gitea/docs/content/doc/developers/hacking-on-gitea.en-us.md
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Co-authored-by: Lauris BH <lauris@nix.lv>
Co-authored-by: techknowlogick <techknowlogick@gitea.io>
2020-11-28 01:12:22 -05:00

11 KiB

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2016-12-01T16:00:00+02:00 Hacking on Gitea hacking-on-gitea 10 false false
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developers Hacking on Gitea 10 hacking-on-gitea

Hacking on Gitea

Installing go

You should install go and set up your go
environment correctly.

Next, install Node.js with npm which is
required to build the JavaScript and CSS files. The minimum supported Node.js
version is {{< min-node-version >}} and the latest LTS version is recommended.

Note: When executing make tasks that require external tools, like
make misspell-check, Gitea will automatically download and build these as
necessary. To be able to use these you must have the "$GOPATH"/bin directory
on the executable path. If you don't add the go bin directory to the
executable path you will have to manage this yourself.

Note 2: Go version {{< min-go-version >}} or higher is required; however, it is important
to note that our continuous integration will check that the formatting of the
source code is not changed by gofmt using make fmt-check. Unfortunately,
the results of gofmt can differ by the version of go. It is therefore
recommended to install the version of Go that our continuous integration is
running. As of last update, it should be Go version {{< go-version >}}.

Installing Make

Gitea makes heavy use of Make to automate tasks and improve development. This
guide covers how to install Make.

On Linux

Install with the package manager.

On Ubuntu/Debian:

sudo apt-get install make

On Fedora/RHEL/CentOS:

sudo yum install make

On Windows

One of these three distributions of Make will run on Windows:

Downloading and cloning the Gitea source code

The recommended method of obtaining the source code is by using git clone.

git clone https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea

(Since the advent of go modules, it is no longer necessary to build go projects
from within the $GOPATH, hence the go get approach is no longer recommended.)

Forking Gitea

Download the master Gitea source code as above. Then, fork the
Gitea repository on GitHub,
and either switch the git remote origin for your fork or add your fork as another remote:

# Rename original Gitea origin to upstream
git remote rename origin upstream
git remote add origin "git@github.com:$GITHUB_USERNAME/gitea.git"
git fetch --all --prune

or:

# Add new remote for our fork
git remote add "$FORK_NAME" "git@github.com:$GITHUB_USERNAME/gitea.git"
git fetch --all --prune

To be able to create pull requests, the forked repository should be added as a remote
to the Gitea sources. Otherwise, changes can't be pushed.

Building Gitea (Basic)

Take a look at our
instructions
for building
from source.

The simplest recommended way to build from source is:

TAGS="bindata sqlite sqlite_unlock_notify" make build

The build target will execute both frontend and backend sub-targets. If the bindata tag is present, the frontend files will be compiled into the binary. It is recommended to leave out the tag when doing frontend development so that changes will be reflected.

See make help for all available make targets. Also see .drone.yml to see how our continuous integration works.

Building continuously

To run and continously rebuild when source files change:

make watch

On macOS, watching all backend source files may hit the default open files limit which can be increased via ulimit -n 12288 for the current shell or in your shell startup file for all future shells.

Formatting, code analysis and spell check

Our continuous integration will reject PRs that are not properly formatted, fail
code analysis or spell check.

You should format your code with go fmt using:

make fmt

and can test whether your changes would match the results with:

make fmt-check # which runs make fmt internally

Note: The results of go fmt are dependent on the version of go present.
You should run the same version of go that is on the continuous integration
server as mentioned above. make fmt-check will only check if your go would
format differently - this may be different from the CI server version.

You should run revive, vet and spell-check on the code with:

make revive vet misspell-check

Working on JS and CSS

Either use the watch-frontend target mentioned above or just build once:

make build && ./gitea

Before committing, make sure the linters pass:

make lint-frontend

Note: When working on frontend code, set USE_SERVICE_WORKER to false in app.ini to prevent undesirable caching of frontend assets.

Building and adding SVGs

SVG icons are built using the make svg target which compiles the icon sources defined in build/generate-svg.js into the output directory public/img/svg. Custom icons can be added in the web_src/svg directory.

The PNG versions of the logo are built from a single SVG source file assets/logo.svg using the make generate-images target. To run it, Node.js and npm must be available. The same process can also be used to generate a custom logo PNGs from a SVG source file. It's possible to remove parts of the SVG logo for the favicon build by adding a detail-remove class to the SVG nodes to be removed.

Updating the API

When creating new API routes or modifying existing API routes, you MUST
update and/or create Swagger
documentation for these using go-swagger comments.
The structure of these comments is described in the specification.
If you want more information about the Swagger structure, you can look at the
Swagger 2.0 Documentation
or compare with a previous PR adding a new API endpoint, e.g. PR #5483

You should be careful not to break the API for downstream users which depend
on a stable API. In general, this means additions are acceptable, but deletions
or fundamental changes to the API will be rejected.

Once you have created or changed an API endpoint, please regenerate the Swagger
documentation using:

make generate-swagger

You should validate your generated Swagger file and spell-check it with:

make swagger-validate misspell-check

You should commit the changed swagger JSON file. The continous integration
server will check that this has been done using:

make swagger-check

Note: Please note you should use the Swagger 2.0 documentation, not the
OpenAPI 3 documentation.

Creating new configuration options

When creating new configuration options, it is not enough to add them to the
modules/setting files. You should add information to custom/conf/app.ini
and to the
configuration cheat sheet
found in docs/content/doc/advanced/config-cheat-sheet.en-us.md

When changing the Gitea logo SVG, you will need to run and commit the results
of:

make generate-images

This will create the necessary Gitea favicon and others.

Database Migrations

If you make breaking changes to any of the database persisted structs in the
models/ directory, you will need to make a new migration. These can be found
in models/migrations/. You can ensure that your migrations work for the main
database types using:

make test-sqlite-migration # with sqlite switched for the appropriate database

Testing

There are two types of test run by Gitea: Unit tests and Integration Tests.

TAGS="bindata sqlite sqlite_unlock_notify" make test # Runs the unit tests

Unit tests will not and cannot completely test Gitea alone. Therefore, we
have written integration tests; however, these are database dependent.

TAGS="bindata sqlite sqlite_unlock_notify" make build test-sqlite

will run the integration tests in an sqlite environment. Integration tests
require git lfs to be installed. Other database tests are available but
may need adjustment to the local environment.

Look at
integrations/README.md
for more information and how to run a single test.

Our continuous integration will test the code passes its unit tests and that
all supported databases will pass integration test in a Docker environment.
Migration from several recent versions of Gitea will also be tested.

Please submit your PR with additional tests and integration tests as
appropriate.

Documentation for the website

Documentation for the website is found in docs/. If you change this you
can test your changes to ensure that they pass continuous integration using:

# from the docs directory within Gitea
make trans-copy clean build

You will require a copy of Hugo to run this task. Please
note: this may generate a number of untracked git objects, which will need to
be cleaned up.

Visual Studio Code

A launch.json and tasks.json are provided within contrib/ide/vscode for
Visual Studio Code. Look at
contrib/ide/README.md
for more information.

Submitting PRs

Once you're happy with your changes, push them up and open a pull request. It
is recommended that you allow Gitea Managers and Owners to modify your PR
branches as we will need to update it to master before merging and/or may be
able to help fix issues directly.

Any PR requires two approvals from the Gitea maintainers and needs to pass the
continous integration. Take a look at our
CONTRIBUTING.md
document.

If you need more help pop on to Discord #Develop
and chat there.

That's it! You are ready to hack on Gitea.