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Top Forums Web Development Some Typical Discourse Docker (Standalone) Rebuild, Restore and Update Times Post 303045708 by Neo on Friday 10th of April 2020 12:40:31 AM
Old 04-10-2020
Some Typical Discourse Docker (Standalone) Rebuild, Restore and Update Times

Just some notes on some typical tasks for Discourse and how long they take:

Restore Postgres DB (Linux Ubuntu, 8 Core 32 GB RAM)

Code:
# time ./restoreneo     // simple script that does a command line restore
cd /var/www/discourse
discourse enable_restore
Restore are now permitted. Disable them with `disable_restore`
begin neo restore
....
...
....

Marking restore as finished...
Notifying 'system' of the end of the restore...
Finished!
[SUCCESS]
Restore done.
discourse disable_restore
Restore are now forbidden. Enable them with `enable_restore`

real	9m58.273s
user	2m20.157s
sys	1m26.850s
root@community-app:/shared/neo/bin#

Rebuild Discourse Docker standalone app which is already installed (MacOS MacPro (Last 2013) 12-Core, 64GB RAM)

Code:
# ./launcher rebuild app

WARNING: We are about to start downloading the Discourse base image
This process may take anywhere between a few minutes to an hour, depending on your network speed

Please be patient

...
...
...

real	7m18.784s
user	0m1.694s
sys	0m1.116s
#

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aset.restore(1M)					  System Administration Commands					  aset.restore(1M)

NAME
aset.restore - restores system files to their content before ASET is installed SYNOPSIS
aset.restore [-d aset_dir] DESCRIPTION
aset.restore restores system files that are affected by the Automated Security Enhancement Tool (ASET) to their pre-ASET content. When ASET is executed for the first time, it saves and archives the original system files in the /usr/aset/archives directory. The aset.restore utility reinstates these files. It also deschedules ASET, if it is currently scheduled for periodic execution. See asetenv(4). If you have made changes to system files after running ASET, these changes are lost when you run aset.restore. If you want to be abso- lutely sure that you keep the existing system state, it is recommended that you back-up your system before using aset.restore. You should use aset.restore, under the following circumstances: You want to remove ASET permanently and restore the original system (if you want to deactivate ASET, you can remove it from schedul- ing). You are unfamiliar with ASET and want to experiment with it. You can use aset.restore to restore the original system state. When some major system functionality is not working properly and you suspect that ASET is causing the problem; you may want to restore the system to see if the problem persists without ASET. aset.restore requires root privileges to execute. OPTIONS
The following options are supported: -d aset_dir Specify the working directory for ASET. By default, this directory is /usr/aset. With this option the archives directory will be located under aset_dir. FILES
/usr/aset/archives archive of system files prior to executing aset ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWast | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
aset(1M), asetenv(4), attributes(5) System Administration Guide: Basic Administration SunOS 5.10 11 Oct 1991 aset.restore(1M)
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