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wpt-sync

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Description

Synchronize changes between gecko and web-platform-tests

Additional documentation

See ./docs. More up-to-date information can be found in this document (only accessible to Mozilla employees).

Development environment

Setting up a development environment requires Docker.

We're somewhat following mozilla-services' Dockerflow.

If you are on MacOS and have brew installed you can do

brew cask install docker

Prerequisites

Depending on what command you want to run, (e.g. wptsync listen), you may need to provide custom configration files at docker run-time by placing them in locations that are bind-mounted to the container and setting container environment variables. See Dockerfile.dev and start_wptsync.sh

You can include these customizations in a shell script or a docker-compose.yml:

  • There's a dev-env convenience script for building the docker image and running the wptsync command in a corresponding container: ./bin/ run_docker_dev.sh. It is similar to the script we use in production.

Quick Setup

The following setup assumes you have already installed Docker and have it running. See Development Environment above.

./bin/run_docker_dev.sh build

This will setup the container and make sure the relevant configuration files are in the right place. You will be asked to enter in a passphrase when it creates development ssh keys, press enter to leave these blank.

To run tests do the following

./bin/run_docker_dev.sh test

Configuration

Development configuration files are checked in to config/ and config/dev. config/dev/ssh contains (usually non-functional) ssh keys and is not checked in to the repository.

For production, configuration goes in config/prod, following the layout of config/dev. This is never committed to the repository. See docs/deployment.md for more information.

Raw docker commands

From repo root:

To build an image called wptsync_dev with the repo root as the build context:

docker build -t wptsync_dev --add-host=rabbitmq:127.0.0.1 --file wpt-sync/docker/Dockerfile.dev .

To start all the services in the container:

exec docker run -it --add-host=rabbitmq:127.0.0.1 \
  --env WPTSYNC_CONFIG=${WPTSYNC_CONFIG:-/app/config/dev/sync.ini} \
  --env WPTSYNC_CREDS=${WPTSYNC_CREDS:-/app/config/dev/credentials.ini} \
  --env WPTSYNC_GECKO_CONFIG=${WPTSYNC_GECKO_CONFIG:/app/config/gecko_config} \
  --env WPTSYNC_WPT_CONFIG=${WPTSYNC_WPT_CONFIG:/app/config/wpt_config} \
  --env WPTSYNC_GH_SSH_KEY=${WPTSYNC_GH_SSH_KEY:/app/config/dev/ssh/id_github} \
  --env WPTSYNC_HGMO_SSH_KEY=${WPTSYNC_HGMO_SSH_KEY:/app/config/dev/ssh/id_hgmo} \
  --mount type=bind,source=$(pwd)/config,target=/app/config \
  --mount type=bind,source=$(pwd)/sync,target=/app/wpt-sync/sync \
  --mount type=bind,source=$(pwd)/test,target=/app/wpt-sync/test \
  --mount type=bind,source=$(pwd)/repos,target=/app/repos \
  --mount type=bind,source=$(pwd)/workspace,target=/app/workspace \
  wptsync_dev

This runs the script designated by ENTRYPOINT in the Dockerfile with an initprocess. You could use --env-file instead of --env to set environment variables in the container.

Stop it with:

docker stop [container name]

You can see names of running containers with docker container ls.

If you want to run a different command in the container interactively, use the -it and --entrypoint options like:

docker run -it --env WPTSYNC_REPO_ROOT=/app/wpt-sync/test/testdata \
    --mount type=bind,source=$(pwd),target=/app/wpt-sync \
    --entrypoint "some_command" wptsync_dev

You can pass additional flags to the entrypoint after the wptsync_dev part, like ... --entrypoint "some_command" wptsync_dev -x

Volumes to --mount

See the VOLUMES directive in the Dockerfile for information about what volumes it's expecting.

Permissions

Inside the Docker container we run as the app user with uid 10001. This user requires write permissions to directories repos, workspace, and config/dev/ssh.

If you're on Linux, for each path run

sudo chown -R 10001 <path>

You may not need to do this at all on mac.

Note that replacing the default entry point means that you're no longer running the start_wptsync.sh script at container start-up and therefore some configuration may be missing or incomplete. For example, the Dockerfile (build-time) doesn't set up any credentials; instead, credentials are only set up in the container at run-time with the above-mentioned script.