The server codebase is written in Java and is powered by Spring + WebFlux. This document explains how you can setup a development environment to make changes and test your changes.
## Pre-requisites
- Java --- OpenJDK 11.
- Maven --- version 3+ (preferably 3.6).
- A MongoDB database --- A simple way to get this up is explained [further down in this document](#setting-up-a-local-mongodb).
- A Redis instance --- A simple way to get this up is explained [further down in this document](#setting-up-a-local-redis).
- An IDE --- We use IntelliJ IDEA as our primary IDE for backend development.
This generates a bunch of classes required by IntelliJ for compiling the rest of the source code. Without this step, your IDE may complain about missing classes and will be unable to compile the code.
- If the volume containing docker's data root path (macOS: `~/Library/Containers/com.docker.docker/Data/vms/0/`, Ubuntu: `/var/lib/docker/`) has less than 2 GB of free space, then the script may fail with the following error:
```
Check failed: Docker environment should have more than 2GB free disk space.
```
There are two ways to resolve this issue: (1) free up more space (2) change docker's data root path.
8. You can check the status of the server by hitting the endpoint: [http://localhost:8080](http://localhost:8080) on your browser. By default you should see an HTTP 401 error.
Please change the `/path/to/store/data` to a valid path on your system. This is where MongoDB will persist it's data across runs of this container.
Note that this command doesn't set any username or password on the database so we make it accessible only from localhost using the `127.0.0.1:` part in the port mapping argument. Please refer to the documentation of this image to learn [how to set a username and password](https://hub.docker.com/_/mongo).
When using this command, the value of `APPSMITH_MONGODB_URI` should be set to `mongodb://localhost:27017/appsmith` (which is what's provided in the example env file).
## Setting up a local Redis
The following command can bring up a Redis docker instance locally.
```sh
docker run -p 127.0.0.1:6379:6379 --name appsmith-redis redis