/travis-api

The Travis CI API

Primary LanguageRubyMIT LicenseMIT

Travis API

Build Status

https://api.travis-ci.org

Requirements

You will need the following packages to get travis-api to work:

  1. PostgreSQL 9.3 or higher
  2. Bundler
  3. Redis
  4. Optional: RabbitMQ Server
  5. Optional: Nginx - If working in Ubuntu please install nginx manually from source: Download and extract latest nginx version, open a terminal in extracted folder and then run the following:
    $ sudo apt-get install libpcre3 libpcre3-dev
    $ auto/configure --user=$USER
    $ make
    $ sudo make install
    $ sudo ln -s /usr/local/nginx/sbin/nginx /bin/nginx

Installation

Setup

$ bundle install

Main Database & Logs Database setup

You might need to create a role first. For this you should run the following:

$ sudo -u postgres psql -c "CREATE USER yourusername WITH SUPERUSER PASSWORD 'yourpassword'"

Databases are set up with a Rake task that uses the database schemas (structure.sql) in travis-migrations. Details can be found in the Rakefile. You can override the travis-migrations branch that is being used by setting the environment variable TRAVIS_MIGRATIONS_BRANCH.

To create and migrate the Databases:

$ ENV=development bundle exec rake db:create
$ ENV=test bundle exec rake db:create

Please Note: The database names are configured using the environment variable ENV. If you are using a different configuration you will have to make your own adjustments. The default environment is test.

Run tests

$ bundle exec rake

Run the server (development)

ENV=development bundle exec ruby -Ilib -S rackup

To test your branch locally:

  • checkout your branch
  • run the local server:
ENV=development bundle exec ruby -Ilib -S rackup
  • get the correct token in another window:
travis login --api-endpoint=http://localhost:9292
travis token --api-endpoint=http://localhost:9292
  • run a request:
curl -H "Travis-API-Version: 3" \
     -H "Authorization: token xxxxxxxxxxxx" \
     http://localhost:9292/repos

(The database connection can be overwritten by setting a DATABASE_URL env var. Please ensure you also set ENV to the corresponding env and add encryption key config to config/travis.yml)

Test billing locally:

To test billing locally add the following code to the config/travis.yml:

development:
  billing:
    url: "http://localhost:9292"
    auth_key: "auth_keys"

go to your local api repo and make sure API is running on port 9293:

ENV=development  bundle exec ruby -Ilib -S rackup -p 9293

go to your local billing repo and run which runs on 9292:

make start

and then you can run:

curl -H "Travis-API-Version: 3" \
     -H "content-type: application/json" \
     -H "Authorization: token <your-token>" \
     http://localhost:9293/subscriptions

and get:

{
  "@type": "subscriptions",
  "@href": "/subscriptions",
  "@representation": "standard",
  "subscriptions": [

  ]
}

Run the server (production)

$ bundle exec script/server

If you have problems with Nginx because the websocket is already in use, try restarting your computer.

Contributing

  1. Fork it
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create new Pull Request

API documentation

v3 documentation can be found at https://developer.travis-ci.org which is a repository that can be found at https://github.com/travis-pro/developer

Adding V3 Endpoints Developer Documentation

Start with the find/get spec (for example: spec/v3/services/caches/find_spec.rb) for your new endpoint. If you don't have a find route start with whatever route you want to add first. Run the test and add the files you need to clear the errors. They should be:

  • A service (lib/travis/api/v3/services/caches/find.rb)
  • A query (lib/travis/api/v3/queries/caches.rb)
  • Register the service in v3/services.rb (alphabetical order please)
  • Add a route (v3/routes.rb) Re-run the test at this point. Depending on what objects you are returning you may also need to add:
  • Add a model (either pulls from the DB or a wrapper for the class of the objects returned from another source (s3 for example), or that structures the result you will be passing back to the client)
  • Add a renderer (if needed to display your new model/object/collection).