The commands here assume you're in the top level of the Cockpit Podman git repository checkout.
For development, you usually want to run your module straight out of the git
tree. To do that, run make devel-install
, which links your checkout to the
location were cockpit-bridge
looks for packages. If you prefer to do this
manually:
mkdir -p ~/.local/share/cockpit
ln -s `pwd`/dist ~/.local/share/cockpit/podman
After changing the code and running make
again, reload the Cockpit page in
your browser.
You can also use watch mode to automatically update the bundle on every code change with
$ make watch
When developing against a virtual machine, watch mode can also automatically upload
the code changes by setting the RSYNC
environment variable to
the remote hostname.
$ RSYNC=c make watch
When developing against a remote host as a normal user, RSYNC_DEVEL
can be
set to upload code changes to ~/.local/share/cockpit/
instead of
/usr/local
.
$ RSYNC_DEVEL=example.com make watch
Cockpit Podman uses ESLint to automatically check
JavaScript code style in .jsx
and .js
files.
eslint is executed as part of test/static-code
, aka. make codecheck
.
For developer convenience, the ESLint can be started explicitly by:
$ npm run eslint
Violations of some rules can be fixed automatically by:
$ npm run eslint:fix
Rules configuration can be found in the .eslintrc.json
file.
Cockpit uses Stylelint to automatically check CSS code
style in .css
and scss
files.
styleint is executed as part of test/static-code
, aka. make codecheck
.
For developer convenience, the Stylelint can be started explicitly by:
$ npm run stylelint
Violations of some rules can be fixed automatically by:
$ npm run stylelint:fix
Rules configuration can be found in the .stylelintrc.json
file.
Run make vm
to build an RPM and install it into a standard Cockpit test VM.
This will be fedora-39
by default. You can set $TEST_OS
to use a different
image, for example
TEST_OS=centos-9-stream make vm
Then run
make test/common
to pull in Cockpit's shared test API for running Chrome DevTools Protocol based browser tests.
With this preparation, you can manually run a single test without rebuilding the VM, possibly with extra options for tracing and halting on test failures (for interactive debugging):
TEST_OS=... test/check-application TestApplication.testRunImageSystem -stv
Use this command to list all known tests:
test/check-application -l
You can also run all of the tests:
make check
However, this is rather expensive, and most of the time it's better to let the CI machinery do this on a draft pull request.
Please see Cockpit's test documentation for details how to run against existing VMs, interactive browser window, interacting with the test VM, and more.