A place to put tooling and scripts that help when working on Tidepool stuff.
Contains:
This is just a list of the names of required repositories if you're going to run the Tidepool stack locally. It's used by the following two scripts. It does not include the Go repos.
This is a script that will clone all the required repositories into a directory structure expected by runservers and the update script. It also runs npm install and bower install appropriately. It first checks that you have several required tools installed.
This is a script that will fetch latest changes and update npm and bower for all the repositories listed in required_repos.txt.
This is a script that returns a (colorized) status of the state of git for a collection of repositories (either the required ones only, or all the repositories that are siblings of this one). It's handy for keeping track of changes in flight.
This is a script to run a set of servers on localhost. Note that it's not executable -- that's because you shouldn't run it directly -- use "source" (also known as ".") to run it, as in . tools/runservers
We'll keep updating it as we grow.
This is a script that pings all the running servers for a particular deploy (local, dev, stg, or prd). It prints out a colorized status for them all.
addLicense.py is a script to add license text to a set of source files by searching for special markers in those files. It's reasonably smart. Run it with the -h switch for full help.
Please see the README in the groupedit repository.
THIS IS EXPERIMENTAL AND WAS NEVER FINISHED
extractDocs.py is designed to allow a natural form of documentation to be placed in source files that can then be extracted and formatted appropriately for markdown files like the apiary documentation and also function-oriented docs like you'll find in the *-client libraries.
It's driven by regular expressions and python's native formatting, which means the configuration file is a little cryptic. But it was fast to implement and does the job of making it so that it's easier to keep code and docs in sync.
Once it's set up in a given repository, one merely has to run this to update the docs.
The Docker development environment has been updated and moved to it's own repo here.
If you have been using the legacy docker environment from this repo, you'll need to change over to the updated one.
Tidepool also has a VM for quickly firing up a development environment on your local machine. The Docker development environment is recommended for development, unless you're familiar with Vagrant and you prefer it over Docker.
The Vagrant configuration creates a single VM and checks out all of the Tidepool git repositories.
To use this Vagrantfile
, you need to have Vagrant installed, as well as one of the following VM providers:
tidepool
)tools
tools
directoryvagrant up --provider <Provider Name>
, where <Provider Name>
is one of:
virtualbox
parallels
vmware_desktop
This will download and install the Base Ubuntu 14.04 virtual machine and install the following Tidepool dependencies:
Once the box has been set up, you can ssh into it using:
# vagrant ssh
This box also has some convenience aliases to help with development:
# tidepool-runservers # <-- Starts the tidepool servers
# tidepool-update # <-- Fetches the latest changes and updates npm/bower