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