Hacking prerequisites » History » Revision 73
Revision 72 (Ward Vandewege, 08/12/2020 03:30 PM) → Revision 73/75 (Ward Vandewege, 09/10/2020 05:26 PM)
{{>toc}} h1. Hacking prerequisites The Arvados test suite can run in a Docker container, a VM, or your workstation -- provided a few prerequisites are satisfied. h2. Host options h3. Starting on your workstation If your workstation is a debian buster 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". Other linux distributions should work too with some modifications, but it's probably easier to use a VM. h3. Starting on a VM Another option is to create a virtual machine using something like Xen or VirtualBox, and run debian buster on it. The instructions below assume you have just a few basic requirements: * SSH server * sudo (@apt-get install sudo@) * A user account with sudo privileges h3. Starting in a docker container _[[Arvbox]] provides a preinstalled Docker-based dev environment. The following instructions are for creating a dev environment inside Docker from scratch._ 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. See http://docker.io for more about installing docker. On debian it looks something like this. <pre> sudo apt-get install docker-ce sudo adduser $USER docker # {log out & log back in} groups # {should include "docker"} </pre> Start up a new container with debian 10 (buster), make a new user and log in as that user: <pre> docker run -it --privileged debian:10 bash apt-get update apt-get -y install sudo adduser me adduser me sudo sudo -u me -i </pre> The "--privileged" is required in order for /dev/fuse to be accessible (without it, no tests that require FUSE will work). h2. Install dev environment Run the following commands as root. Note that the last command here ("arvados-server install -type test") installs additional debian packages to your system, along with additional software in /var/lib/arvados/ (such as suitable versions of Ruby and Go) that do not interfere with system packages. It also creates a postgresql database user named "arvados" with an insecure password. Don't expose this postgresql server to the internet or to untrusted users! NOTE: Go 1.12 is the minimum version required to build arvados-server. On Debian Buster, you will want to add the buster-backports apt repository: arvados-server <pre> echo "deb http://deb.debian.org/debian buster-backports main" > /etc/apt/sources.list.d/backports.list apt-get update apt-get install --no-install-recommends golang -t buster-backports apt-get install --no-install-recommends build-essential ca-certificates git libpam0g-dev </pre> Alternatively, if you are on another distribution: <pre> apt-get install --no-install-recommends build-essential ca-certificates git golang libpam0g-dev </pre> Then: <pre> cd git clone https://git.arvados.org/arvados.git cd arvados go mod download cd cmd/arvados-server go install ~/go/bin/arvados-server install -type test </pre> h2. Start Postgres _If you're running in a docker container_ you'll need to start Postgres manually: <pre> sudo /etc/init.d/postgresql start </pre> (If you're on a regular workstation/server/VM, startup scripts have already taken care of that for you.) h2. Setup groups 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. h2. Run tests <pre> time ~/arvados/build/run-tests.sh WORKSPACE=~/arvados </pre> 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. <pre> mkdir -p ~/.cache/arvados-build time ~/arvados/build/run-tests.sh WORKSPACE=~/arvados --temp ~/.cache/arvados-build </pre>