This guide is useful if you intend to contribute on docker/app
. Thanks for your
effort. Every contribution is very appreciated.
This doc includes:
To build the docker-app
, at least one of the following build system
dependencies are required:
- Docker (17.12 or above)
- Go (1.10.x or above)
You will also need the following tools:
- GNU Make
dep
First you need to setup your Go development environment. You can follow this
guideline How to write go code and at the
end you need to have GOPATH
set in your environment.
At this point you can use go
to checkout docker-app
in your GOPATH
:
go get github.com/docker/app
You are ready to build docker-app
yourself!
docker-app
uses make
to create a repeatable build flow. It means that you
can run:
make
This is going to build all the project binaries in the ./bin/
directory, run tests (unit and end-to-end).
make bin/docker-app # builds the docker-app binary
make bin/docker-app-darwin # builds the docker-app binary for darwin
make bin/docker-app-windows.exe # builds the docker-app binary for windows
make lint # run the linter on the sources
make test-unit # run the unit tests
make test-e2e # run the end-to-end tests
Vendoring of external imports uses the dep
tool.
Please refer to its documentation if you need to update a dependency.
If you don't have Go installed but Docker is present, you can also use
docker.Makefile
to build docker-app
and run tests. This
docker.Makefile
is used by our continuous integration too.
make -f docker.Makefile # builds cross binaries build and tests
make -f docker.Makefile cross # builds cross binaries (linux, darwin, windows)
make -f docker.Makefile lint # run the linter on the sources
make -f docker.Makefile test-unit # run the unit tests
make -f docker.Makefile test-e2e # run the end-to-end tests
During the automated CI, the unit tests and end-to-end tests are run as
part of the PR validation. As a developer you can run these tests
locally by using any of the following Makefile
targets:
make test
: run all non-end-to-end testsmake test-e2e
: run all end-to-end tests
To execute a specific test or set of tests you can use the go test
capabilities without using the Makefile
targets. The following
examples show how to specify a test name and also how to use the flag
directly against go test
to run root-requiring tests.
# run the test <TEST_NAME>:
go test -v -run "<TEST_NAME>" .