For a fully guided walk through of setting up and configuring this sample, see the Continuous Integration Using Salesforce DX Trailhead module.
This repository shows one way you can successfully setup Salesforce DX with Travis CI. We make a few assumptions in this README:
- You know how to get your Github repository setup with Travis CI. (Here's their Getting Started guide.)
- You've installed the Travis CLI.
- You have properly setup JWT-Based Authorization Flow (i.e. headless). I recommend using these steps for generating your Self-Signed SSL Certificate.
If any any of these assumptions aren't true, the following steps won't work.
-
Make sure you have the Salesforce CLI installed. Check by running
sfdx force --help
and confirm you see the command output. If you don't have it installed you can download and install it from here. -
Confirm you can perform a JWT-based auth:
sfdx force:auth:jwt:grant --clientid <your_consumer_key> --jwtkeyfile server.key --username <your_username> --setdefaultdevhubusername
Note: For more info on setting up JWT-based auth see Authorize an Org Using the JWT-Based Flow in the Salesforce DX Developer Guide.
-
Fork this repo into your github account using the fork link at the top of the page.
-
Clone your forked repo locally:
git clone https://github.com/<git_username>/sfdx-travisci.git
-
From you JWT-Based connected app on Salesforce, retrieve the generated
Consumer Key
. -
Set your
Consumer Key
andUsername
using the Travis CLI. Note that this username is the username that you use to access your Dev Hub.travis env set CONSUMERKEY <your_consumer_key> travis env set USERNAME <your_username>
-
Add your
server.key
that you generated previously to the folder calledassets
. -
From the root folder of your local project, encrypt your
server.key
value:travis encrypt-file assets/server.key assets/server.key.enc --add
-
IMPORTANT! Remove your
server.key
:rm assets/server.key
, you should never store keys or certificates in a public place. -
Open the
.travis.yml
file and remove the first line that starts withopenssl ...
and save the file.
And you should be ready to go! Now when you commit and push a change, your change will kick off a Travis CI build.
Enjoy!
If you find any issues or opportunities for improving this respository, fix them! Feel free to contribute to this project by forking this repository and make changes to the content. Once you've made your changes, share them back with the community by sending a pull request. Please see How to send pull requests for more information about contributing to Github projects.
If you find any issues with this demo that you can't fix, feel free to report them in the issues section of this repository.