From ba9335ec4c3578fdebfbec3072396bcda29d3425 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Florian Dold Date: Thu, 29 Aug 2019 13:02:55 +0200 Subject: initial rough import of other docs --- onboarding.rst | 386 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 386 insertions(+) create mode 100644 onboarding.rst (limited to 'onboarding.rst') diff --git a/onboarding.rst b/onboarding.rst new file mode 100644 index 00000000..b2fc829b --- /dev/null +++ b/onboarding.rst @@ -0,0 +1,386 @@ +Developer Onboarding Manual +########################### + + +Taler installation +================== + +Users serving Taler. +-------------------- + +On Gv.Taler.Net, there are four users that are set up to serve Taler on +the internet: + +- ``taler-test``: serves ``*.test.taler.net`` and gets automatically + built by Buildbot. + +- ``taler-internal``: serves ``*.int.taler.net``, and does *NOT* get + automatically built. + +The following two users are *NEVER* automatically built, and they both +serve ``*.demo.taler.net``. At any given time, only one is active and +serves the HTTP requests from the outside; the other one can so be +compiled without any downtime. If the compilation succeeds, the inactive +user can be switched to become active (see next section), and viceversa. + +- ``demo-blue`` + +- ``demo-green`` + +Compile and switch color. +------------------------- + +If the setup is already bootstrapped, then it should only be needed to +login as ’demo-X’ (with X being the inactive color); and then: + +:: + + $ source activate + $ taler-deployment-build + +and then switch the color by logging in as the *demo* user, and switch +the color with the following command: + +:: + + $ taler-deployment-switch-demo-X + +Full bootstrap. +--------------- + +In order to bootstrap a Taler installation under a empty home directory, +do: + +:: + + $ cd $HOME + $ git clone git://git.taler.net/deployment + +Then run the bootstrap script that will download all the repositories. + +:: + + $ ./deployment/bootstrap-taler + + # will make all the services serve *..taler.net + # + # Currently at Gv.Taler.Net, only 'demo' / 'test' / 'int' have + # DNS and certs configured. + +If successful, then activate the new environment with: + +:: + + source activate + +Compile and install all the components. + +:: + + $ taler-deployment-build + +Create the global configuration file. + +:: + + $ taler-deployment-config-generate + +Create (only) the folders where all the data needed by Taler will be +copied into (keys / JSONs with wire details / ..) + +:: + + $ taler-deployment-hier + +Create all the keys. + +:: + + $ taler-deployment-keyup + +Sign the ``/wire`` response for the exchange. + +:: + + $ taler-deployment-sign + +.. + + **Note** + + If the DB schema of merchant/exchange/auditor changed, at this point + it MIGHT be necessary to reset all the tables. To this regard, + consider running one of the following commands: + + :: + + # To reset the merchant DB. + $ taler-merchant-dbinit -r + + # To reset the exchange DB. + $ taler-exchange-dbinit -r + + # To reset the exchange DB. + $ taler-auditor-dbinit -r + +If all the steps succeeded, then it should be possible to launch all the +services. Give: + +:: + + $ taler-deployment-start + + # or restart, if you want to kill old processes and + # start new ones. + $ taler-deployment-restart + +Verify that all services are up and running: + +:: + + $ taler-deployment-arm -I + $ tail logs/-.log + +How to upgrade the code. +------------------------ + +Some repositories, especially the ones from the released components, +have a *stable* branch, that keeps older and more stable code. +Therefore, upon each release we must rebase those stable branches on the +master. + +The following commands do that: + +:: + + $ cd $REPO + + $ git pull origin master stable + $ git checkout stable + + # option a: resolve conflicts resulting from hotfixes + $ git rebase master + $ ... + + # option b: force stable to master + $ git update-ref refs/heads/stable master + + $ git push # possibly with --force + + # continue development + $ git checkout master + +.. _Testing-components: + +Testing components +================== + +This chapter is a VERY ABSTRACT description of how testing is +implemented in Taler, and in NO WAY wants to substitute the reading of +the actual source code by the user. + +In Taler, a test case is a array of ``struct TALER_TESTING_Command``, +informally referred to as ``CMD``, that is iteratively executed by the +testing interpreter. This latter is transparently initiated by the +testing library. + +However, the developer does not have to defined CMDs manually, but +rather call the proper constructor provided by the library. For example, +if a CMD is supposed to test feature ``x``, then the library would +provide the ``TALER_TESTING_cmd_x ()`` constructor for it. Obviously, +each constructor has its own particular arguments that make sense to +test ``x``, and all constructor are thoroughly commented within the +source code. + +Internally, each CMD has two methods: ``run ()`` and ``cleanup ()``. The +former contains the main logic to test feature ``x``, whereas the latter +cleans the memory up after execution. + +In a test life, each CMD needs some internal state, made by values it +keeps in memory. Often, the test has to *share* those values with other +CMDs: for example, CMD1 may create some key material and CMD2 needs this +key material to encrypt data. + +The offering of internal values from CMD1 to CMD2 is made by *traits*. A +trait is a ``struct TALER_TESTING_Trait``, and each CMD contains a array +of traits, that it offers via the public trait interface to other +commands. The definition and filling of such array happens transparently +to the test developer. + +For example, the following example shows how CMD2 takes an amount object +offered by CMD1 via the trait interface. + +Note: the main interpreter and the most part of CMDs and traits are +hosted inside the exchange codebase, but nothing prevents the developer +from implementing new CMDs and traits within other codebases. + +:: + + /* Withouth loss of generality, let's consider the + * following logic to exist inside the run() method of CMD1 */ + .. + + struct TALER_Amount *a; + /** + * the second argument (0) points to the first amount object offered, + * in case multiple are available. + */ + if (GNUNET_OK != TALER_TESTING_get_trait_amount_obj (cmd2, 0, &a)) + return GNUNET_SYSERR; + ... + + use(a); /* 'a' points straight into the internal state of CMD2 */ + +In the Taler realm, there is also the possibility to alter the behaviour +of supposedly well-behaved components. This is needed when, for example, +we want the exchange to return some corrupted signature in order to +check if the merchant backend detects it. + +This alteration is accomplished by another service called *twister*. The +twister acts as a proxy between service A and B, and can be programmed +to tamper with the data exchanged by A and B. + +Please refer to the Twister codebase (under the ``test`` directory) in +order to see how to configure it. + +.. _Releases: + +Releases +======== + +Release Process and Checklists +------------------------------ + +This document describes the process for releasing a new version of the +various Taler components to the official GNU mirrors. + +The following components are published on the GNU mirrors + +- taler-exchange (exchange.git) + +- taler-merchant (merchant.git) + +- talerdonations (donations.git) + +- talerblog (blog.git) + +- taler-bank (bank.git) + +- taler-wallet-webex (wallet-webex.git) + +Tagging +------- + +Tag releases with an **annotated** commit, like + +:: + + git tag -a v0.1.0 -m "Official release v0.1.0" + git push origin v0.1.0 + +Database for tests +------------------ + +For tests in the exchange and merchant to run, make sure that a database +*talercheck* is accessible by *$USER*. Otherwise tests involving the +database logic are skipped. + +Exchange, merchant +------------------ + +Set the version in ``configure.ac``. The commit being tagged should be +the change of the version. + +For the exchange test cases to pass, ``make install`` must be run first. +Without it, test cases will fail because plugins can’t be located. + +:: + + ./bootstrap + ./configure # add required options for your system + make dist + tar -xf taler-$COMPONENT-$VERSION.tar.gz + cd taler-$COMPONENT-$VERSION + make install check + +Wallet WebExtension +------------------- + +The version of the wallet is in *manifest.json*. The ``version_name`` +should be adjusted, and *version* should be increased independently on +every upload to the WebStore. + +:: + + ./configure + make dist + +Upload to GNU mirrors +--------------------- + +See +*https://www.gnu.org/prep/maintain/maintain.html#Automated-FTP-Uploads* + +Directive file: + +:: + + version: 1.2 + directory: taler + filename: taler-exchange-0.1.0.tar.gz + +Upload the files in **binary mode** to the ftp servers. + +.. _Code: + +Code +==== + +Taler code is versioned via Git. For those users without write access, +all the codebases are found at the following URL: + +:: + + git://git.taler.net/ + +A complete list of all the existing repositories is currently found at +``https://git.taler.net/``. Note: ```` must NOT have the +``.git`` extension. + +.. _Bugtracking: + +Bugtracking +=========== + +Bug tracking is done with Mantis (https://www.mantisbt.org/). All the +bugs are then showed and managed at ``https://bugs.gnunet.org/``, under +the "Taler" project. A registration on the Web site is needed in order +to use the bug tracker. + +.. _Continuous-integration: + +Continuous integration +====================== + +CI is done with Buildbot (https://buildbot.net/), and builds are +triggered by the means of Git hooks. The results are published at +``https://buildbot.wild.gv.taler.net/``. + +In order to avoid downtimes, CI uses a "blue/green" deployment +technique. In detail, there are two users building code on the system, +the "green" and the "blue" user; and at any given time, one is running +Taler services and the other one is either building the code or waiting +for that. + +There is also the possibility to trigger builds manually, but this is +only reserved to "admin" users. + +.. _Code-coverage: + +Code coverage +============= + +Code coverage is done with the Gcov / Lcov +(http://ltp.sourceforge.net/coverage/lcov.php) combo, and it is run +\*nightly\* (once a day) by a Buildbot worker. The coverage results are +then published at ``https://lcov.taler.net/``. -- cgit v1.2.3