Cockpit module for Transactional Updates.
make install
compiles and installs the package in /usr/share/cockpit/
. The
convenience targets srpm
and rpm
build the source and binary rpms,
respectively. Both of these make use of the dist
target, which is used
to generate the distribution tarball. In production
mode, source files are
automatically minified and compressed. Set NODE_ENV=production
if you want to
duplicate this behavior.
For development, you usually want to run your module straight out of the git
tree. To do that, link that to the location were cockpit-bridge
looks for packages:
mkdir -p ~/.local/share/cockpit
ln -s `pwd`/dist ~/.local/share/cockpit/cockpit-tukit
After changing the code and running make
again, reload the Cockpit page in
your browser.
You can also use watch mode to automatically update the webpack on every code change with
$ npm run watch
or
$ make watch
When developing against a virtual machine, webpack can also automatically upload
the code changes by setting the RSYNC
environment variable to
the remote hostname.
$ RSYNC=c make watch
Cockpit Transactional Update uses ESLint to automatically
check JavaScript code style in .js
and .jsx
files.
The linter is executed within every build as a webpack preloader.
For developer convenience, the ESLint can be started explicitly by:
$ npm run eslint
Violations of some rules can be fixed automatically by:
$ npm run eslint:fix
Rules configuration can be found in the .eslintrc.json
file.
Run make check
to build an RPM, install it into a standard Cockpit test VM
(centos-8-stream by default), and run the test/check-application integration test on
it. This uses Cockpit's Chrome DevTools Protocol based browser tests, through a
Python API abstraction. Note that this API is not guaranteed to be stable, so
if you run into failures and don't want to adjust tests, consider checking out
Cockpit's test/common from a tag instead of main (see the test/common
target in Makefile
).
After the test VM is prepared, you can manually run the test without rebuilding the VM, possibly with extra options for tracing and halting on test failures (for interactive debugging):
TEST_OS=centos-8-stream test/check-application -tvs
You can also run the test against a different Cockpit image, for example:
TEST_OS=fedora-34 make check
- This module is based on Cockpit Starter Kit.