Put git in a box to make it easy to work with in your apps.
- ✅ Clone repos from 3rd party git providers - GitHub, GitLab, BitBucket etc.
- ✅ Fetch updates from origin on demand
- ✅ Create new commits on a branch and push to the origin
- Set up webhooks to automatically fetch when origin is updated (TODO)
- ✅ Emit events about changes in the repo
- Query the repo for:
- ✅ branch head revisions
- file/directory listings (TODO)
- ✅ file contents
- Authenticate all requests (TODO)
- Create pull requests on 3rd party providers from a local branch (TODO)
- Read user info (orgs, repos) from 3rd party providers (TODO)
git-en-boite is written in Typescript, and produces a Docker image every time the tests pass on the master branch.
It's separated into multiple NPM packages which are all contained inside this repo under ./packages
.
We use yarn workspaces to manage these packages.
The following docker-compose command starts the backend HTTP API
docker-compose up
Now you can hit the service:
curl http://localhost:3001
Install yarn, then install dependencies:
yarn
Set up default environment variables (assumes you're using direnv):
cp .envrc.default .envrc
direnv allow .
The integration tests need redis to be running somewhere. If you don't have or want to have it installed on your dev machine, you can spin it up in Docker:
docker-compose up --detach redis
On ubuntu 20, the default docker package should be replaced by the latest one to use the long syntax in docker-compose.yml
sudo curl -L "https://github.com/docker/compose/releases/download/1.27.4/docker-compose-$(uname -s)-$(uname -m)" -o /usr/local/bin/docker-compose
sudo chmod +x /usr/local/bin/docker-compose
docker-compose -version
The version returned should be 1.27.4, build 40524192
Build first:
yarn build
Run the tests in each of the packages:
yarn test
When the acceptance tests fail, it's often useful to debug them by logging. You can turn on logging to console like this:
LOGGING_READABLE_BY=humans yarn acceptance test
Git-en-boîte ships with smoke tests that can be run against any instance of itself.
To run them, two environment variables need to be set:
smoke_tests_web_server_url
: the base URL for the Git-en-boîte instance you want to test.smoke_tests_remote_repo_url
: the URL of a Git repository that will be used by the smoke tests. git-en-boite-demo typically serves that purpose. Write operations are performed during the test, make sure the URL includes the proper credentials (e.g. a GitHub username/token pair).
Optionally, you can also set this, to test out how failures are reported in your infrastructure:
smoke_tests_deliberate_error
: an error message to raise as soon as the smoke tests run.
Run the smoke tests with:
yarn smoke start
To run against a locally-running instance:
smoke_tests_web_server_url=http://localhost:3001 \
smoke_tests_remote_repo_url=https://<user>:<token>@github.com/SmartBear/git-en-boite-demo\
yarn smoke start
Run using local containers (for both the smoke tests and the running server):
docker-compose up
smoke_tests_remote_repo_url=https://<user>:<token>@github.com/SmartBear/git-en-boite-demo \
docker-compose run smoke-tests yarn smoke start
Git-en-boite is automatically packaged as a new docker image each time the CI build runs succesfully on the main
branch. The docker image is tagged with the git sha of the commit.
To make a semantially-versioned release of the docker-image:
-
Make sure you've closed the GitHub issues that were in the release. This will trigger a bot workflow to update the changelog.
-
Update the root
package.json
file and tag the git commit:
yarn version --major|minor|patch # choose the right switch depending on the type of changes in this release
- Push the new git tag and the commit updating the version:
git push && git push --tags
The build script should take care of the rest.
Remove the git-repos directory:
sudo rm -rf git-repos