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Development Guide
This document is intended to be the canonical source of truth for things like supported toolchain versions for building Voyager. If you find a requirement that this doc does not capture, please submit an issue on github.
This document is intended to be relative to the branch in which it is found. It is guaranteed that requirements will change over time for the development branch, but release branches of Voyager should not change.
Build Voyager
Some of the Voyager development helper scripts rely on a fairly up-to-date GNU tools environment, so most recent Linux distros should work just fine out-of-the-box.
Setup GO
Voyager is written in Google’s GO programming language. Currently, Voyager is developed and tested on go 1.9.2. If you haven’t set up a GO development environment, please follow these instructions to install GO.
Download Source
$ go get -u -v github.com/appscode/voyager
$ cd $(go env GOPATH)/src/github.com/appscode/voyager
Install Dev tools
To install various dev tools for Voyager, run the following command:
$ ./hack/builddeps.sh
Updating Codes
voyager usages codecgen to generate codes related to kubernetes. If changes happens to api types, codes needs to be regenerated. API types needs to be updated in both apis/voyager/v1beta1
and apis/voyager
. Run the following command to generate codes:
$ ./hack/codegen.sh
Build Binary
$ ./hack/make.py
$ voyager version
Run Binary Locally
$ voyager run \
--cloud-provider=minikube \
--secure-port=8443 \
--kubeconfig="$HOME/.kube/config" \
--authorization-kubeconfig="$HOME/.kube/config" \
--authentication-kubeconfig="$HOME/.kube/config" \
--authentication-skip-lookup
Dependency management
Voyager uses Glide to manage dependencies. Dependencies are already checked in the vendor
folder. If you want to update/add dependencies, run:
$ glide slow
Build Docker images
To build and push your custom Docker image, follow the steps below. To release a new version of Voyager, please follow the release guide.
# Build Docker image
$ ./hack/docker/voyager/setup.sh
# Add docker tag for your repository
$ docker tag appscode/voyager:<tag> <image>:<tag>
# Push Image
$ docker push <image>:<tag>
Build HAProxy
We package HAProxy and Kloader into a Ubuntu 16.04 based Docker image.
$ ./hack/docker/haproxy/<version>/setup.sh
$ ./hack/docker/haproxy/<version>/setup.sh push
Generate CLI Reference Docs
$ ./hack/gendocs/make.sh
Run Test
Run Short Unit Test by running
go test ./pkg/...
Run Full Test
To Run Full unit test You need to provide some secret in hack/configs/.env
file. Or You may add them as
environment variables.
TEST_GCE_SERVICE_ACCOUNT_DATA
TEST_GCE_PROJECT
TEST_ACME_USER_EMAIL
TEST_DNS_DOMAINS
Then run
$ ./hack/make.py test unit
Run e2e Test
To run e2e tests in minikube, add the following line to your machine’s /etc/hosts
file:
echo "$(minikube ip) http.appscode.test" >> /etc/hosts
$ ./hack/make.py test minikube # Run Test against minikube, this requires minikube to be set up and started.
$ ./hack/make.py test e2e -cloud-provider=gce # Test e2e against gce cluster
$ ./hack/make.py test integration -cloud-provider=gce # Run Integration test against gce
# This requires voyager to be deployed in the cluster.
- Run only matching tests e2e test
$ ./hack/make.py test e2e -cloud-provider=gce -ginkgo.focus=<regexp>
- Run tests but do not delete resource that are created
$ ./hack/make.py test minikube -cloud-provider=gce -cleanup=false
- Run Service IP Persist test with provided IP
$ ./hack/make.py test e2e -cloud-provider=gce -lb-ip=35.184.104.215
Tests are run only in namespaces prefixed with test-
. So, to run tests in your desired namespace, follow these steps:
# create a Kubernetes namespace in minikube with
kubectl create ns test-<any-name-you-want>
# run tests
./hack/make.py test minikube -namespace test-<any-name-you-want>
Full Spectrum of test configs
Following configurations can be enabled for test via flags in ./hack/make.py test
.
Flag Name | Default | Description |
---|---|---|
cloud-provider | Name of cloud Provider | |
ingress-class | ||
namespace | test- | Run tests in this namespaces |
haproxy-image | appscode/haproxy:1.8.8-7.0.0-alpine | HAProxy image name to run |
cleanup | true | Turn off cleanup for dynamically generated pods and configmaps. Helps with manual testing |
in-cluster | false | Operator is running inside cluster. Helps with running operator testing. |
daemon-host-name | master | Daemon host name to run daemon hosts |
lb-ip | Check load balancer IP with Static IP address | LoadBalancer persistent IP |
rbac | false | Cluster have RBAC enabled. |
cert | false | Run tests regarding certificates |
dump | os.TempDir() | Dump all Certificates and CA files for TLS ingress tests |
e2e tests are powered by ginkgo. All the configs and flags of ginkgo are also available.
CRDs
voyager
uses on two Custom Resource Definition object ingress.voyager.appscode.com
and certificate.voyager.appscode.com
. Those two objects can be created using the following command:
# Create Third Party Resources
$ kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/appscode/voyager/7.0.0/apis/voyager/v1beta1/crds.yaml