Add hacking guideline

After all, it _was_ docday when this was proposed!

This is by no means complete but some of this has come up a lot recently.

Change-Id: I72300506e1c74077d3f9e6bbabea3b2a25a8e829
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Dean Troyer 2012-03-05 07:15:30 -06:00
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Contributing to DevStack
========================
General
-------
DevStack is written in POSIX shell script. This choice was made because
it best illustrates the configuration steps that this implementation takes
on setting up and interacting with OpenStack components. DevStack specifies
BASH and is compatible with Bash 3.
DevStack's official repository is located on GitHub at
https://github.com/openstack-dev/devstack.git. Besides the master branch that
tracks the OpenStack trunk branches a separate branch is maintained for all
OpenStack releases starting with Diablo (stable/diablo).
The primary script in DevStack is ``stack.sh``, which performs the bulk of the
work for DevStack's use cases. There is a subscript ``functions`` that contains
generally useful shell functions and is used by a number of the scripts in
DevStack.
A number of additional scripts can be found in the ``tools`` directory that may
be useful in setting up special-case uses of DevStack. These include: bare metal
deployment, ramdisk deployment and Jenkins integration.
Scripts
-------
DevStack scripts should generally begin by calling ``env(1)`` in the shebang line::
#!/usr/bin/env bash
Sometimes the script needs to know the location of the DevStack install directory.
``TOP_DIR`` should always point there, even if the script itself is located in
a subdirectory::
# Keep track of the current devstack directory.
TOP_DIR=$(cd $(dirname "$0") && pwd)
Many scripts will utilize shared functions from the ``functions`` file. There are
also rc files (``stackrc`` and ``openrc``) that are often included to set the primary
configuration of the user environment::
# Use openrc + stackrc + localrc for settings
pushd $(cd $(dirname "$0")/.. && pwd) >/dev/null
# Import common functions
source ./functions
# Import configuration
source ./openrc
popd >/dev/null
``stack.sh`` is a rather large monolithic script that flows through from beginning
to end. There is a proposal to segment it to put the OpenStack projects
into their own sub-scripts to better document the projects as a unit rather than
have it scattered throughout ``stack.sh``. Someday.
Documentation
-------------
The official DevStack repo on GitHub does not include a gh-pages branch that
GitHub uses to create static web sites. That branch is maintained in the
`CloudBuilders DevStack repo`__ mirror that supports the
http://devstack.org site. This is the primary DevStack
documentation along with the DevStack scripts themselves.
__ repo_
.. _repo: https://github.com/cloudbuilders/devstack
All of the scripts are processed with shocco_ to render them with the comments
as text describing the script below. For this reason we tend to be a little
verbose in the comments _ABOVE_ the code they pertain to. Shocco also supports
Markdown formatting in the comments; use it sparingly. Specifically, ``stack.sh``
uses Markdown headers to divide the script into logical sections.
.. _shocco: http://rtomayko.github.com/shocco/
Exercises
---------
The scripts in the exercises directory are meant to 1) perform basic operational
checks on certain aspects of OpenStack; and b) document the use of the
OpenStack command-line clients.
In addition to the guidelines above, exercise scripts MUST follow the structure
outlined here. ``swift.sh`` is perhaps the clearest example of these guidelines.
These scripts are executed serially by ``exercise.sh`` in testing situations.
* Begin and end with a banner that stands out in a sea of script logs to aid
in debugging failures, particularly in automated testing situations. If the
end banner is not displayed, the script ended prematurely and can be assumed
to have failed.
::
echo "**************************************************"
echo "Begin DevStack Exercise: $0"
echo "**************************************************"
...
set +o xtrace
echo "**************************************************"
echo "End DevStack Exercise: $0"
echo "**************************************************"
* The scripts will generally have the shell ``xtrace`` attribute set to display
the actual commands being executed, and the ``errexit`` attribute set to exit
the script on non-zero exit codes::
# This script exits on an error so that errors don't compound and you see
# only the first error that occured.
set -o errexit
# Print the commands being run so that we can see the command that triggers
# an error. It is also useful for following allowing as the install occurs.
set -o xtrace
* There are a couple of helper functions in the common ``functions`` sub-script
that will check for non-zero exit codes and unset environment variables and
print a message and exit the script. These should be called after most client
commands that are not otherwise checked to short-circuit long timeouts
(instance boot failure, for example)::
swift post $CONTAINER
die_if_error "Failure creating container $CONTAINER"
FLOATING_IP=`euca-allocate-address | cut -f2`
die_if_not_set FLOATING_IP "Failure allocating floating IP"
* The exercise scripts should only use the various OpenStack client binaries to
interact with OpenStack. This specifically excludes any ``*-manage`` tools
as those assume direct access to configuration and databases, as well as direct
database access from the exercise itself.
* If specific configuration needs to be present for the exercise to complete,
it should be staged in ``stack.sh``, or called from ``stack.sh`` (see
``files/keystone_data.sh`` for an example of this).
* The ``OS_*`` environment variables should be the only ones used for all
authentication to OpenStack clients as documented in the CLIAuth_ wiki page.
.. _CLIAuth: http://wiki.openstack.org/CLIAuth
* The exercise MUST clean up after itself if successful. If it is not successful,
it is assumed that state will be left behind; this allows a chance for developers
to look around and attempt to debug the problem. The exercise SHOULD clean up
or graciously handle possible artifacts left over from previous runs if executed
again. It is acceptable to require a reboot or even a re-install of DevStack
to restore a clean test environment.