Skip to content
This repository has been archived by the owner on Jun 11, 2020. It is now read-only.

canonical-web-and-design/build.snapcraft.io

Repository files navigation

build.snapcraft.io

This project is now archived, and the build behaviour has been moved to a new experience at https://snapcraft.io/build. Please see the snapcraft.io repo.

Snapcraft Build site.

Local development

First, make sure all dependencies are installed, you will need node@6 (for example version 6.11.3) and npm in version less then 4 (for example latest npm@3 which is 3.10.10):

$ npm install

Pre-requisites

Before you start the development site, you need to set up test accounts with GitHub and Launchpad to test with.

GitHub

To connect to GitHub itself, you will need to create a "client id" and "client secret" to allow the application to authenticate itself.

Go and register a new OAuth application in your GitHub account. You can fill in the form however you want, the only important detail is that you set the "Authorization callback URL" to http://localhost:8000/auth/verify.

Once you've created the application, you should be given the client id and the client secret. Make a note of these.

[Optional] GitHub token

Additionally, if the intention is to run the GitHub repository poller (npm run poll-repositories), a API token should be acquired so the API calls are submitted to an acceptable rate-limit (5k req/h instead of 60 req/h for anonymous access)::

curl -s -u '<GH_USER>' https://api.github.com/authorizations \
  -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
  -H 'X-GitHub-OTP: <GH 2FA CODE IF ENABLED>' \
  -d '{"client_id": "<CLIENT-ID>", \
       "client_secret": "<CLIENT-SECRET>", \
       "note": "Build.s.io poller token"}' | jq '.token' -r

curl will ask for you GitHub password (basic-auth) and acquire a 40-char authorization token. Make note of it, it should be set in the running environment as GITHUB_AUTH_CLIENT_TOKEN.

Launchpad

To connect to Launchpad, you need to set up a username, a consumer key and obtain an API token and an API token secret::

$ sudo apt install python-launchpadlib
$ ./scripts/create-launchpad-credentials

It will print the details needed in the next section, for filling your environment file.

If you need complete instructions for obtaining these details, they can be found here.

Env file

To use the credentials from GitHub and Launchpad, you need to create an env file.

atom environments/dev.env

Paste the following into the file and fill in the missing values:

LP_API_URL=
LP_API_USERNAME=
LP_API_CONSUMER_KEY=
LP_API_TOKEN=
LP_API_TOKEN_SECRET=
GITHUB_AUTH_CLIENT_ID=
GITHUB_AUTH_CLIENT_SECRET=
GITHUB_AUTH_CLIENT_TOKEN=
NODE_ENV=development

You should now have all the configuration necessary for starting the development site.

Start the dev server

To start the development server:

npm start -- --env=environments/dev.env

After about 20 seconds, the web application should be available at http://127.0.0.1:8000.

Run the repository poller script

$ npm run build:scripts
...
$ npm run poll-repositories -- --env=environments/dev.env

lxd container setup

To locally reproduce the ols jenkaas setup, a local lxd container can be created on ubuntu with the python3-ols-vms package from the ubuntuone/ols-tests PPA:

$ ols-vms setup [--force] build-snapcraft-io
$ ols-vms shell build-snapcraft-io
ubuntu@build-snapcraft-io:~$ git clone git://github.com/canonical-websites/build.snapcraft.io.git work
ubuntu@build-snapcraft-io:~$ cd work
ubuntu@build-snapcraft-io:~/work$ npm install
ubuntu@build-snapcraft-io:~/work$ npm test

emacs

Emacs is confused if 'build.snapcraft.io' is used in the project directory name, using 'build-snapcraft-io' restores sanity.

Updating dependencies

First, you must add or update the dependency by::

$ npm install --save async-lock

or ::

$ npm install --save [email protected]

This way package.json will be modified accordingly. Read more about the version number syntax if necessary.

Finally, run npm run shonkwrap to update the npm-shrinkwrap.json file with the new frozen dependency set. The shonkwrap command wraps npm shrinkwrap, but removes the 'resolved' keys from the final shrinkwrapped file.