Development environment ======================= Git --- Before any partaking in development, you will need to fork the Mailu repository on GitHub. For this you will need a `GitHub`_ account. GitHub has excellent documentation on: #. How to `fork a repo`_ and set upstream (Mailu); #. Keeping your fork `synced`_; #. Sending a `pull request`_. Working on Mailu usually requires you to clone (download) your fork to your work station and create a branch. From here you can work on Mailu. When done, create a commit and push the branch to your GitHub repository. Then, on GitHub you can create a "pull request". Please make sure you have read the :ref:`git_workflow` section of the *Development guidelines* before submitting any pull requests. .. note:: It is strongly advised to **never** modify the ``master`` branch of your fork. This will make it impossible to sync your fork with upstream and creating new (and clean) branches! This includes never merging other branches from yourself or other users into your ``master``. If you want to do that, create a separate branch for it. Short work flow example ``````````````````````` .. code-block:: bash git clone https://github.com//Mailu.git cd Mailu git add remote upstream https://github.com/Mailu/Mailu.git git checkout -b fix-something master Work on the code as desired. Before doing a commit, you should at least build and run the containers. Keep reading this guide for more information. After this, continue to commit and send a PR. .. code-block:: bash git commit -a #Enter commit message in editor, save and close. git push --set-upstream origin fix-something Now you can go to your GitHub page, select the new branch and "send pull request". Updating your fork `````````````````` The Mailu ``master`` branch is an ever evolving target. It is important that newly created branches originate from the latest ``upstream/master``. In order to do so, you will need to `sync your fork`__: .. code-block:: bash git fetch --all git checkout master git merge upstream/master If you kept your master branch clean, this should fast-forward it to the latest upstream version. Likewise, if you worked on your branch for a longer amount of time, it is advised to merge the latest ``upstream/master`` into the branch. .. code-block:: bash git checkout my-old-branch git merge upstream/master Now, git won't fast forward but write a merge commit. Typically you can accept the commit message presented. Read the output if there are any merge conflicts. In ``git status`` you can find the files that need editing to have the desired contents. Also, it will tell you how to mark them as resolved. Optionally, you can ``git push`` after any of above merges to propagate them to GitHub. __ `synced`_ Bad habits ``````````` Some bad habits from users that we are sometimes confronted with. Please refrain yourself from: - ``git reset REF`` and ``git push --force`` after submitting a PR. - Merge a branch (other then master) into yours and submitting a PR before that other branch got merged into master. It will cause you to submit commits someone else wrote and are probably outside the subject of your PR. (There are valid cases however, but take care!) - ``git reset REF`` after merging ``upstream/master`` into your branch. It will unstage **all** changed files that where updated in the merge. Your will have to clean up all of them (don't delete!) using ``git checkout -- ``. And take care not to do that to the files you have modified. However, it can be that the merge modified some other lines then yours. You'll have to make sure there will be no conflicts when you are submitting this messed up branch to Mailu! You get the point, I hope. - ``git rebase`` on a branch that is pull-requested. Others will not be able to see you modified the branch and it messes with the order of commits, compared to a merge. It might break things after we have conducted tests. .. _`GitHub`: https://github.com/ .. _`fork a repo`: https://help.github.com/articles/fork-a-repo/ .. _`synced`: https://help.github.com/articles/syncing-a-fork/ .. _`pull request`: https://help.github.com/articles/about-pull-requests/ Docker containers ----------------- The development environment is quite similar to the production one. Building images ``````````````` We supply a separate ``test/build.yml`` file for convenience. After cloning the git repository to your workstation, you can build the images: .. code-block:: bash cd Mailu docker-compose -f tests/build.yml build The ``build.yml`` file has two variables: #. ``$DOCKER_ORG``: First part of the image tag. Defaults to *mailu* and needs to be changed only when pushing to your own Docker hub account. #. ``$VERSION``: Last part of the image tag. Defaults to *local* to differentiate from pulled images. To re-build only specific containers at a later time. .. code-block:: bash docker-compose -f tests/build.yml build admin webdav If you have to push the images to Docker Hub for testing in Docker Swarm or a remote host, you have to define ``DOCKER_ORG`` (usually your Docker user-name) and login to the hub. .. code-block:: bash docker login Username: Foo Password: Bar export DOCKER_ORG="Foo" export VERSION="feat-extra-app" docker-compose -f tests/build.yml build docker-compose -f tests/build.yml push Running containers `````````````````` To run the newly created images: ``cd`` to your project directory. Edit ``.env`` to set ``VERSION`` to the same value as used during the build, which defaults to ``local``. After that you can run: .. code-block:: bash docker-compose up -d If you wish to run commands inside a container, simply run (example): .. code-block:: bash docker-compose exec admin ls -lah / Or if you wish to start a shell for debugging: .. code-block:: bash docker-compose exec admin sh Finally, if you need to install packages inside the containers for debugging: .. code-block:: bash docker-compose exec admin apk add --no-cache package-name Reviewing --------- System requirements ``````````````````` Reviewing pull requests requires some additional git setup. First, for 90% of the review jobs, you will need a PC or server that can expose all Mailu ports to the outside world. Also, a valid domain name would be required. This can be a simple free DynDNS account. Do not use a production server, as there are cases where data corruption occurs and you need to delete the ``/mailu`` directory structure. If you do no posses the resources, but want to become an involved tester/reviewer. Please contact `muhlemmer on Matrix`_. He can provide access to a testing server, if a thrust relation can be established. .. _`muhlemmer on Matrix`: https://matrix.to/#/@muhlemmer:matrix.org Preparations ```````````` #. Setup `Git`_ the same way as on a development PC. It is advised to keep ``origin`` as your own repository and ``upstream`` as the one from Mailu. This will avoid confusion; #. You will need a ``docker-compose.yml`` and ``.env``, set up for the test server; #. Make sure that the build ``$VERSION`` corresponds with those files. Add the sender `````````````` Replace ```` with the repository name the PR is sent from. .. code-block:: bash git remote add https://github.com//Mailu.git Merge conflicts ``````````````` Before proceeding, check the PR page in the bottom. It should not indicate a merge conflict. If there are merge conflicts, you have 2 options: #. Do a review "request changes" and ask the author to resolve the merge conflict. #. Solve the merge conflict yourself on Github, using the web editor. If it can't be done in the web editor, go for option 1. Unless you want to go through the trouble of importing the branch into your fork, do the merge and send a PR to the repository of the *sender*. Merge the PR locally ``````````````````````` When someone sends a PR, you need merge his PR into master locally. This example will put you in a "detached head" state and do the merge in that state. Any commits done in this state will be lost forever when you checkout a "normal" branch. This is exactly what we want, as we do not want to mess with our repositories. This is just a test run. The following must be done on every PR or after every new commit to an existing PR: 1. Fetch the latest status of all the remotes. 2. List all local and remote available branches (this is not needed, but very helpful at times) 3. Checkout ``upstream/master`` 4. Merge ``upstream/master`` with ``SENDER/branch`` .. code-block:: bash git fetch --all git checkout upstream/master # ...You are in 'detached HEAD' state.... (bla bla bla) git branch -a # Hit `q` to exit the viewer, if it was opened. Uses arrows up/down for scrolling. git merge kaiyou/fix-sender-checks If git opens a editor for a commit message just save and exit as-is. If you have a merge conflict, see above and do the complete procedure from ``git fetch`` onward again. Test ```` You can now build and run the containers for testing. See the "`Docker containers`_" section for instructions. Play around. See if (external) mails work. Check for whatever functionality the PR is trying to fix. When happy, you can approve the PR. When running into failures, mark the review as "request changes" and try to provide as much as possible details on the failure. (Logs, error codes form clients etc). .. note:: Github marks positive reviews as obsolete when a new commit is added to a PR. This requires a new review from your side. Web administration ------------------ The administration Web interface requires a proper dev environment that can easily be setup using ``virtualenv`` (make sure you are using Python 3) : .. code-block:: bash cd core/admin virtualenv . source bin/activate pip install -r requirements.txt You can then export the path to the development database (use four slashes for absolute path): .. code-block:: bash export SQLALCHEMY_DATABASE_URI=sqlite:///path/to/dev.db And finally run the server with debug enabled: .. code-block:: bash python run.py Any change to the files will automatically restart the Web server and reload the files. When using the development environment, a debugging toolbar is displayed on the right side of the screen, that you can open to access query details, internal variables, etc. Documentation ------------- Documentation is maintained in the ``docs`` directory and are maintained as `reStructuredText`_ files. It is possible to run a local documentation server for reviewing purposes, using Docker: .. code-block:: bash cd docker build -t docs docs docker run -p 127.0.0.1:8080:80 docs In a local build Docker always assumes the version to be master. You can read the local documentation by navigating to http://localhost:8080/master. .. note:: After modifying the documentation, the image needs to be rebuild and the container restarted for the changes to become visible. .. _`reStructuredText`: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/rst.html