Openshift Apache HTTP Server without Git-Repo
I am about to create a "Test-Dashboard" for our automatic tests.
The test result of one day consists of multiple static html files. These files will be updated daily and the old files will be moved in a folder named with the current date.
The files are stored on a persistent Storage inside my Openshift-Project.
Now I want to mount this storage into an running Apache HTTP Server Pod to make the results accessible but I just find solutions where the files are inside a Git-Repo.
Is there a possibility to create a solution which won't depend on having the files in a Git-Repo?
apache openshift static-html
add a comment |
I am about to create a "Test-Dashboard" for our automatic tests.
The test result of one day consists of multiple static html files. These files will be updated daily and the old files will be moved in a folder named with the current date.
The files are stored on a persistent Storage inside my Openshift-Project.
Now I want to mount this storage into an running Apache HTTP Server Pod to make the results accessible but I just find solutions where the files are inside a Git-Repo.
Is there a possibility to create a solution which won't depend on having the files in a Git-Repo?
apache openshift static-html
add a comment |
I am about to create a "Test-Dashboard" for our automatic tests.
The test result of one day consists of multiple static html files. These files will be updated daily and the old files will be moved in a folder named with the current date.
The files are stored on a persistent Storage inside my Openshift-Project.
Now I want to mount this storage into an running Apache HTTP Server Pod to make the results accessible but I just find solutions where the files are inside a Git-Repo.
Is there a possibility to create a solution which won't depend on having the files in a Git-Repo?
apache openshift static-html
I am about to create a "Test-Dashboard" for our automatic tests.
The test result of one day consists of multiple static html files. These files will be updated daily and the old files will be moved in a folder named with the current date.
The files are stored on a persistent Storage inside my Openshift-Project.
Now I want to mount this storage into an running Apache HTTP Server Pod to make the results accessible but I just find solutions where the files are inside a Git-Repo.
Is there a possibility to create a solution which won't depend on having the files in a Git-Repo?
apache openshift static-html
apache openshift static-html
asked Nov 12 '18 at 14:27
raphael_mavraphael_mav
11212
11212
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2 Answers
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Here's my recommendation:
Deploy the default Apache app with the example git repo (https://github.com/openshift/httpd-ex.git).
oc new-app httpd-example
This gives you an Apache deployment. Now add your persistent volume to the deployment. Then set the environment variable DOCUMENTROOT
to the full path of your persistent volume
oc env dc httpd-example DOCUMENTROOT=<path>
This should trigger a redeployment and configure Apache to server all files directly from your persistent volume.
Thank you for your recommendation. Since I don't need the whole "git configuration" from the Openshift example catalog, I've choosen a plain HTTP-Server Docker Image (nginx, apache http, node ...). Then I continued just as you described later.
– raphael_mav
Nov 22 '18 at 12:09
add a comment |
Just deploy an Apache HTTP Server, Nginx or Node Docker image on your Openshift-Project.
There's just no template for this UseCase and therefore you won't find any working solution in your Openshift-Catalog.
add a comment |
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Here's my recommendation:
Deploy the default Apache app with the example git repo (https://github.com/openshift/httpd-ex.git).
oc new-app httpd-example
This gives you an Apache deployment. Now add your persistent volume to the deployment. Then set the environment variable DOCUMENTROOT
to the full path of your persistent volume
oc env dc httpd-example DOCUMENTROOT=<path>
This should trigger a redeployment and configure Apache to server all files directly from your persistent volume.
Thank you for your recommendation. Since I don't need the whole "git configuration" from the Openshift example catalog, I've choosen a plain HTTP-Server Docker Image (nginx, apache http, node ...). Then I continued just as you described later.
– raphael_mav
Nov 22 '18 at 12:09
add a comment |
Here's my recommendation:
Deploy the default Apache app with the example git repo (https://github.com/openshift/httpd-ex.git).
oc new-app httpd-example
This gives you an Apache deployment. Now add your persistent volume to the deployment. Then set the environment variable DOCUMENTROOT
to the full path of your persistent volume
oc env dc httpd-example DOCUMENTROOT=<path>
This should trigger a redeployment and configure Apache to server all files directly from your persistent volume.
Thank you for your recommendation. Since I don't need the whole "git configuration" from the Openshift example catalog, I've choosen a plain HTTP-Server Docker Image (nginx, apache http, node ...). Then I continued just as you described later.
– raphael_mav
Nov 22 '18 at 12:09
add a comment |
Here's my recommendation:
Deploy the default Apache app with the example git repo (https://github.com/openshift/httpd-ex.git).
oc new-app httpd-example
This gives you an Apache deployment. Now add your persistent volume to the deployment. Then set the environment variable DOCUMENTROOT
to the full path of your persistent volume
oc env dc httpd-example DOCUMENTROOT=<path>
This should trigger a redeployment and configure Apache to server all files directly from your persistent volume.
Here's my recommendation:
Deploy the default Apache app with the example git repo (https://github.com/openshift/httpd-ex.git).
oc new-app httpd-example
This gives you an Apache deployment. Now add your persistent volume to the deployment. Then set the environment variable DOCUMENTROOT
to the full path of your persistent volume
oc env dc httpd-example DOCUMENTROOT=<path>
This should trigger a redeployment and configure Apache to server all files directly from your persistent volume.
answered Nov 12 '18 at 19:28
Will GordonWill Gordon
8641513
8641513
Thank you for your recommendation. Since I don't need the whole "git configuration" from the Openshift example catalog, I've choosen a plain HTTP-Server Docker Image (nginx, apache http, node ...). Then I continued just as you described later.
– raphael_mav
Nov 22 '18 at 12:09
add a comment |
Thank you for your recommendation. Since I don't need the whole "git configuration" from the Openshift example catalog, I've choosen a plain HTTP-Server Docker Image (nginx, apache http, node ...). Then I continued just as you described later.
– raphael_mav
Nov 22 '18 at 12:09
Thank you for your recommendation. Since I don't need the whole "git configuration" from the Openshift example catalog, I've choosen a plain HTTP-Server Docker Image (nginx, apache http, node ...). Then I continued just as you described later.
– raphael_mav
Nov 22 '18 at 12:09
Thank you for your recommendation. Since I don't need the whole "git configuration" from the Openshift example catalog, I've choosen a plain HTTP-Server Docker Image (nginx, apache http, node ...). Then I continued just as you described later.
– raphael_mav
Nov 22 '18 at 12:09
add a comment |
Just deploy an Apache HTTP Server, Nginx or Node Docker image on your Openshift-Project.
There's just no template for this UseCase and therefore you won't find any working solution in your Openshift-Catalog.
add a comment |
Just deploy an Apache HTTP Server, Nginx or Node Docker image on your Openshift-Project.
There's just no template for this UseCase and therefore you won't find any working solution in your Openshift-Catalog.
add a comment |
Just deploy an Apache HTTP Server, Nginx or Node Docker image on your Openshift-Project.
There's just no template for this UseCase and therefore you won't find any working solution in your Openshift-Catalog.
Just deploy an Apache HTTP Server, Nginx or Node Docker image on your Openshift-Project.
There's just no template for this UseCase and therefore you won't find any working solution in your Openshift-Catalog.
answered Nov 12 '18 at 15:29
raphael_mavraphael_mav
11212
11212
add a comment |
add a comment |
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