# Setup Couchbase ## Locally You can run Couchbase locally using Docker: ``` docker run -d --name db -p 8091-8094:8091-8094 -p 11210:11210 couchbase ``` You can then interact with the server using `localhost:8091` and start the server setup. ## Kubernetes The easiest way to install Couchbase on Kubernetes is by using the [Helm chart](https://github.com/couchbase-partners/helm-charts#deploying-for-development-quick-start): ``` helm repo add couchbase https://couchbase-partners.github.io/helm-charts/ helm install couchbase/couchbase-operator helm install couchbase/couchbase-cluster ``` ## Create a Dapr component The next step is to create a Dapr component for Couchbase. Create the following YAML file named `couchbase.yaml`: ``` apiVersion: dapr.io/v1alpha1 kind: Component metadata: name: spec: type: state.couchbase metadata: - name: couchbaseURL value: # Required. Example: "http://localhost:8091" - name: username value: # Required. - name: password value: # Required. - name: bucketName value: # Required. ``` The above example uses secrets as plain strings. It is recommended to use a secret store for the secrets as described [here](../../concepts/secrets/README.md) ## Apply the configuration ### In Kubernetes To apply the Couchbase state store to Kubernetes, use the `kubectl` CLI: ``` kubectl apply -f couchbase.yaml ``` ### Running locally The Dapr CLI will automatically create a directory named `components` in your current working directory with a Redis component. To use Couchbase, replace the redis.yaml file with the couchbase.yaml above.