Simple CLI tool that spawns linked docker containers with Hawkular and some monitored stuff.
This simple CLI tool helps you with starting the hawkular-services together with some monitored WildFly servers. Internally, it uses the docker-compose tool and exposes the service on localhost:8080.
$ sudo npm install hawkinit -g$ hawkinitChoose the versions of hawkular-services, Cassandra and instrumented WildFly server you want to start, number of containers or if you want to run WF in standalone mode or in a managed domain. For the domain mode couple of scenarios are prepared. Once every question is answered, you should start seeing the logs from particular containers. Congrats, your hawkular-service is up and running on http://localhost:8080.
For more help:
$ hawkinit -hThe hawkinit assumes the docker and docker-compose to be installed, Docker version should be higher than 1.12.0 and also the user that runs the command should be in the docker group.
sudo usermod -a -G docker `whoami`Add yourself to that group for current session (or logout and log in).
newgrp dockerMake sure the docker deamon is up and running.
sudo systemctl enable docker --nowMake sure the /tmp/opt/data is created and owned by user with UID = 1000.
Running following command as non-root (as user with UID=1000) should work.
mkdir -p /tmp/opt/data/ && sudo chown -R $UID:$UID /tmp/opt/data/On Fedora 24 the Docker that is in the default yum repo is obsolete, so remove it and install the docker-engine package from the yum.dockerproject.org repo.
sudo dnf remove docker and follow these instructions https://docs.docker.com/engine/installation/linux/fedora/
sudo apt-get install docker.io docker-compose
Hawkinit is a regular npm package so all is needed is
sudo npm update hawkinit -gIf you run the hawkinit, it says something like:
Later, you can find your hawkular-services listening on http://localhost:8080
Running 'docker-compose up --force-recreate' in directory: /tmp/tmp-11573k3ujXFLACh9zIf you navigate to /tmp/tmp-11573k3ujXFLACh9z, you can run docker-dompose up to start it again. This is not a standard use-case, though. Any other docker-compose command works just fine. So for instance you may want to see only the Cassandra logs by docker-compose logs -f myCassandra or inspecting the Hawkular Services container by docker-compose exec hawkular /bin/bash, etc. Also, nothing protects you from editing the docker-compose.yaml file that was created in that tmp directory.