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demo / proof of concept to create a simple leaflet frontend only pipeline

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bcgov/qsos-leaflet

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Frontend - Leaflet (JavaScript/TypeScript)

Leaflet QuickStart for OpenShift

This is repo / template is experimental at this stage. The bulk of the content has shamelessly been stolen from the openshift quickstart template repo

Local Development with Leaflet QuickStart for OpenShift

see docs here

Pull Request-Based Workflows with Sample Stack

the following statement is aspirational

The is a fully functional set of GitHub Actions workflows and a starter application stack intended to help GIS Leaflet developers hit the ground running.

Features:

  • Pull Request-based pipeline
  • Sandboxed development environments
  • Gateable production deployments
  • Container publishing (ghcr.io) and importing (OpenShift)
  • Security, vulnerability, infrastructure, and container scan tools
  • Automatic dependency patching available from bcgov/renovate-config
  • Enforced code reviews and workflow jobs (pass|fail)
  • Helm Package Manager for atomic deployments
  • Prometheus Metrics export from Backend/Frontend
  • Resource Tuning with Horizontal Pod Autoscaler (in TEST/PROD).
  • Affinity and Anti-Affinity for Scheduling on different worker nodes
  • Rolling updates with zero downtime in PROD
  • Database Migrations with Flyway
  • Pod Disruption Budgets for High Availability
  • Self Healing through Health checks
  • Sample application stack:
    • Frontend: TypeScript, Leaflet, Caddy Server

Table of Contents

Setup

Initial setup is intended to take an hour or less. This depends greatly on intended complexity, features selected/excluded and outside cooperation.

Prerequisites

The following are required:

  • BC Government IDIR accounts for anyone submitting requests
  • GitHub accounts for all participating team members
  • Membership in the BCGov GitHub organization
  • OpenShift project namespaces:

Using this Template

Create a new repository using this repository as a template.

  • Verify bcgov/qsos-leaflet is selected under Repository template

Secrets and Variables

Variables and secrets are consumed by workflows. Environments provide their own values, overriding default sets.

Secrets are hidden from logs and outputs, while variables are visible. Using secrets exclusively can make troubeshooting more difficult.

Note: Dependabot, which we don't recommend as highly as Renovate, requires its own set of variables.

Secrets Values

Click Settings > Secrets and Variables > Actions > Secrets > New repository secret

GITHUB_TOKEN

Default token. Replaced every workflow run, available to all workflows.

  • Consume: {{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}

OC_TOKEN

OpenShift token, different for every project/namespace. This guide assumes your OpenShift platform team has provisioned a pipeline account.

  • Consume: {{ secrets.OC_TOKEN }}

Locate an OpenShift pipeline token:

  1. Login to your OpenShift cluster, e.g.: Gold or Silver
  2. Select your DEV namespace
  3. Click Workloads > Secrets (under Workloads for Administrator view)
  4. Select pipeline-token-... or a similarly privileged token
  5. Under Data, copy token
  6. Paste into the GitHub Secret OC_TOKEN

OC_NAMESPACE

OpenShift project/namespace. Provided by your OpenShift platform team.

  • Consume: {{ secrets.OC_NAMESPACE }}
  • Value: format abc123-dev | test | prod

SONAR_TOKEN(s)

If SonarCloud is being used each application will have its own token. Single-application repositories typically use ${{ secrets.SONAR_TOKEN }}, while monorepos use similar names.

E.g.:

  • ${{ secrets.SONAR_TOKEN_BACKEND }}
  • ${{ secrets.SONAR_TOKEN_FRONTEND }}

BC Government employees can request SonarCloud projects by creating an issue with BCDevOps. Please make sure to request a monorepo with component names (e.g. backend, frontend), which may not be explained in their directions.

Variable Values

Click Settings > Secrets and Variables > Actions > Variables > New repository variable

OC_SERVER

OpenShift server address.

  • Consume: {{ vars.OC_SERVER }}
  • Value: https://api.gold.devops.gov.bc.ca:6443 or https://api.silver.devops.gov.bc.ca:6443

Environments

Environments are groups of secrets and variables that can be gatekept. This includes limting access to certain users or requiring manual approval before a requesting workflow can run. Environment values override any default values.

For pull requests and development surrounding lower-level, sandboxed environments it is best not to use an environment at all. Higher level environments, like TEST and PROD, will override those values as necessary.

Click Settings > Environments > New environment

Environments provide a number of features, including:

  • Required reviewers
  • Wait timer
  • Deployment branches

Updating Dependencies

Dependabot and Mend Renovate can both provide dependency updates using pull requests. Dependabot is simpler to configure, while Renovate is much more configurable and lighter on resources.

Renovate

A config file (renovate.json) is included with this template. It can source config from our renovate repository. Renovate can be self-hosted or run using the GitHub App managed at the organization level. For BC Government the OCIO controls this application, so please opt in with them using a GitHub issue.

To opt-in:

Repository Configuration

Pull Request Handling

Squash merging is recommended for simplified history and ease of rollback. Cleaning up merged branches is recommended for your DevOps Specialist's fragile sanity.

Click Settings > General (selected automatically)

Pull Requests:

  • [uncheck] Allow merge commits
  • [check] Allow squash merging
    • Default to pull request title
  • [uncheck] Allow rebase merging
  • [check] Always suggest updating pull request branches
  • [uncheck] Allow auto-merge
  • [check] Automatically delete head branches

Packages

Packages are available from your repository (link on right). All should have visibility set to public for the workflows to run successfully.

E.g. https://github.com/bcgov/qsos-leaflet/packages

Branch Protection

This is required to prevent direct pushes and merges to the default branch. These steps must be run after one full pull request pipeline has been run.

  1. Select Settings (gear, top right) *> Branches (under Code and Automation)
  2. Click Add Rule or edit an existing rule
  3. Under Protect matching branches specify the following:
    • Branch name pattern: main
    • [check] Require a pull request before merging
      • [check] Require approvals (default = 1)
      • [check] Dismiss stale pull request approvals when new commits are pushed
      • [check] Require review from Code Owners
    • [check] Require status checks to pass before merging
      • [check] Require branches to be up to date before merging
      • Status checks that are required:
        • Select checks as appropriate, e.g. Build x, Deploy y
      • Select at least one status check to enforce branch protection
    • [check] Require conversation resolution before merging
    • [check] Include administrators (optional)

Adding Team Members

Don't forget to add your team members!

  1. Select Settings (gear, top right) *> Collaborators and teams (under Access)
  2. Click Add people or Add teams
  3. Use the search box to find people or teams
  4. Choose a role (read, triage, write, maintain, admin)
  5. Click Add

Workflows

Pull Request

Runs on pull request submission.

  • Provides safe, sandboxed deployment environments
  • Build action pushes to GitHub Container Registry (ghcr.io)
  • Build triggers select new builds vs reusing builds
  • Deployment triggers to only deploy when changes are made
  • Deployment includes curl checks and optional penetration tests
  • Other checks and updates as required

Analysis

Runs on pull request submission or merge to the default branch.

  • Unit tests (should include coverage)
  • SonarCloud coverage and analysis
  • CodeQL/GitHub security reporting
  • Trivy password, vulnerability and security scanning

Pull Request Closed

Runs on pull request close or merge.

  • Cleans up OpenShift objects/artifacts
  • Merge promotes successful build images to TEST

Merge

Runs on merge to main branch.

  • Code scanning and reporting to GitHub Security overview
  • Zero-downtime* TEST deployment
  • Penetration tests on TEST deployment
  • Zero-downtime* PROD deployment
  • Labels successful deployment images as PROD

* excludes database changes

App Stack

Starter

The starter stack includes a (React, MUI, Vite, Caddy) frontend, Pluggable backend(Nest/Node, Quarkus/Java On Native, FastAPI/Python, Fiber/Golang) and postgres database. See subfolder for source, including Dockerfiles and OpenShift templates.

Features:

Resources

This repository is provided by NRIDS Architecture and Forestry Digital Services, courtesy of the Government of British Columbia.

Contributing

Please contribute your ideas! Issues and Pull Requests are appreciated.