Tuskar follows the OpenStack processes when it comes to code, communication, etc. The repositories are hosted on Stackforge, bugs and blueprints are on Launchpad and we use the openstack-dev mailing list (subject [tuskar]) and the #tuskar IRC channel for communication.
We attempt to comply with the OpenStack coding standards, defined in https://github.com/openstack-dev/hacking/blob/master/HACKING.rst
Be sure to familiarise yourself with OpenStack's Gerrit Workflow.
Before submitting your code, please make sure you have completed the following checklist:
- Update tools/sample_data.py (if needed)
- Update the API docs (if needed)
- Update the tests (if needed)
- Update cURL commands page (if needed)
There are various pieces of the codebase that may not be immediately obvious to a newcomer to the project, so we attempt to explain some of that in this section.
Where do the tuskar commands come from? (tuskar-api, tuskar-dbsync, etc)
The project-specific commands live in tuskar/cmd, and are implementations that use the oslo.config project as a base. They are generated and put into your venv when you run 'python setup.py develop'. Adding a new one consists of:
- Creating a new file in tuskar/cmd
- Adding the appropriate name and package reference to the entry_points section of setup.cfg
How do I add a new controller?
Controllers are contained in tuskar/api/controllers/v1.py. To add a new controller, you need to add an 'HTTP Representation' of whatever model you wish to expose with this controller. This is a simple python object that extends Base, and describes the key and value types that the object will return. For example, say there is a Foo model object you wish to return:
class Foo(Base): id = int name = wtypes.text fred = Fred # Fred is another object defined in this file
Then add a controller for it (anywhere above the Controller class, which is the last in the file. For example:
class FoosController(rest.RestController): @wsme_pecan.wsexpose([Foo]) def get_all(self) result = [] """Do some things to get your list of Foos""" return result
Lastly, add a reference to the controller in the Controller class at the bottom of the file as so:
class Controller(object): foos = FoosController()
The name you give the controller above will be how it is accessed by the client, so in the above case, you could get the list of foos with:
curl http://0.0.0.0:6385/v1/foos
For doing something simple, like a poc controller that doesn't return any objects, you can return plain text as so:
class FarkleController(rest.RestController): @wsme_pecan.wsexpose(None, wtypes.text) def get_all(self): return "Hi, I am farkle!"
Where are my changes to the app?
There are two possible answers:
- You may make a change to, say, a controller, and wonder why your change does not seem to happen when you call your curl command on that resource. This is because, at least at the current time, you must -c to kill the tuskar-api server, and then start it again to pick up your changes.
- You may have changed something that requires you to rerun 'python setup.py develop', such as changing or adding a new command in the cmd dir described above
How do I create a new model?
Models live in tuskar/db/sqlalchemy/. There are two files here of relevance for describing the model (we will get to defining the table in the next section), api.py and models.py. The models.py file contains the definition of the columns to expose to the client for the model objects, as well as a mapping of the object in this file to the tablename define in the migration (below). In api.py, we have utility methods, as well as validation rules and other custom methods for interacting with the models.
How do I define the table for my new model?
This is described in a migration file, located in tuskar/db/sqlalchemy/migrate_repo/versions/. Each new table or change to an existing table should get a new file here with a descriptive name, starting with a 3 digit number. Each new file should increment the number to avoid collisions. The primary part of this file is the definition of your table, which s done via a Table object, and you describe the columns, using, surprisingly enough, a Column object. There are upgrade nd downgrade methods in these migrations to describe what to do for creating a given set of tables, as well as dropping them, or rolling back to what was done before the upgrade.
We use testtools for our unit tests, and mox for mock objects.
You can run tests using Tox:
$ tox
This will run tests under Python 2.6, 2.7 and verify PEP 8 compliance. The identical test suite is run by OpenStack's Jenkins whenever you send a patch.
Additional details forthcoming.