Ian Howell d775b2159a This updates the current unit tests for testify
This commit removes any assertion from Go's "testing" package,
preferring instead to use an assertion from the testify package. All
tests now have uniformity.

This also decrease the number of iterations in the password generation
test, decreasing test runtime tenfold

Change-Id: I8799110e93dfa19bebe9050528e865b4c991c3df
2019-11-07 12:15:06 -06:00
2019-11-07 11:37:53 -06:00
2019-06-06 09:30:51 -05:00
2019-06-25 08:11:57 -05:00
2019-10-04 15:31:45 +00:00
2019-10-19 14:16:05 -05:00
2019-11-05 15:52:14 +00:00

airshipctl

Custom Plugins Tutorial

This tutorial walks through a very basic plugin for airshipctl. For a more involved example, see Plugin Support

The following steps will get you started with a very rudimentary example plugin for airshipctl. First, create a directory for your project outside of the GOPATH:

mkdir /tmp/example
cd /tmp/example

This project will need to be a go module. You can initialize a module named example with the following:

go mod init example

Note that modules are a relatively new feature added to Go, so you'll need to be running Go1.11 or greater. Also note that most modules will follow a naming schema that matches the remote version control system. A more realistice module name might look something like opendev.org/airship/exampleplugin.

Next, create a file main.go and populate it with the following:

package main

import (
	"fmt"
	"os"

	"opendev.org/airship/airshipctl/cmd"
	"github.com/spf13/cobra"
)

func main() {
	rootCmd, _, err := cmd.NewRootCmd(os.Stdout)
	if err != nil {
		fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "Failed to create root airshipctl command: %s\n", err.Error())
		os.Exit(1)
	}

	exampleCmd := &cobra.Command{
		Use:   "example",
		Short: "an example plugin",
		Run: func(cmd *cobra.Command, args []string) {
			fmt.Fprintln(os.Stdout, "Hello airshipctl!")
		},
	}

	rootCmd.AddCommand(exampleCmd)
	if err := rootCmd.Execute(); err != nil {
		fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "Failure during execution: %s\n", err.Error())
		os.Exit(1)
	}
}

And finally, run the build command to download and compile airshipctl:

go build -o airshipctl

Now that you've built airshipctl, you can access your plugin with the following command:

./airshipctl example

You may have noticed that this example ignores the second return value from cmd.NewRootCmd. This value is a pointer to the AirshipCTLSettings, which contains various configuration details, such as the debug flag and the path to the config file*. A useful paradigm involves embedding this object into a custom ExampleSettings struct. This can be seen in the demo repo.

For a more involved example, see Plugin Support

* Work in progress

Description
A CLI for managing declarative infrastructure.
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