traefik/CONTRIBUTING.md
2018-10-17 16:24:04 +02:00

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Contributing

Building

You need either Docker and make (Method 1), or go (Method 2) in order to build Traefik. For changes to its dependencies, the dep dependency management tool is required.

Method 1: Using Docker and Makefile

You need to run the binary target. This will create binaries for Linux platform in the dist folder.

$ make binary
docker build -t "traefik-dev:no-more-godep-ever" -f build.Dockerfile .
Sending build context to Docker daemon 295.3 MB
Step 0 : FROM golang:1.11-alpine
 ---> 8c6473912976
Step 1 : RUN go get github.com/golang/dep/cmd/dep
[...]
docker run --rm  -v "/var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock" -it -e OS_ARCH_ARG -e OS_PLATFORM_ARG -e TESTFLAGS -v "/home/user/go/src/github.com/containous/traefik/"dist":/go/src/github.com/containous/traefik/"dist"" "traefik-dev:no-more-godep-ever" ./script/make.sh generate binary
---> Making bundle: generate (in .)
removed 'gen.go'

---> Making bundle: binary (in .)

$ ls dist/
traefik*

Method 2: Using go

Setting up your go environment
  • You need go v1.9+
  • It is recommended you clone Traefik into a directory like ~/go/src/github.com/containous/traefik (This is the official golang workspace hierarchy, and will allow dependencies to resolve properly)
  • Set your GOPATH and PATH variable to be set to ~/go via:
export GOPATH=~/go
export PATH=$PATH:$GOPATH/bin

Note: You will want to add those 2 export lines to your .bashrc or .bash_profile

  • Verify your environment is setup properly by running $ go env. Depending on your OS and environment you should see output similar to:
GOARCH="amd64"
GOBIN=""
GOEXE=""
GOHOSTARCH="amd64"
GOHOSTOS="linux"
GOOS="linux"
GOPATH="/home/<yourusername>/go"
GORACE=""
## more go env's will be listed
Build Traefik

Once your environment is set up and the Traefik repository cloned you can build Traefik. You need get go-bindata once to be able to use go generate command as part of the build. The steps to build are:

cd ~/go/src/github.com/containous/traefik

# Get go-bindata. Please note, the ellipses are required
go get github.com/containous/go-bindata/...

# Start build

# generate
# (required to merge non-code components into the final binary, such as the web dashboard and provider's Go templates)
go generate

# Standard go build
go build ./cmd/traefik
# run other commands like tests

You will find the Traefik executable in the ~/go/src/github.com/containous/traefik folder as traefik.

Updating the templates

If you happen to update the provider templates (in /templates), you need to run go generate to update the autogen package.

Setting up dependency management

dep is not required for building; however, it is necessary to modify dependencies (i.e., add, update, or remove third-party packages)

You need to use dep >= O.4.1.

If you want to add a dependency, use dep ensure -add to have dep put it into the vendor folder and update the dep manifest/lock files (Gopkg.toml and Gopkg.lock, respectively).

A following make dep-prune run should be triggered to trim down the size of the vendor folder. The final result must be committed into VCS.

Here's a full example using dep to add a new dependency:

# install the new main dependency github.com/foo/bar and minimize vendor size
$ dep ensure -add github.com/foo/bar
# generate (Only required to integrate other components such as web dashboard)
$ go generate
# Standard go build
$ go build ./cmd/traefik
# run other commands like tests

Tests

Method 1: Docker and make

You can run unit tests using the test-unit target and the integration test using the test-integration target.

$ make test-unit
docker build -t "traefik-dev:your-feature-branch" -f build.Dockerfile .
# […]
docker run --rm -it -e OS_ARCH_ARG -e OS_PLATFORM_ARG -e TESTFLAGS -v "/home/user/go/src/github/containous/traefik/dist:/go/src/github.com/containous/traefik/dist" "traefik-dev:your-feature-branch" ./script/make.sh generate test-unit
---> Making bundle: generate (in .)
removed 'gen.go'

---> Making bundle: test-unit (in .)
+ go test -cover -coverprofile=cover.out .
ok      github.com/containous/traefik   0.005s  coverage: 4.1% of statements

Test success

For development purposes, you can specify which tests to run by using:

# Run every tests in the MyTest suite
TESTFLAGS="-check.f MyTestSuite" make test-integration

# Run the test "MyTest" in the MyTest suite
TESTFLAGS="-check.f MyTestSuite.MyTest" make test-integration

# Run every tests starting with "My", in the MyTest suite
TESTFLAGS="-check.f MyTestSuite.My" make test-integration

# Run every tests ending with "Test", in the MyTest suite
TESTFLAGS="-check.f MyTestSuite.*Test" make test-integration

More: https://labix.org/gocheck

Method 2: go

Unit tests can be run from the cloned directory by $ go test ./... which should return ok similar to:

ok      _/home/user/go/src/github/containous/traefik    0.004s

Integration tests must be run from the integration/ directory and require the -integration switch to be passed like this: $ cd integration && go test -integration ./....

Documentation

The documentation site is built with mkdocs

Building Documentation

Method 1: Docker and make

You can build the documentation and serve it locally with livereloading, using the docs target:

$ make docs
docker build -t traefik-docs -f docs.Dockerfile .
# […]
docker run  --rm -v /home/user/go/github/containous/traefik:/mkdocs -p 8000:8000 traefik-docs mkdocs serve
# […]
[I 170828 20:47:48 server:283] Serving on http://0.0.0.0:8000
[I 170828 20:47:48 handlers:60] Start watching changes
[I 170828 20:47:48 handlers:62] Start detecting changes

And go to http://127.0.0.1:8000.

If you only want to build the documentation without serving it locally, you can use the following command:

$ make docs-build
...

Method 2: mkdocs

First make sure you have python and pip installed

$ python --version
Python 2.7.2
$ pip --version
pip 1.5.2

Then install mkdocs with pip

pip install --user -r requirements.txt

To build documentation locally and serve it locally, run mkdocs serve in the root directory, this should start a server locally to preview your changes.

$ mkdocs serve
INFO    -  Building documentation...
INFO    -  Cleaning site directory
[I 160505 22:31:24 server:281] Serving on http://127.0.0.1:8000
[I 160505 22:31:24 handlers:59] Start watching changes
[I 160505 22:31:24 handlers:61] Start detecting changes

Verify Documentation

You can verify that the documentation meets some expectations, as checking for dead links, html markup validity.

$ make docs-verify
docker build -t traefik-docs-verify ./script/docs-verify-docker-image ## Build Validator image
...
docker run --rm -v /home/travis/build/containous/traefik:/app traefik-docs-verify ## Check for dead links and w3c compliance
=== Checking HTML content...
Running ["HtmlCheck", "ImageCheck", "ScriptCheck", "LinkCheck"] on /app/site/basics/index.html on *.html...

If you recently changed the documentation, do not forget to clean it to have it rebuilt:

$ make docs-clean docs-verify
...

How to Write a Good Issue

Please keep in mind that the GitHub issue tracker is not intended as a general support forum, but for reporting bugs and feature requests.

For end-user related support questions, refer to one of the following:

  • the Traefik community Slack channel: Join the chat at https://slack.traefik.io
  • Stack Overflow (using the traefik tag)

Title

The title must be short and descriptive. (~60 characters)

Description

  • Respect the issue template as much as possible. template
  • If it's possible use the command traefik bug. See https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lyz62L8m93I.
  • Explain the conditions which led you to write this issue: the context.
  • The context should lead to something, an idea or a problem that youre facing.
  • Remain clear and concise.
  • Format your messages to help the reader focus on what matters and understand the structure of your message, use Markdown syntax

How to Write a Good Pull Request

Title

The title must be short and descriptive. (~60 characters)

Description

  • Respect the pull request template as much as possible. template
  • Explain the conditions which led you to write this PR: the context.
  • The context should lead to something, an idea or a problem that youre facing.
  • Remain clear and concise.
  • Format your messages to help the reader focus on what matters and understand the structure of your message, use Markdown syntax

Content

  • Make it small.
  • Do only one thing.
  • Write useful descriptions and titles.
  • Avoid re-formatting.
  • Make sure the code builds.
  • Make sure all tests pass.
  • Add tests.
  • Address review comments in terms of additional commits.
  • Do not amend/squash existing ones unless the PR is trivial.
  • If a PR involves changes to third-party dependencies, the commits pertaining to the vendor folder and the manifest/lock file(s) should be committed separated.

Read 10 tips for better pull requests.