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helm/docs/developers.md

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Developers Guide

This guide explains how to set up your environment for developing on Helm.

Prerequisites

  • The latest version of Go
  • The latest version of Dep
  • A Kubernetes cluster w/ kubectl (optional)
  • Git

Building Helm

We use Make to build our programs. The simplest way to get started is:

$ make bootstrap build

NOTE: This will fail if not running from the path $GOPATH/src/k8s.io/helm. The directory k8s.io should not be a symlink or build will not find the relevant packages.

This will build both Helm and the Helm library. make bootstrap will attempt to install certain tools if they are missing.

To run all the tests (without running the tests for vendor/), run make test.

To run Helm locally, you can run bin/helm.

  • Helm is known to run on macOS and most Linuxes, including Alpine.

Man pages

Man pages and Markdown documentation are already pre-built in docs/. You may regenerate documentation using make docs.

To expose the Helm man pages to your man client, you can put the files in your $MANPATH:

$ export MANPATH=$GOPATH/src/k8s.io/helm/docs/man:$MANPATH
$ man helm

Docker Images

To build Docker images, use make docker-build.

Pre-build images are already available in the official Kubernetes Helm GCR registry.

Running a Local Cluster

For development, we highly recommend using the Kubernetes Minikube developer-oriented distribution.

Contribution Guidelines

We welcome contributions. This project has set up some guidelines in order to ensure that (a) code quality remains high, (b) the project remains consistent, and (c) contributions follow the open source legal requirements. Our intent is not to burden contributors, but to build elegant and high-quality open source code so that our users will benefit.

Make sure you have read and understood the main CONTRIBUTING guide:

https://github.com/helm/helm/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md

Structure of the Code

The code for the Helm project is organized as follows:

  • The individual programs are located in cmd/. Code inside of cmd/ is not designed for library re-use.
  • Shared libraries are stored in pkg/.
  • The raw ProtoBuf files are stored in _proto/hapi (where hapi stands for the Helm Application Programming Interface).
  • The Go files generated from the proto definitions are stored in pkg/proto.
  • The scripts/ directory contains a number of utility scripts. Most of these are used by the CI/CD pipeline.
  • The rootfs/ folder is used for Docker-specific files.
  • The docs/ folder is used for documentation and examples.

Go dependencies are managed with Dep and stored in the vendor/ directory.

Git Conventions

We use Git for our version control system. The master branch is the home of the current development candidate. Releases are tagged.

We accept changes to the code via GitHub Pull Requests (PRs). One workflow for doing this is as follows:

  1. Go to your $GOPATH/src/k8s.io directory and git clone the github.com/kubernetes/helm repository.
  2. Fork that repository into your GitHub account
  3. Add your repository as a remote for $GOPATH/src/k8s.io/helm
  4. Create a new working branch (git checkout -b feat/my-feature) and do your work on that branch.
  5. When you are ready for us to review, push your branch to GitHub, and then open a new pull request with us.

For Git commit messages, we follow the Semantic Commit Messages:

fix(helm): add --foo flag to 'helm install'

When 'helm install --foo bar' is run, this will print "foo" in the
output regardless of the outcome of the installation.

Closes #1234

Common commit types:

  • fix: Fix a bug or error
  • feat: Add a new feature
  • docs: Change documentation
  • test: Improve testing
  • ref: refactor existing code

Common scopes:

  • helm: The Helm CLI
  • pkg/lint: The lint package. Follow a similar convention for any package
  • *: two or more scopes

Read more:

  • The Deis Guidelines were the inspiration for this section.
  • Karma Runner defines the semantic commit message idea.

Go Conventions

We follow the Go coding style standards very closely. Typically, running go fmt will make your code beautiful for you.

We also typically follow the conventions recommended by go lint and gometalinter. Run make test-style to test the style conformance.

Read more:

Protobuf Conventions

Because this project is largely Go code, we format our Protobuf files as closely to Go as possible. There are currently no real formatting rules or guidelines for Protobuf, but as they emerge, we may opt to follow those instead.

Standards:

  • Tabs for indentation, not spaces.
  • Spacing rules follow Go conventions (curly braces at line end, spaces around operators).

Conventions:

  • Files should specify their package with option go_package = "...";
  • Comments should translate into good Go code comments (since protoc copies comments into the destination source code file).
  • RPC functions are defined in the same file as their request/response messages.
  • Deprecated RPCs, messages, and fields are marked deprecated in the comments (// UpdateFoo DEPRECATED updates a foo.).