Signed-off-by: Rémy Coutable <remy@rymai.me>
6.2 KiB
Rake tasks for developers
Set up db with developer seeds
Note that if your db user does not have advanced privileges you must create the db manually before running this command.
bundle exec rake setup
The setup
task is an alias for gitlab:setup
.
This tasks calls db:reset
to create the database, calls add_limits_mysql
that adds limits to the database schema in case of a MySQL database and finally it calls db:seed_fu
to seed the database.
Note: db:setup
calls db:seed
but this does nothing.
Seeding issues for all or a given project
You can seed issues for all or a given project with the gitlab:seed:issues
task:
# All projects
bin/rake gitlab:seed:issues
# A specific project
bin/rake "gitlab:seed:issues[group-path/project-path]"
By default, this seeds an average of 2 issues per week for the last 5 weeks per project.
Automation
If you're very sure that you want to wipe the current database and refill seeds, you could:
echo 'yes' | bundle exec rake setup
To save you from answering yes
manually.
Discard stdout
Since the script would print a lot of information, it could be slowing down
your terminal, and it would generate more than 20G logs if you just redirect
it to a file. If we don't care about the output, we could just redirect it to
/dev/null
:
echo 'yes' | bundle exec rake setup > /dev/null
Note that since you can't see the questions from stdout, you might just want
to echo 'yes'
to keep it running. It would still print the errors on stderr
so no worries about missing errors.
Extra Project seed options
There are a few environment flags you can pass to change how projects are seeded
SIZE
: defaults to8
, max:32
. Amount of projects to create.LARGE_PROJECTS
: defaults to false. If set will clone 6 large projects to help with testing.FORK
: defaults to false. If set totrue
will forktorvalds/linux
five times. Can also be set to an existing project full_path and it will fork that instead.
Notes for MySQL
Since the seeds would contain various UTF-8 characters, such as emojis or so,
we'll need to make sure that we're using utf8mb4
for all the encoding
settings and utf8mb4_unicode_ci
for collation. Please check
MySQL utf8mb4 support
Make sure that config/database.yml
has encoding: utf8mb4
, too.
Next, we'll need to update the schema to make the indices fit:
sed -i 's/limit: 255/limit: 191/g' db/schema.rb
Then run the setup script:
bundle exec rake setup
To make sure that indices still fit. You could find great details in: How to support full Unicode in MySQL databases
Run tests
In order to run the test you can use the following commands:
rake spec
to run the rspec suiterake karma
to run the karma test suiterake gitlab:test
to run all the tests
Note: rake spec
takes significant time to pass.
Instead of running full test suite locally you can save a lot of time by running
a single test or directory related to your changes. After you submit merge request
CI will run full test suite for you. Green CI status in the merge request means
full test suite is passed.
Note: You can't run rspec .
since this will try to run all the _spec.rb
files it can find, also the ones in /tmp
To run a single test file you can use:
bin/rspec spec/controllers/commit_controller_spec.rb
for a rspec test
To run several tests inside one directory:
bin/rspec spec/requests/api/
for the rspec tests if you want to test API only
Speed-up tests, rake tasks, and migrations
Spring is a Rails application preloader. It speeds up development by keeping your application running in the background so you don't need to boot it every time you run a test, rake task or migration.
If you want to use it, you'll need to export the ENABLE_SPRING
environment
variable to 1
:
export ENABLE_SPRING=1
Alternatively you can use the following on each spec run,
bundle exec spring rspec some_spec.rb
Compile Frontend Assets
You shouldn't ever need to compile frontend assets manually in development, but if you ever need to test how the assets get compiled in a production environment you can do so with the following command:
RAILS_ENV=production NODE_ENV=production bundle exec rake gitlab:assets:compile
This will compile and minify all JavaScript and CSS assets and copy them along
with all other frontend assets (images, fonts, etc) into /public/assets
where
they can be easily inspected.
Generate API documentation for project services (e.g. Slack)
bundle exec rake services:doc
Updating Emoji Aliases
To update the Emoji aliases file (used for Emoji autocomplete) you must run the following:
bundle exec rake gemojione:aliases
Updating Emoji Digests
To update the Emoji digests file (used for Emoji autocomplete) you must run the following:
bundle exec rake gemojione:digests
This will update the file fixtures/emojis/digests.json
based on the currently
available Emoji.
Emoji Sprites
Generating a sprite file containing all the Emoji can be done by running:
bundle exec rake gemojione:sprite
If new emoji are added, the spritesheet may change size. To compensate for
such changes, first generate the emoji.png
spritesheet with the above Rake
task, then check the dimensions of the new spritesheet and update the
SPRITESHEET_WIDTH
and SPRITESHEET_HEIGHT
constants accordingly.
Updating project templates
Starting a project from a template needs this project to be exported. On a up to date master branch with run:
gdk run
# In a new terminal window
bundle exec rake gitlab:update_project_templates
git checkout -b update-project-templates
git add vendor/project_templates
git commit
git push -u origin update-project-templates
Now create a merge request and merge that to master.
Generate route lists
To see the full list of API routes, you can run:
bundle exec rake grape:path_helpers
For the Rails controllers, run:
bundle exec rake routes
Since these take some time to create, it's often helpful to save the output to a file for quick reference.