airshipctl/docs/source/developers.md

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Developers Guide

This guide explains how to set up your environment for developing on airshipctl.

Environment Expectations

  • Go 1.13
  • Docker
  • Git

Building airshipctl

We use Make to build our programs. The simplest way to get started is:

$ make build

NOTE: The airshipctl application is a go module. This means you do not need to clone the repository into $GOPATH in order to build it. You should be able to build it from any directory.

This will build the airshipctl binary.

To run all the tests including linting and coverage reports, run make test. To run all tests in a containerized environment, run make docker-image-unit-tests or make docker-image-lint

To run airshipctl locally, you can run bin/airshipctl.

Docker Images

If you want to build an airshipctl Docker image, run make docker-image.

Pre-built images are already available at quay.io.

Contribution Guidelines

We welcome contributions. This project has set up some guidelines in order to ensure that (a) code quality remains high, (b) the project remains consistent, and c contributions follow the open source legal requirements. Our intent is not to burden contributors, but to build elegant and high-quality open source code so that our users will benefit.

Make sure you have read and understood the main airshipctl Contributing Guide

Structure of the Code

The code for the airshipctl project is organized as follows:

  • The individual programs are located in cmd/. Code inside of cmd/ is not designed for library re-use.
  • Shared libraries are stored in pkg/.
  • Both commands and shared libraries may require test data fixtures. These should be placed in a testdata/ subdirectory within the command or library.
  • The testutil/ directory contains functions that are helpful for unit tests.
  • The zuul.d/ directory contains Zuul YAML definitions for CI/CD jobs to run.
  • The playbooks/ directory contains playbooks that the Zuul CI/CD jobs will run.
  • The tools/ directory contains scripts used by the Makefile and CI/CD pipeline.
  • The docs/ folder is used for documentation and examples.

Go dependencies are managed by go mod and stored in go.mod and go.sum

Git Conventions

We use Git for our version control system. The master branch is the home of the current development candidate. Releases are tagged.

We accept changes to the code via Gerrit pull requests. One workflow for doing this is as follows:

  1. git clone the opendev.org/airship/airshipctl repository.
  2. Create a new working branch (git checkout -b feat/my-feature) and do your work on that branch.
  3. When you are ready for us to review, push your branch to gerrit using git-review. For more information on the gerrit workflow, see the OpenDev documentation.

Go Conventions

We follow the Go coding style standards very closely. Typically, running go fmt will make your code beautiful for you.

We also typically follow the conventions of golangci-lint.

Read more:

Testing

In order to ensure that all package unit tests follow the same standards and use the same frameworks, airshipctl has a document outlining specific test guidelines maintained separately.