New to AppsCode Service Broker? Please start here.

Development Guide

This document is intended to be the canonical source of truth for things like supported toolchain versions for building AppsCode Service Broker. If you find a requirement that this doc does not capture, please submit an issue on github.

This document is intended to be relative to the branch in which it is found. It is guaranteed that requirements will change over time for the development branch, but release branches of AppsCode Service Broker should not change.

Build AppsCode Service Broker

Some of the AppsCode Service Broker development helper scripts rely on a fairly up-to-date GNU tools environment, so most recent Linux distros should work just fine out-of-the-box.

Setup GO

AppsCode Service Broker is written in Google’s GO programming language. Currently, AppsCode Service Broker is developed and tested on go 1.9.2. If you haven’t set up a GO development environment, please follow these instructions to install GO.

Download Source

$ go get github.com/appscode/service-broker
$ cd $(go env GOPATH)/src/github.com/appscode/service-broker

Install Dev tools

To install various dev tools for AppsCode Service Broker, run the following command:

$ ./hack/builddeps.sh

Build Binary

$ ./hack/make.py
$ service-broker version

Dependency management

AppsCode Service Broker uses Glide to manage dependencies. Dependencies are already checked in the vendor folder. If you want to update/add dependencies, run:

$ glide slow

Build Docker images

To build and push your custom Docker image, follow the steps below. To release a new version of AppsCode Service Broker, please follow the release guide.

# Build Docker image
$ ./hack/docker/setup.sh; ./hack/docker/setup.sh push

# Add docker tag for your repository
$ docker tag appscode/service-broker:<tag> <image>:<tag>

# Push Image
$ docker push <image>:<tag>

Generate CLI Reference Docs

$ ./hack/gendocs/make.sh

Testing AppsCode Service Broker

Unit tests

$ ./hack/make.py test unit

Run e2e tests

AppsCode Service Broker uses Ginkgo to run e2e tests.

$ ./hack/make.py test e2e

To run e2e tests against remote backends, you need to set cloud provider credentials in ./hack/config/.env. You can see an example file in ./hack/config/.env.example.