Hacking prerequisites » History » Version 19
Tom Clegg, 11/05/2015 10:18 PM
1 | 1 | Tom Clegg | {{>toc}} |
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2 | |||
3 | h1. Hacking prerequisites |
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4 | |||
5 | The Arvados test suite can run in a Docker container, a VM, or your workstation -- provided a few prerequisites are satisfied. |
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6 | |||
7 | h2. Host options |
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8 | |||
9 | h3. Starting on your workstation |
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10 | |||
11 | If your workstation is a debian wheezy or jessie system -- and you don't mind installing a bunch of packages on your workstation, some of them without apt -- the easiest way to get running is to run tests on bare metal. Skip to "Dependencies". |
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12 | |||
13 | Other linux distributions should work too with some modifications, but it's probably easier to use a VM. |
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14 | |||
15 | h3. Starting on a VM |
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16 | |||
17 | Another option is to create a virtual machine using something like Xen or VirtualBox, and run debian jessie on it. The instructions below assume you have just a few basic requirements: |
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18 | * SSH server |
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19 | * sudo (@apt-get install sudo@) |
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20 | * A user account with sudo privileges |
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21 | |||
22 | h3. Starting in a docker container |
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23 | |||
24 | This can get you started quickly, but (unlike the above options) you'll need to remember to use something like @docker commit@ to save your state before shutting down your container. |
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25 | |||
26 | See http://docker.io for more about installing docker. On debian it looks something like this. |
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27 | |||
28 | <pre> |
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29 | echo 'deb http://http.debian.net/debian jessie-backports main' | sudo tee -a /etc/apt/sources.list.d/jessie-backports.list |
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30 | sudo apt-get install docker.io |
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31 | sudo adduser $USER docker |
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32 | # {log out & log back in} |
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33 | groups |
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34 | # {should include "docker"} |
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35 | </pre> |
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36 | |||
37 | Start up a new container with jessie, make a new user and log in as that user: |
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38 | |||
39 | <pre> |
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40 | 12 | Joshua Randall | docker run -it --privileged debian:jessie bash |
41 | 1 | Tom Clegg | apt-get update |
42 | apt-get install sudo |
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43 | adduser me |
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44 | adduser me sudo |
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45 | sudo -u me -i |
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46 | </pre> |
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47 | 12 | Joshua Randall | |
48 | 15 | Tom Clegg | The "--privileged" is required in order for /dev/fuse to be accessible (without it, no tests that require FUSE will work). |
49 | 1 | Tom Clegg | |
50 | h2. Install dev environment |
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51 | |||
52 | 3 | Tom Clegg | <pre> |
53 | 19 | Tom Clegg | sudo apt-get install --no-install-recommends \ |
54 | bison build-essential fuse gettext git gitolite3 graphviz \ |
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55 | 7 | Bryan Cosca | iceweasel libattr1-dev libfuse-dev libcrypt-ssleay-perl libjson-perl libcurl3 libcurl3-gnutls \ |
56 | 1 | Tom Clegg | libcurl4-openssl-dev libpcre3-dev libpq-dev libpython2.7-dev \ |
57 | 8 | Joshua Randall | libreadline-dev libssl-dev libxslt1.1 linkchecker lsof nginx perl-modules \ |
58 | 10 | Joshua Randall | postgresql python python-epydoc pkg-config sudo virtualenv \ |
59 | 2 | Tom Clegg | wget xvfb zlib1g-dev |
60 | |||
61 | 1 | Tom Clegg | # ruby 2.1: |
62 | 6 | Tom Clegg | sudo apt-get install ruby2.1 ruby2.1-dev || \ |
63 | 1 | Tom Clegg | ( |
64 | set -e |
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65 | mkdir -p ~/src |
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66 | cd ~/src |
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67 | 15 | Tom Clegg | wget http://cache.ruby-lang.org/pub/ruby/2.1/ruby-2.1.7.tar.gz |
68 | tar xzf ruby-2.1.7.tar.gz |
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69 | cd ruby-2.1.7 |
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70 | 1 | Tom Clegg | ./configure --disable-install-doc |
71 | make |
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72 | sudo make install |
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73 | sudo gem install bundler |
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74 | ) |
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75 | |||
76 | # go >= 1.3 |
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77 | sudo apt-get install golang=2:1.3.3-1 || \ |
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78 | ( |
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79 | set -e |
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80 | wget https://storage.googleapis.com/golang/go1.4.2.linux-amd64.tar.gz |
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81 | sudo tar -C /usr/local -xzf go1.4.2.linux-amd64.tar.gz |
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82 | cd /usr/local/bin |
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83 | sudo ln -s ../go/bin/* . |
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84 | ) |
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85 | |||
86 | # phantomjs 1.9.8 |
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87 | ( |
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88 | set -e |
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89 | PJS=phantomjs-1.9.8-linux-x86_64 |
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90 | wget -P /tmp https://bitbucket.org/ariya/phantomjs/downloads/$PJS.tar.bz2 |
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91 | sudo tar -C /usr/local -xjf /tmp/$PJS.tar.bz2 |
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92 | sudo ln -s ../$PJS/bin/phantomjs /usr/local/bin/ |
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93 | ) |
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94 | </pre> |
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95 | |||
96 | 18 | Bryan Cosca | Note: For ubuntu, virtualenv is dh-virtualenv |
97 | |||
98 | 1 | Tom Clegg | h2. Get the arvados source tree and test scripts |
99 | |||
100 | <pre> |
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101 | cd |
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102 | git clone https://github.com/curoverse/arvados.git |
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103 | git clone https://github.com/curoverse/arvados-dev.git |
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104 | </pre> |
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105 | |||
106 | ...or, if you're a committer with your public key on our git server: |
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107 | |||
108 | <pre> |
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109 | cd |
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110 | git clone git@git.curoverse.com:arvados.git |
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111 | git clone git@git.curoverse.com:arvados-dev.git |
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112 | </pre> |
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113 | |||
114 | 5 | Tom Clegg | h2. Start Postgres |
115 | |||
116 | _If you're running in a docker container_ you'll need to start Postgres manually: |
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117 | |||
118 | <pre> |
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119 | sudo /etc/init.d/postgresql start |
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120 | </pre> |
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121 | |||
122 | 1 | Tom Clegg | (If you're on a regular workstation/server/VM, startup scripts have already taken care of that for you.) |
123 | 9 | Joshua Randall | |
124 | 11 | Joshua Randall | h2. Start X11 |
125 | |||
126 | In order for the apps/workbench tests to function, firefox needs to have an X11 server (or it will fail to start). If you are on a workstation with a "real" X server, that should work. If not, Xvfb is an X server that renders to a virtual framebuffer so that selenium/firefox tests can run in headless mode. Also make sure that the DISPLAY environment variable is set accordingly. |
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127 | |||
128 | <pre> |
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129 | Xvfb :0.0 |
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130 | export DISPLAY=":0.0" |
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131 | </pre> |
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132 | |||
133 | 9 | Joshua Randall | h2. Setup groups |
134 | |||
135 | 17 | Tom Clegg | Make sure the fuse and docker groups exist (create them if necessary) and that the user who will run the tests is a member of them. |
136 | 13 | Joshua Randall | |
137 | 1 | Tom Clegg | h2. Create a Postgres user |
138 | |||
139 | 5 | Tom Clegg | Create an "arvados" user with "create database" privileges. The test suite will create and drop the arvados_test database as needed. |
140 | 1 | Tom Clegg | |
141 | <pre> |
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142 | newpw=`tr -cd a-zA-Z </dev/urandom |head -c32` |
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143 | sudo -u postgres psql -c "create user arvados with createdb encrypted password '$newpw'" |
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144 | 16 | Tom Clegg | cp -i ~/arvados/services/api/config/database.yml{.example,} |
145 | 1 | Tom Clegg | newpw="$newpw" perl -pi~ -e 's/xxxxxxxx/$ENV{newpw}/' ~/arvados/services/api/config/database.yml |
146 | </pre> |
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147 | |||
148 | h2. Run tests |
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149 | |||
150 | <pre> |
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151 | time ~/arvados-dev/jenkins/run-tests.sh WORKSPACE=~/arvados |
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152 | </pre> |
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153 | |||
154 | 14 | Tom Clegg | During development, you'll probably want something more like this. It reuses the given temp directory, which avoids a lot of repetitive downloading of dependencies, and allows you to save time with @--skip-install@ or @--only-install sdk/ruby@ and so on. |
155 | 1 | Tom Clegg | |
156 | <pre> |
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157 | 14 | Tom Clegg | mkdir ~/.cache/arvados-build |
158 | time ~/arvados-dev/jenkins/run-tests.sh WORKSPACE=~/arvados --temp ~/.cache/arvados-build |
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159 | 1 | Tom Clegg | </pre> |