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Dockerfile
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Dockerfile
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# Dockerfile contains instructions how to build a Docker image that
# will contain all the code and configuration needed to run your actor.
# For a full Dockerfile reference,
# see https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/builder/
# First, specify the base Docker image. Apify provides the following
# base images for your convenience:
# apify/actor-node-basic (Node.js on Alpine Linux, small and fast)
# apify/actor-node-chrome (Node.js + Chrome on Debian)
# apify/actor-node-chrome-xvfb (Node.js + Chrome + Xvfb on Debian)
# For more information, see https://docs.apify.com/actor/build#base-images
# Note that you can use any other image from Docker Hub.
FROM apify/actor-node-chrome-xvfb
# Second, copy just package.json since it should be the only file
# that affects "npm install" in the next step, to speed up the build
COPY package.json ./
# Install NPM packages, skip optional and development dependencies to
# keep the image small. Avoid logging too much and print the dependency
# tree for debugging
RUN npm --quiet set progress=false \
&& npm install --only=prod --no-optional \
&& echo "Installed NPM packages:" \
&& npm list || true \
&& echo "Node.js version:" \
&& node --version \
&& echo "NPM version:" \
&& npm --version
# Next, copy the remaining files and directories with the source code.
# Since we do this after NPM install, quick build will be really fast
# for most source file changes.
COPY . ./
# Optionally, specify how to launch the source code of your actor.
# By default, Apify's base Docker images define the CMD instruction
# that runs the Node.js source code using the command specified
# in the "scripts.start" section of the package.json file.
# In short, the instruction looks something like this:
#
# CMD npm start