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Development Guide

This is a guide for developers who would like to contribute to this project.

GitHub Workflow

If you're interested in contributing to pgcli, first of all my heart felt thanks. Fork the project on github. Then clone your fork into your computer (git clone <url-for-your-fork>). Make the changes and create the commits in your local machine. Then push those changes to your fork. Then click on the pull request icon on github and create a new pull request. Add a description about the change and send it along. I promise to review the pull request in a reasonable window of time and get back to you.

In order to keep your fork up to date with any changes from mainline, add a new git remote to your local copy called 'upstream' and point it to the main pgcli repo.

$ git remote add upstream [email protected]:dbcli/pgcli.git

Once the 'upstream' end point is added you can then periodically do a git pull upstream master to update your local copy and then do a git push origin master to keep your own fork up to date.

Check Github's Understanding the GitHub flow guide for a more detailed explanation of this process.

Local Setup

The installation instructions in the README file are intended for users of pgcli. If you're developing pgcli, you'll need to install it in a slightly different way so you can see the effects of your changes right away without having to go through the install cycle every time you change the code.

It is highly recommended to use virtualenv for development. If you don't know what a virtualenv is, this guide will help you get started.

Create a virtualenv (let's call it pgcli-dev). Activate it:

source ./pgcli-dev/bin/activate

or

.\pgcli-dev\scripts\activate (for Windows)

Once the virtualenv is activated, cd into the local clone of pgcli folder and install pgcli using pip as follows:

$ pip install --editable .

or

$ pip install -e .

This will install the necessary dependencies as well as install pgcli from the working folder into the virtualenv. By installing it using pip install -e we've linked the pgcli installation with the working copy. Any changes made to the code are immediately available in the installed version of pgcli. This makes it easy to change something in the code, launch pgcli and check the effects of your changes.

Adding PostgreSQL Special (Meta) Commands

If you want to work on adding new meta-commands (such as dp, ds, dy), you need to contribute to pgspecial project.

Visual Studio Code Debugging

To set up Visual Studio Code to debug pgcli requires a launch.json file.

Within the project, create a file: .vscode\launch.json like below.

{
    // Use IntelliSense to learn about possible attributes.
    // Hover to view descriptions of existing attributes.
    // For more information, visit: https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?linkid=830387
    "version": "0.2.0",
    "configurations": [
        {
            "name": "Python: Module",
            "type": "python",
            "request": "launch",
            "module": "pgcli.main",
            "justMyCode": false,
            "console": "externalTerminal",
            "env": {
                "PGUSER": "postgres",
                "PGPASS": "password",
                "PGHOST": "localhost",
                "PGPORT": "5432"
            }
        }
    ]
}

Building RPM and DEB packages

You will need Vagrant 1.7.2 or higher. In the project root there is a Vagrantfile that is setup to do multi-vm provisioning. If you're setting things up for the first time, then do:

$ version=x.y.z vagrant up debian
$ version=x.y.z vagrant up centos

If you already have those VMs setup and you're merely creating a new version of DEB or RPM package, then you can do:

$ version=x.y.z vagrant provision

That will create a .deb file and a .rpm file.

The deb package can be installed as follows:

$ sudo dpkg -i pgcli*.deb   # if dependencies are available.

or

$ sudo apt-get install -f pgcli*.deb  # if dependencies are not available.

The rpm package can be installed as follows:

$ sudo yum install pgcli*.rpm

Running the integration tests

Integration tests use behave package and pytest. Configuration settings for this package are provided via a behave.ini file in the tests directory. An example:

[behave]
stderr_capture = false

[behave.userdata]
pg_test_user = dbuser
pg_test_host = db.example.com
pg_test_port = 30000

First, install the requirements for testing:

::
$ pip install -U pip setuptools $ pip install --no-cache-dir ".[sshtunnel]" $ pip install -r requirements-dev.txt

Ensure that the database user has permissions to create and drop test databases by checking your pg_hba.conf file. The default user should be postgres at localhost. Make sure the authentication method is set to trust. If you made any changes to your pg_hba.conf make sure to restart the postgres service for the changes to take effect.

# ONLY IF YOU MADE CHANGES TO YOUR pg_hba.conf FILE
$ sudo service postgresql restart

After that, tests in the /pgcli/tests directory can be run with: (Note that these behave tests do not currently work when developing on Windows due to pexpect incompatibility.)

# on directory /pgcli/tests
$ behave

And on the /pgcli directory:

# on directory /pgcli
$ py.test

To see stdout/stderr, use the following command:

$ behave --no-capture

Troubleshooting the integration tests

  • Make sure postgres instance on localhost is running
  • Check your pg_hba.conf file to verify local connections are enabled
  • Check this issue for relevant information.
  • File an issue.

Coding Style

pgcli uses black to format the source code. Make sure to install black.

Releases

If you're the person responsible for releasing pgcli, this guide is for you.