/dark

Primary LanguageOCamlOtherNOASSERTION

Dark

This is the main repo for Dark, a combined language, editor, and infrastructure to make it easy to build backends.

This repo is intended to help Dark users solve their needs by fixing bugs, expanding features, or otherwise contributing. Dark is source available, not open source.

Contributing

We are committed to make Dark easy to contribute to. Our contributor docs will help guide you through your first PR, find good projects to contribute to, and learn about the code base.

Getting Started

Install dependencies

To build and run the server you must have the following installed (and running):

On Windows, you can run Dark in WSL2 (Windows Subsystem for Linux):

Docker

The app and its dependencies are all held within the container. While code is edited on your machine, the application is compiled and run inside of the container.

Ensure that docker:

  • set to use 4 CPUs, 4.0 GiB of Memory, and 4.0 GiB of Swap (under the Advanced preferences tab).

Ignore the other tabs (for example you don't need to enable Kubernetes).

Dnsmasq

A local DNS server is needed to access the application via a .localhost TLD. The following is a quick start, adapted from this guide.

Install dnsmasq:

brew install dnsmasq / apt install dnsmasq

Follow brew's post-install instructions:

brew info dnsmasq

(probably sudo brew services start dnsmasq)

Add the following to (brew --prefix)/etc/dnsmasq.conf

address=/localhost/127.0.0.1

Restart dnsmasq:

sudo brew services restart dnsmasq / sudo /etc/init.d/dnsmasq restart

Configure OSX to use dnsmasq (not needed on linux):

sudo mkdir -p /etc/resolver
sudo tee /etc/resolver/localhost >/dev/null <<EOF
nameserver 127.0.0.1
EOF

Test it:

# Make sure you haven't broken your DNS.
ping -c 1 www.google.com
# Check that .localhost names work
dig testing.builtwithdark.localhost@127.0.0.1

Building and running for the first time

  • Run scripts/builder --compile --watch --test
  • Wait until the terminal says "Finished initial compile" - this means the build server is ready. The builder script will sit open, waiting for file changes in order to recompile
  • If you see "initial compile failed", it may be a memory issue. Ensure you have docker configured to provide 4GB or more of memory, then rerun the builder script. (Sometimes just rerunning will work, too).
  • Open your browser to http://darklang.localhost:8000/a/dark/, username "dark", password "what"
  • Edit code normally - on each save to your filesystem, the app will be rebuilt and the browser will reload as necessary

Read the contributor docs

If you've gotten this far, you're now ready to contribute your first PR.

Testing

Unit tests run when you specify --test to scripts/builder. You can run them as a once off using:

  • scripts/runtests # client
  • scripts/run-backend-tests
  • scripts/run-rust-tests containers/stroller
  • scripts/run-rust-tests containers/queue-scheduler

Integration tests:

  • scripts/run-in-docker ./integration-tests/run.sh

You can also run integration tests on your (host) machine, which gives you some debugging ability, and typically runs faster:

  • ./integration-tests/run.sh

There are good debugging options for integration testing. See integration-tests/README.

Running unix commands in the container

  • scripts/run-in-docker bash

Accessing the local db

  • scripts/run-in-docker psql -d devdb

Config files

Config files are in config/. Simple rule: anything that runs inside the container must use a DARK_CONFIG value set in config/, and cannot use any other env var.

Debugging the client

You can enable the FluidDebugger by mousing over the Gear in the left-sidebar. There is also "Enable debugger" which enables a legacy debugger that nobody uses and doesn't work well.

If you're using Chrome, enable Custom Formatters to see OCaml values in Chrome Dev Tools instead of their JS representation. From within Chrome Dev Tools, click "⠇", "Settings", "Preferences", "Enable Custom Formatters".

Production Services

The app is split into backend/ and client/. Part of the backend is used in the client (jsanalysis), and one directory is shared (libshared). These are compiled to create libraries and binaries.

These are put into containers, whose definitions are in containers/. We also have some containers which are defined entirely in their directory (typically, these have a self-contained codebase).

The containers are used in services/. A service is typically a number of yaml files defining a kubernetes deployment, made up of one or more containers, which use binaries from the backend.

Some services do not use Dark's containers (eg, when we deploy 3rdparty code, such as "let's encrypt"). Some just have a single container (eg queue-scheduler and postgres-honeytail).

Other important docs

Less important docs