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Largely a fork of go-camo itself a go implementation of camo

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camo

Largely a fork of go-camo itself a go implementation of camo

Developing

Setup the development environment

After cloning the repo run make develop:

make develop

This does three things. First it runs the dependencies target (see dependencies below). Second, it adds a pre-push hook which lints and runs tests before to validate things when pushing to github.

Finally, it also initializes git flow.

Working on features

To start work on a new feature or bug run:

git flow feature start <name>

I usually use the issue number I am working on and a description of the work for the name, e.g. bp-5064_add-camo-asset-proxy. This makes it easy for me to recall the issue when necessary and know what it is by description. It also means others know the same thing at a glance.

When done push your branch to your github fork and create a PR. Once that is approved you can run:

git flow feature finish <name>

This will merge the feature branch into develop and delete the local feature branch. Then you can push your changes to develop

Checking work as you go.

Lint

You can run various static analysis tools with the lint target.

make lint

This will report various issues in your code.

Testing

make test will run the tests for you.

make test-race will run the tests with the race detector on. This slows the test run a bit as it instruments the compiled code to do the detection which slows the test run noticably. It is normal to run make test regularly and then run with the race detector before committing and pushing to ensure you haven't added any detectable races to the code.

To check on test coverage run:

make coverage

Or to see line by line coverage in html run

make coverage-html

Building

make build will build a binary you can run on your dev workstation for testing purposes.

make build-linux will cross compile a linux binary for testing on linux should you need to.

make master and make release targets are for circle to do deployments.

Dependencies

To install dependencies for building artifacts run:

make dependencies

This is done by the develop target as well. So you probably don't need to do this you're self. It is a separate target so that CI/CD can setup dependencies in a non-development environment.

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Largely a fork of go-camo itself a go implementation of camo

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