This repository is the home of calicoctl
.
Note that the documentation in this repo is targeted at Calico contributors.Documentation for Calico users is here:
https://docs.projectcalico.org
For information on calicoctl
usage, see the calicoctl reference information
Binary downloads of calicoctl
can be found on the Releases page.
Unpack the calicoctl
binary and add it to your PATH and you are good to go!
If you want to use a package manager:
- Homebrew users can use
brew install calicoctl
.
Print useful actions with make help
.
For simplicity, calicoctl
can be built in a Docker container, eliminating
the need for any dependencies in your host developer environment, using the following command:
make build
The binary will be put in ./dist/
and named calicoctl-<os>-<arch>
, e.g.:
$ ls -1 ./dist/
calicoctl-linux-amd64
calicoctl-linux-arm64
calicoctl-linux-armv7
calicoctl-linux-ppc64le
calicoctl-linux-s390x
calicoctl-darwin-amd64
calicoctl-windows-amd64.exe
To build for a different OS or ARCH, simply define it as a var to make
, e.g.:
$ make build ARCH=arm64
$ make build OS=darwin ARCH=amd64
To list all possible targets, run make help
.
Tests can be run in a container to ensure all build dependencies are met.
To run the tests
make test
Note: Tests depend on the test image calico/test
, which is available only on amd64
. The actual image used as set by the make variable TEST_CONTAINER_NAME
. If you have a local build of that image or one for a different architecture, you can override it by setting the variable, e.g.:
$ make test TEST_CONTAINER_NAME=some/container:tag