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TODO

  • switch from tidyverse image with rocker to lighter weight image with similar build spec but without rstudio

EMAP-bot

This is a template docker arrangement for developing, and then running a machine learning pipeline on a regular schedule. In the UCLH EMAP environment, this means that we can build connect to the live EMAP database ('star'), wrangle and analyse the data, and then return the results back to a table in the User Data Store (UDS). This in turn can then feed a dashboard, or be made available to the Electronic Health Record itself in near real time.

The example pipeline is uses R, but this could be switched to Python by modifying the docker image.

Alongside this, we also we also provide a working development environment comprised of Rstudio Server (from the rocker project and pgweb as a database front end for PostgreSQL. Since both of these run in a browser (Chrome/Firefox recommended) then the entire system is available without any further installation.

Please use make to interact with the project.

Install

git clone https://github.com/docsteveharris/try-ofelia.git
git checkout master

You now must generate your 'dot' files. Examples are provided as env-example and renviron-example. Edit these and provide HTTP proxies, user names and passwords. Save them as .env and .Renviron respectively. These must be ignored by .gitignore so they remain out of version control and your secrets don't leak.

Now you can build your images which will pick up the secrets above, and therefore be ready to connect.

make dev-build
make dev-up

Now go enter the IP address of your GAE in a modern browser (Chrome/Firefox), and login. The default user for Rstudio is rstudio and the default password is sitrep.

e.g.

Develop your application

At the end of development and before deployment, you need to generate a list of libraries that must be available for the application to run. From your development environment, with everything loaded run the following command. Ideally, restart your R session before this so that you have nothing extraneous loaded.

# First ensure you've unloaded everything
invisible(lapply(paste0("package:", names(sessionInfo()$otherPkgs)),   # Unload add-on packages
                 detach,
                 character.only = TRUE, unload = TRUE))
rm(list=ls())

# Run the app from the console
# This ensures that the app both works and that you have a complete set of necessary libraries loaded.
source(app.R)
pkgs <- (.packages())
print(pkgs)

Now hand edit the dev/setup.R file to ensure that all the necessary packages are listed for install. The first half of the list is for CRAN, and the second half will handle GitHub installs. Please see the existing sample file for help in how this should be set up.

Notes on the RStudio dev environment

  • Installing additional libraries: The RStudio image is able to install from CRAN and from GitHub. It comes pre-installed with ODBC and the necessary drivers to connect to PostgreSQL and Microsoft SQL Server. Everything the user might need will need to be installed from within RStudio.
  • It uses the Rocker Tidyverse image which means that it comes pre-installed with a decent selection of libraries.
  • The .Renviron file holds all the 'secrets' (usernames, passwords etc.) and must be in .gitignore

Build and run your application

This is a testing step that runs the application just once from docker. It confirms that the application will run, and that all the libraries (as per the previous step) have been made available in the Docker image.

Deploy your application

TODO: tie together the R libraries between the dev arm and the app

When you look inside the project, there

This is a template docker arrangement for running a specific R script on a schedule.

You need to git clone this to the GAE or your local machine. It will try and pick up the any local proxies (http_proxy etc.). You must make your own .env file from the example env-example file. Then

docker-compose up --build

What it should do

  • Every 5 mins it will read the last entry from the IDS; if that is not within the last 300 seconds it will raise an alert and 'stop'
  • The job result (success/failure) will be posted to the slack channel.

Features

  • Creates a docker image using Rocker/tidyverse
  • Sets-up ODBC infrastructure for connection to MS-SQL databases (e.g. Epic's Clarity or Caboodle)
  • Installs CRAN and GitHub packages (e.g. emapR)
  • Builds and installs local packages (to make parts of the code more transportable)
  • Runs monitor_ids.R every 5 minutes which could contain any bit of code you wish
  • Adjust the schedule as per the instructions here
  • Pushes a status message to slack

It should be relatively trivial to swap this out for a Python version.

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