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AIOverflow is a full-stack forum website where an AI actively contributes to discussions. Built with ASP.NET and React as part of the "סדנה בתכנות מונחה עצמים - 20586" workshop, the project uses Docker for easy deployment and local development. The AI enhances conversations by participating in threads, adding dynamic and insightful input.

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AIOverflow

This project is the implementation of the "סדנה בתכנות מונחה עצמים - 20586" workshop.

Building The Application

Docker

In order to run the application inside a Docker container, you need to first build the image for the application. The configuration for building the application image can be found in the Dockerfile, which uses the mcr.microsoft.com/dotnet/sdk:7.0 builder image for building the ASP.NET & React application and then publishing it.

The result is then hosted inside the mcr.microsoft.com/dotnet/aspnet:7.0 image, which is used for running and serving the application.

To build the image run the following command from the directory in which the Dockerfile resides:

docker build -t <image name>:<optional tag> .

Please note that the . at the of the command is crucial for setting the build context.

Running The Application

Locally

The dotnet CLI provides a convenient command for running your application, which is dotnet run.

If you are using VS Code, there is a configured task labelled dotnet: run for running the ASP.NET server locally.

Docker

After the image has been built, you can run the application's container using the following command:

docker run -dit -p <exposed port>:80 <image name>:<tag>

The application serves the web application on port 80 while running in production, hence it is required to expose the 80 port to be able to access it from outside the container.

After the container is running, you can access the web application from http://localhost:<exposed port>.

Please note that the application is currently served over HTTP and not HTTPS.

Debugging The Application

Locally

In order to debug the application's code, there's a VS Code launch configuration and a VS Code task which allow to debug both the React web application and the ASP.NET server.

ASP.NET Server

Important: There are .NET requirements for running & debugging the ASP.NET server locally, please make sure that everything required is installed properly, VS Code should prompt you automatically for installing all the requirements once the corresponding launch configurations run for the first time.


In order to run the ASP.NET server for debugging, execute the dotnet: run task. This should start the ASP.NET process and run the server in development mode, together with a SPA proxy middleware for rerouting requests that reach the web application port to the ASP.NET endpoints (which are served on a different port). After the server is running, you need to run the launch configuration named .NET Core Attach, which will attach to the corresponding server process, and allow debugging the process and set breakpoints from the VS Code IDE. The corresponding process which needs to be attached may be filtered and found by typing run after launching the configuration, and a process named <Application Name> run should be present.

Database

In order to run the database container (and if you would like also pgAdmin), you can run the following command:

docker compose -f <path to development compose file> up db pgAdmin

This will start the db and pgAdmin containers.

React Web Application

Once the ASP.NET server is running and serves the web application, you can attach to the Chrome browser in order to debug the React code from within VS Code. Launch the Attach to Chrome configuration, which expects the application to be served locally on port 44442.

If the application is hosted on a different port, please configure the port accordingly here.

Docker Container

It is possible to deploy a development docker container which will run the ASP.NET server with development configurations. The debugging process of such a container consists of 2 steps, running the container & attaching to the remote process inside the container for debugging through VS Code. In order to attach to the remote ASP.NET process, a launch configuration has been created with the name Docker .NET Attach. Once the docker container is running, all you need to do is launch the configuration from VS Code and it will allow you to set breakpoints and debug the remote server process.

About

AIOverflow is a full-stack forum website where an AI actively contributes to discussions. Built with ASP.NET and React as part of the "סדנה בתכנות מונחה עצמים - 20586" workshop, the project uses Docker for easy deployment and local development. The AI enhances conversations by participating in threads, adding dynamic and insightful input.

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