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This page is about CoreOS Assembler development. See the Building Fedora CoreOS and Working with CoreOS Assembler guides if you are looking for how to use the CoreOS Assembler.
- TOC {:toc}
If you find yourself wanting to hack on CoreOS Assembler itself then you can
easily mount the scripts into the container and prevent rebuilding the
container to test every change. This can be done using the
COREOS_ASSEMBLER_GIT
env var.
$ export COREOS_ASSEMBLER_GIT=/path/to/github.com/coreos/coreos-assembler/
$ cosa init https://github.com/coreos/fedora-coreos-config.git
$ cosa fetch && cosa build
If you already have a pet container you'd like to keep using that matches the same Fedora release cosa uses, you can install cosa inside of it by doing:
$ sudo ./build.sh configure_yum_repos
$ sudo ./build.sh install_rpms
$ make
$ sudo make install
From that point on, you only need to run make && sudo make install
if you're
hacking on cosa itself (unless there are new RPM requirements added).
You can also reuse a cosa shell
to test changes from other git repositories.
You'll likely want to do this for e.g. things like testing out changes to
ostree
/rpm-ostree
that are run as part of cosa build
.
Similarly, if you are only working on kola, ore or plume, you can build, test and use them directly with:
$ cd mantle
$ ./build kola ore plume
$ ./test
$ ./bin/kola ...
You will need the required build tools (golang toolchain, etc.) and may either
reuse a cosa shell
to get them or install them inside a toolbx container.
To completely rebuild the COSA container image locally, use:
$ podman build -t localhost/coreos-assembler .
You should then set COREOS_ASSEMBLER_CONTAINER=localhost/coreos-assembler
in
the environment if you're using the bash alias cosa
:
$ export COREOS_ASSEMBLER_CONTAINER=localhost/coreos-assembler
$ cosa ...
You can also re-use the official COSA container image as a base to quickly create a new container image with your local changes:
$ podman build -t localhost/coreos-assembler . --from quay.io/coreos-assembler/coreos-assembler:latest
This is especially useful for changes to dependencies or for final verification of COSA code.
Many coreos-assembler developers use podman
locally. However some things
may only reproduce in a Kubernetes/OpenShift environment. One trick is to
spin up a pod with coreos-assembler with an entrypoint of sleep infinity
,
then use oc rsh
to log into it.
A further trick you can use is oc rsync
to copy the build from your
workstation to the remote pod for fast iteration. For example, assuming
a remote pod name of walters-cosa
:
oc rsync ./ walters-cosa:/home/builder/coreos-assembler/ && oc rsh walters-cosa sudo /bin/sh -c 'cd ~builder/coreos-assembler && make install'
(This could be improved in various ways, among them just shipping the binaries and not the source)
To pull in fixed packages before they make it through Bodhi,
you can simply tag them into the
f${releasever}-coreos-continuous
tag and trigger a
rebuild.
- Ensure that
pytest
andpytest-cov
are installed:
$ pip3 install --user -r test-requirements.txt
- Run
make unittest
$ make unittest
COSA_TEST_META_PATH=`pwd`/fixtures \
PYTHONPATH=`pwd`/src python3 -m pytest tests/
============================= test session starts ==============================
platform linux -- Python 3.7.3, pytest-4.6.3, py-1.8.0, pluggy-0.12.0
rootdir: /var/home/steve/Tech/GITHUB/coreos-assembler, inifile: pytest.ini
plugins: cov-2.7.1
collected 3 items
tests/test_cli.py ... [100%]
----------- coverage: platform linux, python 3.7.3-final-0 -----------
Name Stmts Miss Cover
---------------------------------------------
src/cosalib/__init__.py 0 0 100%
src/cosalib/build.py 127 127 0%
src/cosalib/cli.py 28 0 100%
---------------------------------------------
TOTAL 155 127 18%
=========================== 3 passed in 0.05 seconds ===========================
For adding tests to kola
, please see the Testing with Kola page.
You can then run make
to build your modifications.