dex/Documentation/dev-guide.md
Pavel Strashkin dec5d90657 examples: add sample for clients
Adds consistency to existing samples for users, connectors, etc., as
well as protects users from accidental changes to files under Git, which
is why there are samples after all.
2016-05-18 18:18:20 -07:00

5.1 KiB

Dev Guide

No DB mode

When you are working on dex it's convenient to use the --no-db flag. This starts up dex in a mode which uses an in-memory datastore for persistence. It also does not rotate keys, so no overlord is required.

In this mode you provide the binary with paths to files for clients, connectors, users, and emailer. There are example files you can use inside of static/fixtures named "clients.json.sample", "connectors.json.sample", "users.json.sample", and "emailer.json.sample", respectively.

You can rename these to the equivalent without the ".sample" suffix since the defaults point to those locations:

cp static/fixtures/clients.json.sample static/fixtures/clients.json
cp static/fixtures/connectors.json.sample static/fixtures/connectors.json
cp static/fixtures/users.json.sample static/fixtures/users.json
cp static/fixtures/emailer.json.sample static/fixtures/emailer.json

Starting dex is then as simple as:

bin/dex-worker  --no-db

Do not use this flag in production - it's not thread safe and data is destroyed when the process dies. In addition, there is no key rotation.

Note: If you want to test out the registration flow, you need to enable that feature by passing --enable-registration=true as well.

Building

To build using the go binary on your host, use the ./build script.

You can also use a copy of go hosted inside a Docker container if you prefix your command with go-docker, as in: ./go-docker ./build

Docker Build and Push

Once binaries are compiled you can build and push a dex image to quay.io. Before doing this step binaries must be built above using one of the build tools.

./build-docker build

If you want to push the build to quay.io, use ./build-docker push:

export DOCKER_USER=<<your user>>
export DOCKER_PASSWORD=<<your password>>
./build-docker push

By default the script pushes to quay.io/coreos/dex; if you want to push to a different repository, override the DOCKER_REGISTRY and DOCKER_REPO environment variables.

Rebuild API from JSON schema

Go API bindings are generated from a JSON Discovery file. To regenerate run:

schema/generator

For updating generator dependencies see docs in: schema/generator_import.go.

Running Tests

To run all tests (except functional) use the ./test script;

If you want to test a single package only, use PKG=<pkgname> ./test

The functional tests require a database; create a database (eg. createdb dex_func_test) and then pass it as an environment variable to the functional test script, eg. DEX_TEST_DSN=postgres://localhost/dex_func_test?sslmode=disable ./test-functional

To run these tests with Docker is a little trickier; you need to have a container running Postgres, and then you need to link that container to the container running your tests:

# Run the Postgres docker container, which creates a db called "postgres"
docker run --name dex_postgres -d postgres

# The host name in the DSN is "postgres"; that works because that is what we
# will alias the link as, which causes Docker to modify /etc/hosts with a "postgres"
# entry.
export DEX_TEST_DSN=postgres://postgres@postgres/postgres?sslmode=disable

# Run the test container, linking it to the Postgres container.
DOCKER_LINKS=dex_postgres:postgres DOCKER_ENV=DEX_TEST_DSN ./go-docker ./test-functional

# Remove the container after the tests are run.
docker rm -f dex_postgres

Vendoring dependencies

dex uses glide for vendoring external dependencies. This section details how to add and update those dependencies.

Before continuing, please ensure you have the latest version of glide available in your PATH.

go get -u github.com/Masterminds/glide

Adding a new package

After adding a new import to dex source, use glide get to add the dependency to the glide.yaml and glide.lock files.

glide get -u -v -s github.com/godbus/dbus

Note that all of these flags are manditory. This should add an entry to the glide files, add the package to the vendor directory, and remove nested vendor directories and version control information.

Updating an existing package

To update an existing package, edit the glide.yaml file to the desired verison (most likely a git hash), and run glide update.

{{ edit the entry in glide.yaml }}
glide update -u -v -s github.com/lib/pq

Like glide get all flags are manditory. If the update was successful, glide.lock will have been updated to reflect the changes to glide.yaml and the package will have been updated in vendor.

Finalizing your change

Use git to ensure the vendor directory has updated only your target packages, and that no other entries in glide.yaml and glide.lock have changed.

Changes to the Godeps directory should be added as a separate commit from other changes for readability:

git status      # make sure things look reasonable
git add vendor
git commit -m "vendor: updated postgres driver"

# continue working

git add .
git commit -m "dirname: this is my actual change"