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Developer's Guide

We aim to make local development and testing as straightforward as possible. For basic guidelines around contributing, see the CONTRIBUTING document.

There are a number of automation tools available to help with testing and building your changes, detailed below.

Building kube-router

Go version 1.7 or above is required to build kube-router

All the dependencies are vendored already, so just run make or go build -o kube-router kube-router.go to build.

Building A Docker Image

Running make container will compile kube-router (if needed) and build a Docker image. By default the container will be tagged with the last release version, and current commit ID.

For example:

$ make container
docker build -t "cloudnativelabs/kube-router-git:0.0.4-22-gd782e89-dirty-build-release"
Sending build context to Docker daemon  151.5MB
Step 1/4 : FROM alpine
 ---> a41a7446062d
Step 2/4 : RUN apk add --no-cache iptables ipset
 ---> Using cache
 ---> 30e25a7640de
Step 3/4 : COPY kube-router /
 ---> Using cache
 ---> c06f78fd02e8
Step 4/4 : ENTRYPOINT /kube-router
 ---> Using cache
 ---> 5cfcfe54623e
Successfully built 5cfcfe54623e
Successfully tagged cloudnativelabs/kube-router-git:0.0.4-22-gd782e89-dirty-build-release

The -dirty part of the tag means there are uncommitted changes in your local git repo.

Pushing A Docker Image

Running make push will push your container image to a Docker registry. The default configuration will use the Docker Hub repository for the official kube-router images, cloudnativelabs/kube-router. You can push to a different repository by changing a couple settings, as described in Image Options below.

Makefile Options

There are several variables which can be modified in the Makefile to customize your builds. They are specified after your make command like this: make OPTION=VALUE. These options can also be set in your environment variables. For more details beyond the scope of this document, see the Makefile and run make help.

Image Options

You can configure the name and tag of the Docker image with a few variables passed to make container and make push.

Example:

$ make container IMG_FQDN=quay.io IMG_NAMESPACE=bzub IMAGE_TAG=custom
docker build -t "quay.io/bzub/kube-router-git:custom" .
Sending build context to Docker daemon  151.5MB
Step 1/4 : FROM alpine
 ---> a41a7446062d
Step 2/4 : RUN apk add --no-cache iptables ipset
 ---> Using cache
 ---> 30e25a7640de
Step 3/4 : COPY kube-router /
 ---> Using cache
 ---> c06f78fd02e8
Step 4/4 : ENTRYPOINT /kube-router
 ---> Using cache
 ---> 5cfcfe54623e
Successfully built 5cfcfe54623e
Successfully tagged quay.io/bzub/kube-router-git:custom
  • REGISTRY is derived from other options. Set this to something else to quickly override the Docker image registry used to tag and push images.
    • Note: This will override other variables below that make up the image name/tag.
  • IMG_FQDN should be set if you are not using Docker Hub for images. In the examples above IMG_FQDN is set to quay.io.
  • IMG_NAMESPACE is the Docker registry user or organization. It is used in URLs.
    • Example: quay.io/IMG_NAMESPACE/kube-router
  • NAME goes onto the end of the Docker registry URL that will be used.
    • Example: quay.io/cloudnativelabs/NAME
  • IMAGE_TAG is used to override the tag of the Docker image being built.
  • DEV_SUFFIX is appended to Docker image names that are not for release. By default these images get a name ending with -git to signify that they are for testing purposes. Example (DEV-SUFFIX=master-latest): quay.io/cloudnativelabs/kube-router-git:master-latest

Testing kube-router

Please read the testing documentation for details.

Release Workflow

These instructions show how official kube-router releases are performed.

First, you must tag a git commit with the release version. This will cause the CI system to:

  • Build kube-router
  • Build a Docker image with ${VERSION} and latest tags
  • Push the Docker image to the official registry
  • Submits a draft release to GitHub

Example:

VERSION=v0.5.0
git tag -a ${VERSION} -m "Brief release note" && git push origin ${VERSION}

Then the only thing left to do is edit the release notes on the GitHub release and publish it.

Manual Releases

These instructions show how To perform a custom or test release outside of the CI system, using a local git commit.

First tag a commit:

VERSION=v0.5.0_bzub
git tag -a ${VERSION} -m "Brief release note"

Then you can provide options to make release.

This does the following:

  • Builds kube-router
  • Builds a Docker image
  • Tags the image with the current git commit's tag
  • Tags the image with latest
  • Pushes the image to a docker registry

If you'd like to test the GitHub release functionality as well, you will need to pass in the GITHUB_TOKEN variable with a value of an API token you've generated. This Access Token must have the "repo" OAuth scope enabled.

NOTE: For added security when running a command that contains secure credentials, add a space before the entire command to prevent it from being added to your shell history file.

Example:

$  make release IMG_FQDN=quay.io IMG_NAMESPACE=bzub GITHUB_TOKEN=b1ahbl1ahb1ahba1hahb1ah