The Cube in a Box is a simple way to run the Open Data Cube.
Checkout the Repo:
git clone https://github.com/opendatacube/cube-in-a-box.git
orgit clone [email protected]:opendatacube/cube-in-a-box.git
First time users of Docker should run:
bash setup.sh
- This will get your system running and install everything you need.- Note that after this step you will either need to logout/login, or run the next step with
sudo
If you already have make
, docker
and docker-compose
installed. For a custom bounding box append BBOX=<left>,<bottom>,<right>,<top>
to the end of the command.
make setup
ormake setup-prod
(for speed)- Custom bounding box:
make setup BBOX=-2,37,15,47
ormake setup-prod BBOX=-2,37,15,47
If you do not have make
installed and would rather run the commands individually run the following:
- Build a local environment:
docker-compose build
- Start a local environment:
docker-compose up
- Set up your local postgres database (after the above has finished) using:
docker-compose exec jupyter datacube -v system init
docker-compose exec jupyter datacube product add https://raw.githubusercontent.com/digitalearthafrica/config/master/products/esa_s2_l2a.odc-product.yaml
- Index a default region with:
docker-compose exec jupyter bash -c "stac-to-dc --bbox='25,20,35,30' --collections='sentinel-s2-l2a-cogs' --datetime='2020-01-01/2020-03-31'"
- Shutdown your local environment:
docker-compose down
View the Jupyter notebook Sentinel_2.ipynb
at http://localhost using the password secretpassword
. Note that you can index additional areas using the Indexing_More_Data.ipynb
notebook.
To deploy to AWS, you can either do it on the command line, with the AWS command line installed or the magic URL below and the AWS console. Detailed instructions are available.
Once deployed, if you navigate to the IP of the deployed instance, you can access Jupyter with the password you set in the parameters.json file or in the AWS UI if you used the magic URL.
You need to be logged in to the AWS Console deploy using this URL. Once logged in, click the link, and follow the prompts including settings a bounding box region of interest, EC2 instance type and password for Jupyter.
- Alter the parameters in the parameters.json file
- Run
make create-infra
- If you want to change the stack, you can do
make update-infra
(although it may be cleaner to delete and re-create the stack)