diff --git a/README.md b/README.md index 58c02de..3b69d11 100644 --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -1,34 +1,31 @@ # ynh-dev - Yunohost dev environment manager -Please report issues on the following repository: +Please report issues on the following repository: -> https://github.com/yunohost/issues +## Table Of Contents -# Table Of Contents - -- [Introduction](#introduction) - * [Local Development Path](#local-development-path) - * [Remote Development Path](#remote-development-path) - -- [Local Development Environment](#local-development-environment) - * [1. Setup `ynh-dev` and the development environment](#1-setup-ynh-dev-and-the-development-environment) - * [2. Manage YunoHost's dev LXCs](#2-manage-yunohosts-dev-lxcs) - * [3. Development and container testing](#3-development-and-container-testing) - * [4. Testing the web interface](#4-testing-the-web-interface) - * [Advanced: using snapshots](#advanced-using-snapshots) - * [Alternative: Only Virtualbox](#alternative-using-only-virtualbox) - * [Troubleshooting](#troubleshooting) - -- [Remote Development Environment](#remote-development-environment) - * [1. Setup your VPS and install YunoHost](#1-setup-your-vps-and-install-yunohost) - * [2. Setup `ynh-dev` and the development environment](#2-setup-ynh-dev-and-the-development-environment) - * [3. Develop and test](#3-develop-and-test) - -- [Further Resources](#further-resources) +- [ynh-dev - Yunohost dev environment manager](#ynh-dev---yunohost-dev-environment-manager) + - [Table Of Contents](#table-of-contents) + - [Introduction](#introduction) + - [Local Development Path](#local-development-path) + - [Remote Development Path](#remote-development-path) + - [Local Development Environment](#local-development-environment) + - [1. Setup `ynh-dev` and the development environment](#1-setup-ynh-dev-and-the-development-environment) + - [2. Manage YunoHost's dev LXCs](#2-manage-yunohosts-dev-lxcs) + - [3. Development and container testing](#3-development-and-container-testing) + - [4. Testing the web interface](#4-testing-the-web-interface) + - [Advanced: using snapshots](#advanced-using-snapshots) + - [Alternative: Using Only Virtualbox](#alternative-using-only-virtualbox) + - [Troubleshooting](#troubleshooting) + - [Remote Development Environment](#remote-development-environment) + - [1. Setup your VPS and install YunoHost](#1-setup-your-vps-and-install-yunohost) + - [2. Setup `ynh-dev` and the development environment](#2-setup-ynh-dev-and-the-development-environment) + - [3. Develop and test](#3-develop-and-test) + - [Further Resources](#further-resources) --- -# Introduction +## Introduction `ynh-dev` is a CLI tool to manage your local development environment for YunoHost. @@ -36,8 +33,8 @@ This allow you to develop on the various repositories of the YunoHost project. In particular, it allows you to: - * Create a directory with a clone of each repository of the YunoHost project - * Replace Yunohost debian packages with symlinks to those git clones +- Create a directory with a clone of each repository of the YunoHost project +- Replace Yunohost debian packages with symlinks to those git clones Because there are many diverse constraints on the development of the Yunohost project, there is no "official" one-size-fits-all development environment. @@ -49,16 +46,16 @@ your capacities and resources when aiming to setup a development environment. `yhn-dev` can be used for the following scenarios: -## Local Development Path +### Local Development Path Yunohost can be developed on using a combination of the following technologies: - * Git (any version is sufficient) - * LXD (>= 2.x) (though only tested with 3.x for now) +- Git (any version is sufficient) +- Incus -Because LXC are containers, they are typically lightweight and quick to start and stop. -But you may find the initial setup complex (in particular network configuration). -LXD makes managing an LXC ecosystem much simpler. +Because LXC are containers, they are typically lightweight and quick to start and stop. +But you may find the initial setup complex (in particular network configuration). +Incus makes managing an LXC ecosystem much simpler. This local development path allows to work without an internet connection, but be aware that it will *not* allow you to easily test your email stack @@ -70,18 +67,18 @@ If choosing this path, please keep reading at the [local development environment](#local-development-environment) section. Alternatively, you may be able to setup a local environnement using Vagrant and -Virtualbox which is kinda more resource-hungry because it is fully virtualized, -but might be more familiar and user-friendly if you already know your way around +Virtualbox which is kinda more resource-hungry because it is fully virtualized, +but might be more familiar and user-friendly if you already know your way around Virtualbox's UI. - * Virtualbox (>= 6.x) - * Vagrant (>= ?.?.?) - * Vagrant-virtualbox (>= ?.?.?) +- Virtualbox (>= 6.x) +- Vagrant (>= ?.?.?) +- Vagrant-virtualbox (>= ?.?.?) See the [Alternative: Only Virtualbox](#alternative-using-only-virtualbox) section for more info. -## Remote Development Path +### Remote Development Path Yunohost can be deployed as a typical install on a remote VPS. You can then use `ynh-dev` to configure a development environment on the server. @@ -89,7 +86,7 @@ Yunohost can be deployed as a typical install on a remote VPS. You can then use This method can potentially be faster than the local development environment assuming you have familiarity with working on VPS machines, if you always have internet connectivity when working, and if you're okay with paying a fee. It -is also a good option if the required system dependencies (LXD/LXC, Vagrant, +is also a good option if the required system dependencies (Incus/LXC, Vagrant, Virtualbox, etc.) are not easily available to you on your distribution. Please be aware that this method should **not** be used for a end-user facing @@ -98,7 +95,7 @@ production environment. If choosing this path, please keep reading at the [remote development environment](#remote-development-environment) section. -# Local Development Environment +## Local Development Environment Here is the development flow: @@ -106,53 +103,48 @@ Here is the development flow: 2. Manage YunoHost's development LXCs 3. Develop on your local host and testing in the container -## 1. Setup `ynh-dev` and the development environment +### 1. Setup `ynh-dev` and the development environment First you need to install the system dependencies. -`ynh-dev` essentially requires Git and the LXD/LXC ecosystem. Be careful that -**LXD can conflict with other installed virtualization technologies such as -libvirt or vanilla LXCs**, especially because they all require a daemon based +`ynh-dev` essentially requires Git and the Incus/LXC ecosystem. Be careful that +**Incus/LXC can conflict with other installed virtualization technologies such as +libvirt or vanilla LXCs**, especially because they all require a daemon based on DNSmasq and therefore require to listen on port 53. -On a Debian-based system (regular Debian, Ubuntu, Mint ...), LXD can be -installed using `snapd`. On other systems like Archlinux, you will probably also -be able to install `snapd` using the system package manager (or even -`lxd` directly). +Incus can be installed with your Linux distribution package manager, such as: ```bash -apt install git snapd -sudo snap install core -sudo snap install lxd - -# Adding lxc/lxd to /usr/local/bin to make sure we can use them easily even -# with sudo for which the PATH is defined in /etc/sudoers and probably doesn't -# include /snap/bin -sudo ln -s /snap/bin/lxc /usr/local/bin/lxc -sudo ln -s /snap/bin/lxd /usr/local/bin/lxd +apt install incus ``` -Then you shall initialize LXD which will ask you a bunch of question. Usually +You then need to add yourself in the incus-admin group, to run incus without sudo every time: + +```bash +sudo usermod -a -G incus-admin $(whoami) +``` + +Then you shall initialize Incus which will ask you a bunch of question. Usually answering the default (just pressing enter) to all questions is fine. ```bash -sudo lxd init +incus admin init ``` Pre-built images are centralized on `devbaseimgs.yunohost.org` and we'll download them from there to speed things up: ```bash -sudo lxc remote add yunohost https://devbaseimgs.yunohost.org --public +incus remote add yunohost https://devbaseimgs.yunohost.org --public ``` On Archlinux-based distributions (Arch, Manjaro, ...) it was found that it's needed -that LXC/LXD will throw some error about "newuidmap failed to write mapping / Failed +that Incus/LXC will throw some error about "newuidmap failed to write mapping / Failed to set up id mapping" ... It can be [fixed with the following](https://discuss.linuxcontainers.org/t/solved-arch-linux-containers-only-run-when-security-privileged-true/4006/4) : -``` -# N.B.: this is ONLY for Arch-based distros -$ echo "root:1000000:65536" > /etc/subuid -$ echo "root:1000000:65536" > /etc/subgid +```bash +## N.B.: this is ONLY for Arch-based distros +echo "root:1000000:65536" > /etc/subuid +echo "root:1000000:65536" > /etc/subgid ``` Then, go into your favorite development folder and deploy `ynh-dev` with: @@ -167,24 +159,30 @@ In particular, you shall notice that there are clones or the various git repositories. In the next step, we shall start a LXC and 'link' those folders between the host and the LXC. -## 2. Manage YunoHost's dev LXCs +### 2. Manage YunoHost's dev LXCs When ran on the host, the `./ynh-dev` command allows you to manage YunoHost's dev LXCs. Start your actual dev LXC using : ```bash -$ cd ynh-dev # if not already done -$ ./ynh-dev start +cd ynh-dev # if not already done +./ynh-dev start ``` -This should automatically download from `devbaseimgs.yunohost.org` a pre-build ynh-dev LXC image running Yunohost unstable, and create a fresh container from it. +This should automatically download from `devbaseimgs.yunohost.org` a pre-build +ynh-dev LXC image running Yunohost unstable, and create a fresh container from it. -After starting the LXC, your terminal will automatically be attached to it. If you later disconnect from the LXC, you can go back in with `./ynh-dev attach`. Later, you might want to destroy the LXC. You can do so with `./ynh-dev destroy`. +After starting the LXC, your terminal will automatically be attached to it. If you +later disconnect from the LXC, you can go back in with `./ynh-dev attach`. Later, +you might want to destroy the LXC. You can do so with `./ynh-dev destroy`. -If you container **doesn't have an ip address nor access to internet**, this is likely because you either have a conflict with another virtualization system or that a program running on the host is using the port 53 and therefore prevent LXD's dnsmasq to run correctly (as stated before in the setup section.) +If you container **doesn't have an ip address nor access to internet**, this is +likely because you either have a conflict with another virtualization system or +that a program running on the host is using the port 53 and therefore prevent +Incus's dnsmasq to run correctly (as stated before in the setup section.) -## 3. Development and container testing +### 3. Development and container testing After SSH-ing inside the container, you should notice that the *directory* `/ynh-dev` is a shared folder with your host. In particular, it contains the various git clones `yunohost`, `yunohost-admin` and so on - as well as the `./ynh-dev` script itself. @@ -195,7 +193,7 @@ Inside the container, `./ynh-dev` can be used to link the git clones living in t For instance, after running: ```bash -$ ./ynh-dev use-git yunohost +./ynh-dev use-git yunohost ``` The code of the git clone `'yunohost'` will be directly available inside the container. Which mean that running any `yunohost` command inside the container will use the code from the host... This allows to develop with any tool you want on your host, then test the changes in the container. @@ -204,7 +202,7 @@ The `use-git` action can be used for any package among `yunohost`, `yunohost-adm ***Note***: The `use-git` operation can't be reverted now. Do **not** do this in production. -## 4. Testing the web interface +### 4. Testing the web interface You should be able to access the web interface via the IP address of the container. The IP can be known from inside the container using either from `ip a` or with `./ynh-dev ip`. @@ -216,25 +214,26 @@ If you want to access to the interface using the domain name, you shall tweak yo Note that `./ynh-dev use-git yunohost-admin` has a particular behavior: it starts a `gulp` watcher that shall re-compile automatically any changes in the javascript code. Hence this particular `use-git` will keep running until you kill it after your work is done. -## Advanced: using snapshots +### Advanced: using snapshots -You can check `lxc snapshot --help` to learn how to manage lxc snapshots. +You can check `incus snapshot --help` to learn how to manage incus snapshots. -## Alternative: Using Only Virtualbox +### Alternative: Using Only Virtualbox A Vagrant and Virtualbox (without LXC) guide is provided on another branch of this repository. This is a known working setup used by some developers. Please see the ["virtualbox" branch](https://github.com/YunoHost/ynh-dev/tree/virtualbox#develop-on-your-local-machine) for more. -## Troubleshooting -If you experiment network issues with your lxd during rebuild container steps. Probably your container are not able to get a local IP with DHCP. +### Troubleshooting -It could be due to bridge conflict (for example if you have lxc installed too) or dnsmasq port already used. +If you experiment network issues with your incus during rebuild container steps. Probably your container are not able to get a local IP with DHCP. + +It could be due to bridge conflict (for example if you have incus installed too) or dnsmasq port already used. This [ticket](https://github.com/YunoHost/issues/issues/1664) could help. -# Remote Development Environment +## Remote Development Environment Here is the development flow: @@ -242,36 +241,36 @@ Here is the development flow: 2. Setup `ynh-dev` and the development environment 3. Develop and test -## 1. Setup your VPS and install YunoHost +### 1. Setup your VPS and install YunoHost Setup a VPS somewhere (e.g. Scaleway, Digital Ocean, etc.) and install YunoHost following the [usual instructions](https://yunohost.org/#/install_manually). Depending on what you want to achieve, you might want to run the postinstall right away - and/or setup a domain with an actually working DNS. -## 2. Setup `ynh-dev` and the development environment +### 2. Setup `ynh-dev` and the development environment Deploy a `ynh-dev` folder at the root of the filesystem with: -``` -$ cd / -$ curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/yunohost/ynh-dev/master/deploy.sh | bash -$ cd /ynh-dev +```bash +cd / +curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/yunohost/ynh-dev/master/deploy.sh | bash +cd /ynh-dev ``` -## 3. Develop and test +### 3. Develop and test Inside the VPS, `./ynh-dev` can be used to link the git clones to actual the code being ran. For instance, after running: ```bash -$ ./ynh-dev use-git yunohost +./ynh-dev use-git yunohost ``` Any `yunohost` command will run from the code of the git clone. The `use-git` action can be used for any package among `yunohost`, `yunohost-admin`, `moulinette` and `ssowat` with similar consequences. -# Further Resources +## Further Resources - * [yunohost.org/dev](https://yunohost.org/dev) +- [yunohost.org/dev](https://yunohost.org/dev) diff --git a/ynh-dev b/ynh-dev index cd853bc..397f3d2 100755 --- a/ynh-dev +++ b/ynh-dev @@ -3,12 +3,12 @@ function show_usage() { cat </dev/null \ - || critical "You need to have LXD installed for ynh-dev to be usable from the host machine. Refer to the README to know how to install it." - - # Check that we'll be able to use lxc/lxd using sudo (for which the PATH is defined in /etc/sudoers and probably doesn't include /snap/bin) - if [[ ! -e /usr/bin/lxc ]] && [[ ! -e /usr/bin/lxd ]] && [[ -e /snap ]] - then - [[ -e /usr/local/bin/lxc ]] && [[ -e /usr/local/bin/lxd ]] \ - || critical "You might want to add lxc and lxd inside /usr/local/bin so that there's no tricky PATH issue with sudo. If you installed lxd/lxc with snapd, this should do the trick: sudo ln -s /snap/bin/lxc /usr/local/bin/lxc && sudo ln -s /snap/bin/lxd /usr/local/bin/lxd" + # Check incus is installed somehow + if ! which incus &>/dev/null; then + critical "You need to have Incus installed for ynh-dev to be usable from the host machine. Refer to the README to know how to install it." + fi + if ! id -nG "$(whoami)" | grep -qw "incus-admin"; then + critical "You need to be in the incus-admin group!" fi - ip a | grep -q lx[cd]br0 \ - || critical "There is no 'lxcbr0' or 'lxdbr0' interface... Did you ran 'lxd init' ?" + ip a | grep -q incusbr0 \ + || warn "There is no 'incusbr0' interface... Did you ran 'incus admin init' ?" + + set_incus_remote +} + +function set_incus_remote() +{ + configured=$(incus remote list -f json | jq 'has("yunohost")') + if [[ "$configured" != "true" ]]; then + incus remote add yunohost https://devbaseimgs.yunohost.org --public + fi } function start_ynhdev() { - check_lxd_setup + check_incus_setup local DIST=${1:-bookworm} local YNH_BRANCH=${3:-unstable} local BOX=${2:-ynh-dev}-${DIST}-${YNH_BRANCH} - if ! sudo lxc info $BOX &>/dev/null + if ! incus info $BOX &>/dev/null then - if ! sudo lxc image info $BOX-base &>/dev/null + if ! incus image info $BOX-base &>/dev/null then LXC_BASE="ynh-dev-$DIST-amd64-$YNH_BRANCH-base" - sudo lxc launch yunohost:$LXC_BASE $BOX -c security.nesting=true -c security.privileged=true \ + incus launch yunohost:$LXC_BASE $BOX -c security.nesting=true -c security.privileged=true \ || critical "Failed to launch the container ?" else - sudo lxc launch $BOX-base $BOX -c security.nesting=true -c security.privileged=true + incus launch $BOX-base $BOX -c security.nesting=true -c security.privileged=true fi - sudo lxc config device add $BOX ynhdev-shared-folder disk path=/ynh-dev source="$(readlink -f $(pwd))" + incus config device add $BOX ynhdev-shared-folder disk path=/ynh-dev source="$(readlink -f $(pwd))" info "Now attaching to the container" else info "Attaching to existing container" @@ -221,41 +228,41 @@ function start_ynhdev() function attach_ynhdev() { - check_lxd_setup + check_setup local DIST=${1:-bookworm} local YNH_BRANCH=${3:-unstable} local BOX=${2:-ynh-dev}-${DIST}-${YNH_BRANCH} - sudo lxc start $BOX 2>/dev/null || true - sudo lxc exec $BOX --cwd /ynh-dev -- /bin/bash + incus start $BOX 2>/dev/null || true + incus exec $BOX --cwd /ynh-dev -- /bin/bash } function destroy_ynhdev() { - check_lxd_setup + check_setup local DIST=${1:-bookworm} local YNH_BRANCH=${3:-unstable} local BOX=${2:-ynh-dev}-${DIST}-${YNH_BRANCH} - sudo lxc stop $BOX - sudo lxc delete $BOX + incus stop $BOX + incus delete $BOX } function rebuild_ynhdev() { - check_lxd_setup + check_setup local DIST=${1:-bookworm} local YNH_BRANCH=${3:-unstable} local BOX=${2:-ynh-dev}-${DIST}-${YNH_BRANCH} set -x - sudo lxc info $BOX-rebuild >/dev/null && sudo lxc delete $BOX-rebuild --force - sudo lxc launch images:debian/$DIST/amd64 $BOX-rebuild -c security.nesting=true -c security.privileged=true + incus info $BOX-rebuild >/dev/null && incus delete $BOX-rebuild --force + incus launch images:debian/$DIST/amd64 $BOX-rebuild -c security.nesting=true -c security.privileged=true sleep 5 - sudo lxc exec $BOX-rebuild -- apt install curl -y + incus exec $BOX-rebuild -- apt install curl -y INSTALL_SCRIPT="https://install.yunohost.org/$DIST" - sudo lxc exec $BOX-rebuild -- /bin/bash -c "curl $INSTALL_SCRIPT | bash -s -- -a -d $YNH_BRANCH" - sudo lxc stop $BOX-rebuild - sudo lxc publish $BOX-rebuild --alias $BOX-base + incus exec $BOX-rebuild -- /bin/bash -c "curl $INSTALL_SCRIPT | bash -s -- -a -d $YNH_BRANCH" + incus stop $BOX-rebuild + incus publish $BOX-rebuild --alias $BOX-base set +x }