This repository contains most of tinyci's microservices as well as its
command-line client, tinycli
.
To get a tinyCI release, head over to https://github.com/tinyci/tinyci/releases. The rest of this page is largely about developer setup. Check out our docs if you're interested in using or testing out tinyCI.
Follow these instructions carefully. We will soon have something a little more streamlined.
It is easiest to work with this project through the Golang Toolchain. Get it before following these instructions.
$ export GOPATH=$HOME
$ go get -d github.com/tinyci/ci-agents
$ go get -d github.com/tinyci/ci-ui
$ cd ~/src/github.com/tinyci/ci-ui && make test-debug
$ cd ~/src/github.com/tinyci/ci-agents
$ cp .config/services.yaml.example .config/services.yaml
<edit services to taste>
$ make demo
You will need docker
and docker-compose
installed.
Then hit port 3000 of that host on your browser. If you have configured OAuth, you will be presented with a confirmation screen. If you are running in no auth mode, you will be teleported to the UI directly.
make demo
starts a jaeger container. Please note that enable_tracing
must
be set in the services config for this to be effective.
To start, it's easiest to configure one task at the root with multiple runs.
Later on, you will want to isolate directories with additional task.yml
files
so subsections of your code can be tested independently of each other.
Put this in a file named task.yml
at the root:
---
mountpoint: '/build' # this is where your source will be mounted in the image
runs:
testbuild: # name of the run
command: ['do', 'build'] # customize this to taste
image: 'ubuntu:18.04' # example! Use any image you'd like.
test: # name of the run
command: ['do', 'test'] # customize this to taste
image: 'ubuntu:18.04' # example! Use any image you'd like.
As well as creating an empty tinyci.yml
-- this file typically contains
global overrides and is always read from the master branch. For now,
customizing it is not necessary.
To add your repository to tinyCI, click the hamburger menu at the top left of
the UI, then select the Add
tab and find your repository. Check the box; the
hook will be set up automatically in a secured fashion.
After that, you can submit code through the Manual Submission dialog or any push or pull request will also trigger a CI run. Enjoy!
Please note that actually running your code requires that you launch a runner (ideally on a separate server) which is covered in our documentation.
Mozilla Public License 2.0: https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/MPL/2.0/