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Version: 1.27

Getting Started with Okteto and Ruby

Okteto is a platform that simplifies the process of launching cloud development environments without requiring the expertise to do this yourself. This enables developers to automatically spin up fully-managed development environments that emulate production as closely as possible. Okteto eliminates the friction of local development environments, the many deviations that can exist for the same engineering organization, and the troubleshooting that comes with them.

This tutorial will show you how to develop and debug a Ruby application using Okteto.

Prerequisites

Install the latest version of the Okteto CLI and configure it to access Okteto. Follow our installation guide if you haven't done it yet.

Step 1: Deploy the Ruby Sample App

Get a local version of the Ruby Sample App by executing the following commands:

$ git clone https://github.com/okteto/ruby-getting-started
$ cd ruby-getting-started

At the root of the directory, you'll find the okteto.yml file. This file describes how to deploy the Python Sample App.

okteto.yml
deploy:
- kubectl apply -f k8s.yml

Deploy your development environment by executing:

$ okteto deploy
 i  Using cindy @ okteto.example.com as context
i Running kubectl apply -f k8s.yml
deployment.apps/hello-world created
service/hello-world created
ingress.networking.k8s.io/hello-world created
✓ Development environment 'ruby-getting-started' successfully deployed
i Run 'okteto up' to activate your development container

Log into your Okteto instance and click on the URL of the application:

Okteto UI Ruby

Did you notice that you're accessing your application through an HTTPs endpoint? This is because Okteto will automatically create them for you when you deploy your application. Cool no 😎?

Step 2: Activate your development container

The dev section defines how to activate a development container for the Ruby Sample App:

okteto.yml
dev:
hello-world:
command: bash
sync:
- .:/opt/app/
forward:
- 1234:1234
volumes:
- /usr/local/bundle/cache

The hello-world key matches the name of the hello world Deployment. The meaning of the rest of fields is:

  • command: the start command of the development container.
  • sync: the folders that will be synchronized between your local machine and the development container.
  • forward: a list of ports to forward from your development container to localhost in your machine. This is needed to configure the Ruby remote debugger.
  • volumes: a list of paths in your development container to be mounted as persistent volumes. For example, this is useful to persist the bundle cache.

Also, note that there is a .stignore file to indicate which files shouldn't be synchronized to your development container. This is useful to avoid synchronizing binaries, build artifacts or git metadata.

Next, execute the following command to activate your development container:

$ okteto up
 ✓  Persistent volume successfully attached
✓ Images successfully pulled
✓ Files synchronized
Namespace: cindy
Name: hello-world
Forward: 1234 -> 1234

Welcome to your development container. Happy coding!
cindy:hello-world app>

Working in your development container is the same as working on your local machine. Start the application in hot-reload mode by running the following command:

cindy:hello-world app> ruby app.rb
[2022-07-04 16:50:53] INFO  WEBrick 1.6.1
[2022-07-04 16:50:53] INFO ruby 2.7.6 (2022-04-12) [x86_64-linux]
== Sinatra (v2.0.8.1) has taken the stage on 8080 for production with backup from WEBrick
[2022-07-04 16:50:53] INFO WEBrick::HTTPServer#start: pid=79 port=8080

Go back to the browser and reload the page to test that your application is running.

Step 3: Remote Development with Okteto

Open the app.rb file in your favorite local IDE and modify the response message on line 7 to be Hello world from Okteto!. Save your changes.

get "/" do
message = "Hello world from Okteto!"
message
end

Okteto will synchronize your changes to your development container in Kubernetes and Sinatra automatically detects them and reloads your application.

Go back to the browser and reload the page. Your code changes were instantly applied. No commit, build, or push required 😎!

Step 4: Remote debugging with Okteto

Okteto enables you to debug your applications directly from your favorite IDE. Let's take a look at how that works in VS Code, one of the most popular IDEs for Ruby development. If you haven't done it yet, install the Ruby extension available from Visual Studio marketplace. This extension comes with debug definitions covering the default ruby-debug-ide client setup.

Now, cancel the execution of ruby app.rb from the development container shell by pressing ctrl + c. Rerun your application in debug mode:

cindy:hello-world app> rdebug-ide --host 0.0.0.0 app.rb
Fast Debugger (ruby-debug-ide 0.7.0, debase 0.2.4.1, file filtering is supported) listens on 0.0.0.0:1234

Open the Run view in VS Code and run the Connect to okteto debug configuration (or press the F5 shortcut):

{
"version": "0.2.0",
"configurations": [
{
"name": "Connect to okteto",
"type": "Ruby",
"request": "attach",
"remotePort": "1234",
"remoteHost": "localhost",
"remoteWorkspaceRoot": "/opt/app",
"cwd": "${workspaceRoot}"
}
]
}
note

You should be replacing the value of remoteWorkspaceRoot with wherever your application code is.

Add a breakpoint on app.rb, line 8. Go back to the browser and reload the page. The execution will halt at your breakpoint. You can then inspect the request, the available variables, etc...

debugging in Okteto with Ruby

Your code is executing in Okteto, but you can debug it from your local machine without any extra services or tools. Pretty cool no? 😉

Next steps

Congratulations, you just developed your first application in Okteto 🚀.

Okteto lets you develop your applications directly on Kubernetes. This way you can:

  • Eliminate integration issues by developing in a realistic environment
  • Test your application end to end as fast as you type code
  • No more CPU cycles wasted in your machine. Develop at the speed of the cloud!

Find more advanced samples with Okteto in this repository or join our community to ask questions and share your feedback.