notifier uses MySQL. It and the database need to be set up before it can operate, or before tests can be run.
notifier uses the latest stable release of MySQL as of the time of writing, 8.0.33.
Running in the cloud, Docker is no longer needed and introduces an unnecessary performance overhead for production. Spin up a dedicated server of some kind and install MySQL directly onto it.
Running on your local machine, I advise running MySQL in a Docker container. This is to avoid this version conflicting with any MySQL already installed on your system, and to make it easy to pin a required version.
Create the MySQL Server container:
docker create --name notifier_mysql -p 3306:3306 -e MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=root mysql:8.0.33
For an ephemeral, development-only, containerised MySQL installation I'm cool with just setting the root password insecurely like this. Obviously don't do this in production.
Start the container:
docker start notifier_mysql
To access the database from the local command line using the MySQL client, use 127.0.0.1
the local loopback interface (localhost
doesn't work in my experience):
mysql -h127.0.0.1 -uroot -proot
If 127.0.0.1
doesn't work you may need to find the IP of the Docker
container and use that instead:
docker inspect -f '{{range.NetworkSettings.Networks}}{{.IPAddress}}{{end}}' notifier_mysql
Once inside the database server, you can create the database.
If you want to connect to the database from inside a different Docker container (e.g. a container running the main notifier Python application), '127.0.0.1
' pinged from inside that container will refer to itself, not to the database container. You will need to connect the two containers via a Docker network. There are plenty of methods of doing that but the easiest in my opinion is adding a --network
flag to the command used to launch the 2nd container, instructing it to use the database's network stack:
docker run --network=container:notifier_mysql ...
Left as an exercise for the reader.
I recommend installing from source if possible to get the latest version.
If deploying the database as an AWS EC2 on a private VPS, you can cheat and get internet connectivity to download the necessary files by temporarily assigning it an Elastic IP. Just remember to dissociate and release it afterwards.
A new user will need to be created for the notifier, replacing the placeholders with the MySQL-specific credentials supplied during authentication:
CREATE USER '<username>'@'<host>' IDENTIFIED BY '<password>';
Create the database, with the database's name matching the name in the
config file (default: wikidot_notifier
), and grant the new user access to
it:
CREATE DATABASE `<name>` CHARACTER SET utf8mb4 COLLATE utf8mb4_bin;
GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON `<name>`.* TO '<username>'@'<host>';
In order to run tests, a test database will also need to be created. The name of this database is the same as the configured name, with "_test" appended:
CREATE DATABASE `<name>_test` CHARACTER SET utf8mb4 COLLATE utf8mb4_bin;
GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON `<name>_test`.* TO '<username>'@'<host>';