Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
272 lines (195 loc) · 11.3 KB

dev.md

File metadata and controls

272 lines (195 loc) · 11.3 KB

Development & Deploy

Prerequisites

You will need the following tools to build and deploy kapp-controller:

  • ytt
  • kbld
  • kapp

For linux/mac users, all the tools below can be installed by running ./hack/install-deps.sh.

For windows users, please download the binaries from the respective GitHub repositories:

Build

To build the kapp-controller project locally, run the following:

./hack/build.sh

Deploy

The kapp-controller source can be built and deployed to a Kubernetes cluster using one of the options below.

minikube

eval $(minikube docker-env)
./hack/deploy.sh

Note: for rapid iteration while developing, you can run the script ./hack/dev-deploy.sh which is much faster (0.5 minutes vs. 4+ minutes), but it requires that you have previously run the full deploy at least once to set things up.

Non-minikube environment

  1. Change the push_images property to true
  2. Change the image_repo property to the location to push the kapp-controller image
  3. Run ./hack/deploy.sh

Note: As above, while iterating you may prefer to run ./hack/dev-deploy.sh which is much faster (0.5 minutes vs. 4+ minutes), but it requires that you have previously run the full deploy at least once to set things up. Additionally you may need to make changes directly to the overlay in config-dev-deploy/build.yml.

secretgen-controller for private auth workflows

See more on kapp-controller's integration with secretgen-controller here.

# deploys secretgen-controller with kapp-controller
export KAPPCTRL_E2E_SECRETGEN_CONTROLLER=true

# use one of the methods above for where/how to deploy kapp-controller
./hack/deploy.sh

Testing

kapp-controller has unit tests and e2e tests that can be run as documented below.

Unit Testing

./hack/test.sh

e2e Testing

# deploy kapp-controller to cluster with test assets
./hack/deploy-test.sh

# namespace where tests will be run on cluster
export KAPPCTRL_E2E_NAMESPACE=kappctrl-test

# run e2e test suite
./hack/test-all.sh

The hack/test-e2e.sh script (also run by test-all) will tee its output to both your stdout and the (gitignored) file tmp/e2eoutput.txt so that you can more easily grep/search/parse the output.

Benchmark Testing

Benchmark tests are run via github action. They can also be run locally via go toolchain go test ./test/bench/... -bench=.

Benchmarks run on develop branch are graphed in github pages.

Profiling

1.) Enable profiling by editing config/values-schema.yaml and setting dangerousEnablePprof to true 2.) deploy (see above) 3.) install graphviz: brew install graphviz 4.) If you're using minikube you can then get the url for pprof via minikube service --url pprof -n kapp-controller - then append /debug/pprof/ as there is no redirect for /. 5.) consume data from the pprof server with your local toolchain. For instance the below will show you the memory usage profile:

> export PROFURL=`minikube service --url pprof -n kapp-controller`
> go tool pprof -png $PROFURL/debug/pprof/heap > heap.png
> open heap.png

Troubleshooting tips

  1. If testing against a minikube cluster, run eval $(minikube docker-env) before development.

    This prevents the following error, which is a result of the docker daemon being unable to pull the kapp-controller dev image.

11:01:16AM:     ^ Pending: ImagePullBackOff (message: Back-off pulling image "kbld:kapp-controller-sha256-1bb8a9169c8265defc094a0220fa51d8c69a621d778813e4c4567d8cabde0e45")
11:01:05AM:     ^ Pending: ErrImagePull (message: rpc error: code = Unknown desc = Error response from daemon: pull access denied for kbld, repository does not exist or may require 'docker login': denied: requested access to the resource is denied)

Release

Release versions are scraped from git tags in the same style as the goreleaser tool.

Tag the release - it's necessary to do this first because the release process uses the latest tag to record the version.

git tag "v1.2.3"

Push the tag to GitHub.

git push --tags

After pushing the tag to GitHub, the release process will be carried out by a GitHub workflow. This workflow will:

  • Build and push the kapp-controller container image to ghcr.io
  • Generate the release YAML (i.e. release.yml)
  • Create a GitHub release draft
  • Upload release.yml to the GitHub release

After the release process finishes successfully, you can view the newly drafted release via the GitHub UI here.

The newly published release will be available as a Draft (i.e. not available to the public). Release notes can be autogenerated by GitHub, but make sure to call attention to any points that are not immediately clear from the autogenerated notes. Make sure to always thank external contributors for their additions to kapp-controller in the release notes.

Once the release notes are ready, clicking the Publish release button in the GitHub UI to make the release available to users.

LTS Releases

We want our releases to be sorted in semver order, but github only sorts on semver order for releases on the same day (otherwise it sorts preferentially by date). So we use sneaky post-dated annotated tags for LTS releases to pin them to the date of the original release. For example:

 GIT_COMMITTER_DATE="2022-02-25 2:00" git tag -a -m "v0.30.2" "v0.30.2"

Release development process

If you are making changes to the release process and want to test the process, it is recommended to work on a fork of kapp-controller instead of against the repository in the carvel-dev organization.

To do this, you can start by forking this repository.

Next, head to the Actions tab of the fork you are using and enable GitHub Actions to run against this fork (i.e. By default, Actions do not run against forked repositories).

Change the config-release/values-schema.yml to point to your forked repository by changing image_repo: ghcr.io/carvel-dev/kapp-controller to image_repo: ghcr.io/<YOUR GitHub USERNAME>/kapp-controller.

After these steps have been carried out, you can trigger the release process by pushing a tag to your forked repository.

Some files to make note of when working on the release process:

Code Generation

kapp-controller relies on Kubernetes-focused code generation tools to generate the following:

  • Custom resource definitions
  • Clients, deep copy, lister, and informer logic for kapp-controller types
  • API Server specifics: protobuf and openapi logic

Code generation should take place when API changes are made to kapp-controller resources (e.g. adding new fields). The CI for kapp-controller will always check if code generators should have been run and notify users to do so if needed, so do not worry if you are unsure. ./hack/verify-no-dirty-files.sh can also be run locally to make sure any changes are ready to be checked in.

Prerequisite

Make sure to have protoc installed.

Run All Generators at Once

To run all generator scripts before checking changes in, use ./hack/build-and-all-gen.sh.

Custom resource generation

For CRD generation, kapp-controller makes use of kubebuilder via scripts and configuration.

Running ./hack/build.sh calls out to ./hack/gen-crds.sh. With every build of kapp-controller, the CRDs will be regenerated and output to config/crds.yml.

The ./hack/gen-crds.sh script also makes use of a ytt overly in ./hack/crd-overlay.yml. This overlay removes unnecessary properties of the generated YAML.

Clients, deep copy, lister, and informer

To regenerate clients, deep copy, lister, and informer code, use ./hack/gen.sh.

API Server generation

To regenerate code for API Server updates, use ./hack/gen-apiserver.sh.

Packaging Development

Due to the fact the one of our resources is named package, which is a golang keyword, we were not able to use the code-generation binaries. To get around this, we generated the code using the name pkg, and then manually edited those files to enable us to use the name package. We will have to come up with a long term solution to enable us to use the code-generation binaries again.

Continuous Integration/Jobs

kapp-controller uses GitHub Actions for all continuous integration for the project. You can find these CI processes under the .github/workflows folder.

Pull Requests

On each pull request, the following CI processes run:

  • test-gh - Builds kapp-controller, deploys build to minikube, runs unit tests, runs e2e tests.
  • golangci-lint - Runs project linter. Configuration for linter is in .golangci.yml file.
  • test-kctrl-gh - Runs build and tests for kapp-controller CLI.
  • upgrade-testing - This process deploys the latest released version of kapp-controller and then builds and redeploys the changes submitted in the pull request. This helps to assure changes do not break upgrades between kapp-controller versions.

Daily Jobs

Each day, the following processes run:

Jobs Based on Events

The actions below are carried out when a certain event occurs:

  • Remove label on close - This job runs whenever an issue is closed. It removes the carvel-triage label from the closed issue to signal no further attention is needed on the issue.
  • Closed issue comment labeling - This job runs whenever a comment is posted to a closed issue to signal maintainers should take a look.
  • kapp-controller release - This job carries out the kapp-controller release. More information available here.