5.4 KiB
Building and Testing
Compile and Test Your Own Traefik! {: .subtitle }
So you want to build your own Traefik binary from the sources? Let's see how.
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
Run make with the binary
target.
This will create binaries for the Linux platform in the dist
folder.
$ make binary
docker build -t traefik-webui -f webui/Dockerfile webui
Sending build context to Docker daemon 2.686MB
Step 1/11 : FROM node:8.15.0
---> 1f6c34f7921c
[...]
Successfully built ce4ff439c06a
Successfully tagged traefik-webui:latest
[...]
docker build -t "traefik-dev:4475--feature-documentation" -f build.Dockerfile .
Sending build context to Docker daemon 279MB
Step 1/10 : FROM golang:1.13rc1-alpine
---> f4bfb3d22bda
[...]
Successfully built 5c3c1a911277
Successfully tagged traefik-dev:4475--feature-documentation
docker run -e "TEST_CONTAINER=1" -v "/var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock" -it -e OS_ARCH_ARG -e OS_PLATFORM_ARG -e TESTFLAGS -e VERBOSE -e VERSION -e CODENAME -e TESTDIRS -e CI -e CONTAINER=DOCKER -v "/home/ldez/sources/go/src/github.com/containous/traefik/"dist":/go/src/github.com/containous/traefik/"dist"" "traefik-dev:4475--feature-documentation" ./script/make.sh generate binary
---> Making bundle: generate (in .)
removed 'autogen/genstatic/gen.go'
---> Making bundle: binary (in .)
$ ls dist/
traefik*
The following targets can be executed outside Docker by setting the variable PRE_TARGET
to an empty string (we don't recommend that):
test-unit
test-integration
validate
binary
(the webUI is still generated by using Docker)
ex:
PRE_TARGET= make test-unit
Method 2: Using go
Requirements:
go
v1.13+- environment variable
GO111MODULE=on
!!! tip "Source Directory"
It is recommended that you clone Traefik into the `~/go/src/github.com/containous/traefik` directory.
This is the official golang workspace hierarchy that will allow dependencies to be properly resolved.
!!! note "Environment"
Set your `GOPATH` and `PATH` variable to be set to `~/go` via:
```bash
export GOPATH=~/go
export PATH=$PATH:$GOPATH/bin
```
For convenience, add `GOPATH` and `PATH` 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 an output similar to:
```bash
GOARCH="amd64"
GOBIN=""
GOEXE=""
GOHOSTARCH="amd64"
GOHOSTOS="linux"
GOOS="linux"
GOPATH="/home/<yourusername>/go"
GORACE=""
## ... and the list goes on
```
Build Traefik
Once you've set up your go environment and cloned the source repository, you can build Traefik.
Beforehand, you need to get go-bindata
(the first time) in order to be able to use the go generate
command (which is part of the build process).
cd ~/go/src/github.com/containous/traefik
# Get go-bindata. (Important: the ellipses are required.)
GO111MODULE=off go get github.com/containous/go-bindata/...
# Let's build
# generate
# (required to merge non-code components into the final binary, such as the web dashboard and the provider's templates)
go generate
# Standard go build
go build ./cmd/traefik
You will find the Traefik executable (traefik
) in the ~/go/src/github.com/containous/traefik
directory.
Updating the templates
If you happen to update the provider's templates (located in /templates
), you must run go generate
to update the autogen
package.
Testing
Method 1: Docker
and make
Run unit tests using the test-unit
target.
Run integration tests using the test-integration
target.
Run all tests (unit and integration) using the test
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 (only works the test-integration
target):
# 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 using $ 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: $ cd integration && go test -integration ./...
.