| description: | How to hack on Deis including setup instructions |
|---|
We try to make it simple to hack on Deis. However, there are necessarily several moving pieces and some setup required. We welcome any suggestions for automating or simplifying this process.
If you're just getting into the Deis codebase, look for GitHub issues with the label easy-fix. These are more straightforward or low-risk issues and are a great way to become more familiar with Deis.
You can develop on any supported platform including your laptop, cloud providers or on bare metal. We strongly recommend a minimum 3-node cluster.
Deis is written in both python and Go, so you will need to install both Python 2.7 and the latest version of Go.
If your local workstation does not support the linux/amd64 target environment, you will have to install Go from source with cross-compile support for that environment. This is because some of the components are built on your local machine and then injected into a docker container. To do that, run
$ sudo su
$ curl -sSL https://golang.org/dl/go1.4.src.tar.gz | tar -v -C /usr/local -xz
$ cd /usr/local/go/src
$ # compile Go for our default platform first, then add cross-compile support
$ ./make.bash --no-clean
$ GOOS=linux GOARCH=amd64 ./make.bash --no-cleanAfter that, you should be able to compile Deis' components as normal.
The development workflow requires a Docker Registry that is accessible to you (the developer) and to all of the hosts in your cluster.
You will also need a deisctl client to update images and restart components.
To get Deis running for development, first fork the Deis repository, then clone your fork of the repository:
$ git clone git@github.com:<username>/deis.git
$ cd deisYour Deis client should match your server's version. For developers, one way
to ensure this is to use Python 2.7 to install requirements and then run
client/deis.py in the Deis code repository. Then make a symlink or shell
alias for deis to ensure it is found in your $PATH:
$ make -C client/ install
$ sudo ln -fs $(pwd)/client/deis.py /usr/local/bin/deis
$ deis
Usage: deis <command> [<args>...]To connect to the cluster using deisctl, you must add the private key to ssh-agent.
For example, when using Vagrant:
$ ssh-add ~/.vagrant.d/insecure_private_keySet DEISCTL_TUNNEL so the deisctl client on your workstation can connect to
one of the hosts in your cluster:
$ export DEISCTL_TUNNEL=172.17.8.100Test connectivity using deisctl list:
$ deisctl listTo start up and configure a local vagrant cluster for development, you can use the dev-cluster target.
This requires that deisctl and vagrant are installed.
$ make dev-clusterThe development workflow requires Docker Registry set at the DEV_REGISTRY
environment variable. If you're developing locally you can use the dev-registry
target to spin up a quick, disposable registry inside a Docker container.
The target dev-registry prints the registry's address and port when using boot2docker;
otherwise, use your host's IP address as returned by ifconfig with port 5000 for DEV_REGISTRY.
$ make dev-registry
To configure the registry for local Deis development:
export DEV_REGISTRY=192.168.59.103:5000Note
For Docker 1.3.1 and later, docker push to this development registry may fail
without SSL certificate support. Restart docker with an --insecure-registry flag.
For boot2docker 1.3.1 for example, add
EXTRA_ARGS="--insecure-registry 192.168.59.103:5000" to
/var/lib/boot2docker/profile and restart docker with sudo /etc/init.d/docker restart.
If you are developing elsewhere, you must set up a registry yourself. Make sure it meets the following requirements:
- You can push Docker images from your workstation
- Hosts in the cluster can pull images with the same URL
Note
If the development registry is insecure and has an IP address in a range other than 10.0.0.0/8,
172.16.0.0/12, or 192.168.0.0/16, you'll have to modify contrib/coreos/user-data.example
and whitelist your development registry so the daemons can pull your custom components.
Deis includes Makefile targets designed to simplify the development workflow.
This workflow is typically:
- Update source code and commit your changes using
git- Use
make -C <component> buildto build a new Docker image- Use
make -C <component> dev-releaseto push a snapshot release- Use
make -C <component> restartto restart the component
This can be shortened to a one-liner using the deploy target:
$ make -C controller deployYou can also use the same tasks on the root Makefile to operate on all
components at once. For example, make deploy will build, dev-release,
and restart all components on the cluster.
Important
In order to cut a dev-release, you must commit changes using git to increment
the SHA used when tagging Docker images
Deis ships with a comprehensive suite of automated tests, most written in Go. See :ref:`testing` for instructions on running the tests.
Once your controller is running, here are some helpful commands.
$ deisctl journal controller$ make -C controller build push restart$ make -C controller restart$ deisctl ssh controller # SSH into the controller
$ nse deis-controller # inject yourself into the container
$ cd /app # change into the django project root
$ ./manage.py shell # get a django shellHave commands other Deis developers might find useful? Send us a PR!
Please read :ref:`standards`. It contains a checklist of things you should do when proposing a change to Deis.