fluentui/.devcontainer
Martin Hochel 07d1911aad
ci: migrate to node 20 (#31495)
2024-05-29 13:48:39 +02:00
..
Dockerfile ci: migrate to node 20 (#31495) 2024-05-29 13:48:39 +02:00
README.md ci: bump devcontainer to node 18 (#29759) 2023-11-06 11:15:39 -05:00
devcontainer.json ci: migrate to node 20 (#31495) 2024-05-29 13:48:39 +02:00

README.md

Dev Container

This configuration is based on the base Node container provided by VSCode, it should work out of the box for most users.

For more information on how to use/create development containers follow the VSCode Documentation

See here for more information on the base container https://github.com/microsoft/vscode-dev-containers/blob/main/containers/javascript-node/.devcontainer/base.Dockerfile

Cypress tests

To run Cypress in dev containers some additional configuration is required, since Cypress depends on opening a browser (which requires GUI), a DISPLAY Environment Variable should be exported by the host to tell docker how to properly run GUI. Follow the instructions bellow to add to host OS the required software.

⚠️ You should rebuild the container every time your IP address changes if you want to run Cypress tests

WSL2

  1. Install VcXsrv
  2. Run the XLaunch application, then in it's application menu you'll find a Preferences choice. In the Preferences make this setting:
    • Allow connections from network clients

      This opens the display so it accepts XServer connections from any non-local computer. The Docker container we're about to create counts - as would a Linux machine in your office.

  3. export DISPLAY Environment Variable somewhere (e.g .bashrc, .zshrc)
    # get your IP Address
    IP=$(cat /etc/resolv.conf | grep nameserver | awk '{print $2}')
    export DISPLAY = $IP:0
    

MacOS

  1. Install XQuartz
  2. Run the XQuartz application, then in it's application menu you'll find a Preferences choice. In the Preferences make this setting:
    • Allow connections from network clients.

      This opens the display so it accepts X11 connections from any non-local computer. The Docker container we're about to create counts - as would a Linux machine in your office.

  3. Save DISPLAY and IP environment variables somewhere (e.g: .bashrc, .zshrc)
      export IP = $(ipconfig getifaddr en0) # en0 or eth0... might vary depending on your WI-FI/Cable connection
      export DISPLAY = $IP:0
    
  4. With XQuartz NOT running run this once to add IP address:
      xhost +$IP