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CONTRIBUTING.md

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Contributing

Table of Contents

Reporting Issues

  • When reporting issues, please include the output of atlantis version.
  • Also include the steps required to reproduce the problem if possible and applicable. This information will help us review and fix your issue faster.
  • When sending lengthy log-files, consider posting them as a gist (https://gist.github.com). Don't forget to remove sensitive data from your logfiles before posting (you can replace those parts with "REDACTED").

Reporting Security Issues

We take security issues seriously. Please report a security vulnerability to the maintainers using private vulnerability reporting.

Updating The Website

  • To view the generated website locally, run npm website:dev and then open your browser to http://localhost:8080.
  • The website will be regenerated when your pull request is merged to main.

Developing

Running Atlantis Locally

  • Clone the repo from https://github.com/runatlantis/atlantis/
  • Compile Atlantis:
    go install
  • Run Atlantis:
    atlantis server --gh-user <your username> --gh-token <your token> --repo-allowlist <your repo> --gh-webhook-secret <your webhook secret> --log-level debug
    If you get an error like command not found: atlantis, ensure that $GOPATH/bin is in your $PATH.

Running Atlantis With Local Changes

Docker compose is set up to start an atlantis container and ngrok container in the same network in order to expose the atlantis instance to the internet. In order to do this, create a file in the repository called atlantis.env and add the required env vars for the atlantis server configuration.

e.g.

NGROK_AUTH=1234567890

ATLANTIS_GH_APP_ID=123
ATLANTIS_GH_APP_KEY_FILE="/.ssh/somekey.pem"
ATLANTIS_GH_WEBHOOK_SECRET=12345

Note: ~/.ssh is mounted to allow for referencing any local ssh keys.

Following this just run:

make build-service
docker-compose up --detach
docker-compose logs --follow

Rebuilding

If the ngrok container is restarted, the url will change which is a hassle. Fortunately, when we make a code change, we can rebuild and restart the atlantis container easily without disrupting ngrok.

e.g.

make build-service
docker-compose up --detach --build

Running Tests Locally

make test. If you want to run the integration tests that actually run real terraform commands, run make test-all.

Running Tests In Docker

docker run --rm -v $(pwd):/go/src/github.com/runatlantis/atlantis -w /go/src/github.com/runatlantis/atlantis ghcr.io/runatlantis/testing-env:latest make test

Or to run the integration tests

docker run --rm -v $(pwd):/go/src/github.com/runatlantis/atlantis -w /go/src/github.com/runatlantis/atlantis ghcr.io/runatlantis/testing-env:latest make test-all

Calling Your Local Atlantis From GitHub

  • Create a test terraform repository in your GitHub.
  • Create a personal access token for Atlantis. See Create a GitHub token.
  • Start Atlantis in server mode using that token:
atlantis server --gh-user <your username> --gh-token <your token> --repo-allowlist <your repo> --gh-webhook-secret <your webhook secret> --log-level debug
  • Download ngrok from https://ngrok.com/download. This will enable you to expose Atlantis running on your laptop to the internet so GitHub can call it.
  • When you've downloaded and extracted ngrok, run it on port 4141:
ngrok http 4141
  • Create a Webhook in your repo and use the https url that ngrok printed out after running ngrok http 4141. Be sure to append /events so your webhook url looks something like https://efce3bcd.ngrok.io/events. See Add GitHub Webhook.
  • Create a pull request and type atlantis help. You should see the request in the ngrok and Atlantis logs and you should also see Atlantis comment back.

Code Style

Logging

  • ctx.Log should be available in most methods. If not, pass it down.
  • levels:
    • debug is for developers of atlantis
    • info is for users (expected that people run on info level)
    • warn is for something that might be a problem but we're not sure
    • error is for something that's definitely a problem
  • ALWAYS logs should be all lowercase (when printed, the first letter of each line will be automatically capitalized)
  • ALWAYS quote any string variables using %q in the fmt string, ex. ctx.Log.Info("cleaning clone dir %q", dir) => Cleaning clone directory "/tmp/atlantis/lkysow/atlantis-terraform-test/3"
  • NEVER use colons ":" in a log since that's used to separate error descriptions and causes
    • if you need to have a break in your log, either use - or , ex. failed to clean directory, continuing regardless

Errors

  • ALWAYS use lowercase unless the word requires it
  • ALWAYS use errors.Wrap(err, "additional context...")" instead of fmt.Errorf("additional context: %s", err) because it is less likely to result in mistakes and gives us the ability to trace call stacks
  • NEVER use the words "error occurred when...", or "failed to..." or "unable to...", etc. Instead, describe what was occurring at time of the error, ex. "cloning repository", "creating AWS session". This will prevent errors from looking like
Error setting up workspace: failed to run git clone: could find git

and will instead look like

Error: setting up workspace: running git clone: no executable "git"

This is easier to read and more consistent

Testing

  • place tests under {package under test}_test to enforce testing the external interfaces
  • if you need to test internally i.e. access non-exported stuff, call the file {file under test}_internal_test.go
  • use our testing utility for easier-to-read assertions: import . "github.com/runatlantis/atlantis/testing" and then use Assert(), Equals() and Ok()

Mocks

We use pegomock for mocking. If you're modifying any interfaces that are mocked, you'll need to regen the mocks for that interface.

Install using go install github.com/petergtz/pegomock/pegomock

If you see errors like:

# github.com/runatlantis/atlantis/server/events [github.com/runatlantis/atlantis/server/events.test]
server/events/project_command_builder_internal_test.go:567:5: cannot use workingDir (type *MockWorkingDir) as type WorkingDir in field value:
	*MockWorkingDir does not implement WorkingDir (missing ListAllFiles method)

Then you've likely modified an interface and now need to update the mocks.

Each interface that is mocked has a go:generate command above it, e.g.

//go:generate pegomock generate -m --package mocks -o mocks/mock_project_command_builder.go ProjectCommandBuilder

type ProjectCommandBuilder interface {
	BuildAutoplanCommands(ctx *command.Context) ([]command.ProjectContext, error)
}

To regen the mock, run go generate on that file, e.g.

go generate server/events/project_command_builder.go

If you get an error about pegomock not being available, install it:

go get github.com/petergtz/pegomock/...

Backporting Fixes

Atlantis now uses a cherry-pick-bot from Google. The bot assists in maintaining changes across releases branches by easily cherry-picking changes via pull requests.

Maintainers and Core Contributors can add a comment to a pull request:

/cherry-pick target-branch-name

target-branch-name is the branch to cherry-pick to. cherry-pick-bot will cherry-pick the merged commit to a new branch (created from the target branch) and open a new pull request to the target branch.

The bot will immediately try to cherry-pick a merged PR. On unmerged pull request, it will not do anything immediately, but wait until merge. You can comment multiple times on a PR for multiple release branches.

Manual Backporting Fixes

The bot will fail to cherry-pick if the feature branches' git history is not linear (merge commits instead of rebase). In that case, you will need to manually cherry-pick the squashed merged commit from main to the release branch

  1. Switch to the release branch intended for the fix.
  2. Run git cherry-pick <sha> with the commit hash from the main branch.
  3. Push the newly cherry-picked commit up to the remote release branch.

Creating a New Release

  1. (Major/Minor release only) Create a new release branch release-x.y
  2. Go to https://github.com/runatlantis/atlantis/releases and click "Draft a new release"
    1. Prefix version with v and increment based on last release.
    2. The title of the release is the same as the tag (ex. v0.2.2)
    3. Fill in description by clicking on the "Generate Release Notes" button.
      1. You may have to manually move around some commit titles as they are determined by PR labels (see .github/labeler.yml & .github/release.yml)
    4. (Latest Major/Minor branches only) Make sure the release is set as latest
      1. Don't set "latest release" for patches on older release branches.
  3. Check and update the default version in Chart.yaml in the official Helm chart as needed.