run. You can check the progress on the right side of the terminal area.
After all these tasks are finished, you will see a page similar to the following. On this page, check the REMOTE EXPLORER
area in the left navigation pane (Gitpod supports URL-based port forwarding) and find the URL of your port 8080
.
Using custom Gitpod configuration and Docker image
Customize Gitpod configurations
Referring to example.gitpod.yml, create a .gitpod. yml
file in the root directory of your project to configure the Gitpod workspace.
# This configuration file was automatically generated by Gitpod.
# Please adjust to your needs (see https://www.gitpod.io/docs/config-gitpod-file)
# and commit this file to your remote git repository to share the goodness with others.
# image:
# file: .gitpod.Dockerfile
tasks:
- name: Open Target File
command: |
if [ -n "$targetFile" ]; then code ${targetFile//[_]//}; fi
- name: TiUP init playground
command: |
$HOME/.tiup/bin/tiup playground
- name: Test Case
openMode: split-right
init: echo "*** Waiting for TiUP Playground Ready! ***"
command: |
gp await-port 3930
if [ "$targetMode" == "plain-java-jdbc" ]
then
cd plain-java-jdbc
code src/main/resources/dbinit.sql
code src/main/java/com/pingcap/JDBCExample.java
make mysql
elif [ "$targetMode" == "plain-java-hibernate" ]
then
cd plain-java-hibernate
make
elif [ "$targetMode" == "spring-jpa-hibernate" ]
then
cd spring-jpa-hibernate
make
fi
ports:
- port: 8080
visibility: public
- port: 4000
visibility: public
- port: 2379-36663
onOpen: ignore
Customize Gitpod Docker images
By default, Gitpod uses a standard Docker image named Workspace-Full as the basis for the workspace. Workspaces launched from this default image are pre-installed with Docker, Go, Java, Node.js, C/C++, Python, Ruby, Rust, PHP, and tools such as Homebrew, Tailscale, and Nginx.
You can use a public Docker image or a Dockerfile and also install any required dependencies for your project.
For example, you can use a Dockerfile (see also Example .gitpod.Dockerfile) as follows:
FROM gitpod/workspace-java-17
RUN sudo apt install mysql-client -y
RUN curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -sSf https://tiup-mirrors.pingcap.com/install.sh | sh
Then, you need to update .gitpod.yml
:
# This configuration file was automatically generated by Gitpod.
# Please adjust to your needs (see https://www.gitpod.io/docs/config-gitpod-file)
# and commit this file to your remote git repository to share the goodness with others.
image:
# Import your Dockerfile here.
file: .gitpod.Dockerfile
tasks:
- name: Open Target File
command: |
if [ -n "$targetFile" ]; then code ${targetFile//[_]//}; fi
- name: TiUP init playground
command: |
$HOME/.tiup/bin/tiup playground
- name: Test Case
openMode: split-right
init: echo "*** Waiting for TiUP Playground Ready! ***"
command: |
gp await-port 3930
if [ "$targetMode" == "plain-java-jdbc" ]
then
cd plain-java-jdbc
code src/main/resources/dbinit.sql
code src/main/java/com/pingcap/JDBCExample.java
make mysql
elif [ "$targetMode" == "plain-java-hibernate" ]
then
cd plain-java-hibernate
make
elif [ "$targetMode" == "spring-jpa-hibernate" ]
then
cd spring-jpa-hibernate
make
fi
ports:
- port: 8080
visibility: public
- port: 4000
visibility: public
- port: 2379-36663
onOpen: ignore
Apply changes
After completing the configuration of the .gitpod.yml
file, make sure that the latest code is available in your corresponding GitHub repository.
Visit https://gitpod.io/#<YOUR_REPO_URL>
to create a new Gitpod workspace with the latest code applied.
Visit https://gitpod.io/workspaces
for all established workspaces.
Summary
Gitpod provides a complete, automated, and pre-configured cloud-native development environment. You can develop, run, and test code directly in the browser without any local configurations.