Project

General

Profile

How to Create a Smart-Proxy Plugin » History » Version 8

Anonymous, 08/19/2014 10:46 AM

1 1 Anonymous
h1. How to Create a Smart-Proxy Plugin
2
3 4 Anonymous
This guide outlines main components of a plugin, but assumes some degree of familiarity with ruby gems, bundler, rack, and Sinatra. You'll find links to useful documentation in each of the sections below.
4 1 Anonymous
5
h2. Plugin Organization
6
7 8 Anonymous
Smart-Proxy plugins are normal ruby gems, please follow documentation at http://guides.rubygems.org/make-your-own-gem/ for guidance on gem creation and packaging. It is strongly recommended to follow smart_proxy_<your plugin name here> naming convention for your plugin. The "smart_proxy_example plugin":https://github.com/theforeman/smart_proxy_example is a minimal example plugin that can be used as a skeleton. Also, "smart_proxy_pulp plugin":https://github.com/theforeman/smart-proxy-pulp is an example for a fully functional, yet easy to understand Smart-Proxy plugin.
8 1 Anonymous
9 6 Dominic Cleal
h2. Making your plugin official
10
11
Once you're ready to release the first version, please see [[How_to_Create_a_Plugin#Making-your-plugin-official]] for info on making your plugin part of the Foreman project.
12
13 1 Anonymous
h2. Plugin Definition
14 2 Anonymous
15 3 Anonymous
Plugin Definition is used to define plugin's name, version, location of rackup configuration, and other parameters. At a minimum, Plugin Descriptor must define plugin name and version. Note the base class of the descriptor is ::Proxy::Plugin:
16
17 1 Anonymous
<pre><code class='ruby'>
18 8 Anonymous
module Proxy::Example
19
  class Plugin < ::Proxy::Plugin
20
    plugin :example, "0.0.1"
21
    http_rackup_path File.expand_path("http_config.ru", File.expand_path("../", __FILE__))
22
    https_rackup_path File.expand_path("https_config.ru", File.expand_path("../", __FILE__))
23
    default_settings :hello_greeting => 'Hello there!'
24
  end
25 3 Anonymous
end
26
</code></pre>
27
28
Here we defined a plugin called "example", with version "0.0.1", that is going to listen on both http and https ports. Following is the full list of parameters that can be defined by the Plugin Descriptor.
29
30
 * plugin :example, "1.2.3": *required*. Sets plugin name to "example" and version to "0.0.1".
31
 * http_rackup_path "path/to/http_config.ru": *optional*. Sets path to http rackup configuration. If omitted, the plugin is not going to listen on the http port. Please see below for information on rackup configuration.
32
 * https_rackup_path "path/to/https_config.ru": *optional*. Sets path to https rackup configuration. If omitted, the plugin is not going to listen on the https port. Please see below for information on rackup configuration.
33
 * requires :another_plugin, '~> 1.2.0': *optional*. Specifies plugin dependencies, where ":another_plugin" is another plugin name, and '~> 1.2.0' is version specification (pls. see http://guides.rubygems.org/patterns/#pessimistic_version_constraint for details on version specification).
34 1 Anonymous
 * default_settings :first => 'my first setting', :another => 'my other setting': *optional*. Defines default values for plugin parameters. These parameters can be overridden in plugin settings file.
35 4 Anonymous
 * after_activation { do_something }: *optional*. Supplied block is going to be executed after the plugin has been loaded and enabled. Note that the block is going to be executed in the context of the Plugin Descriptor class.
36 1 Anonymous
 * bundler_group :my_plugin_group: *optional*.  Sets the name of the bundler group for plugin dependencies. If omitted the plugin name is used. 
37
38 4 Anonymous
39
h2. API
40 1 Anonymous
41 4 Anonymous
Modular Sinatra app is used to define plugin API. Note the base class Sinatra::Base and inclusion of ::Proxy::Helpers:
42
<pre><code class='ruby'>
43 8 Anonymous
module Proxy::Example
44
 class Api < Sinatra::Base
45 4 Anonymous
  helpers ::Proxy::Helpers
46
47
  get "/hello" do
48 8 Anonymous
    Proxy::Example::Plugin.settings.hello_greeting
49 4 Anonymous
  end
50
end
51
</code></pre>
52
53 1 Anonymous
Here we return a string defined in 'hello_greeting' parameter (see Plugin Descriptor above and settings file below) when a client performs a GET /hello. Please refer to "Sinatra documentation":http://www.sinatrarb.com/intro.html on details about routing, template rendering, available helpers, etc.
54 4 Anonymous
55
h2. Rackup Configuration
56
57
During startup Smart-Proxy assembles web applications listening on http and https ports using rackup files of enabled plugins. Plugin rackup files define mounting points of plugin API:
58
<pre><code class="ruby">
59
require 'example_plugin/example_api'
60
61
map "/example" do
62 8 Anonymous
  run Proxy::Example::Api
63 4 Anonymous
end
64
</code></pre>
65
66
The example above should be sufficient for the majority of plugins. Please refer to "Sinatra+Rack":http://www.sinatrarb.com/intro.html documentation for additional information. 
67
68
h2. Plugin Settings
69
70
On startup Smart-Proxy will load and parse plugin configuration files located in its settings.d/ directory. Each plugin config file is named after the plugin and is a yaml-encoded collection of key-value pairs and used to override default values of plugin parameters. 
71
<pre>
72
---
73
:enabled: true
74
:hello_greeting: "O hai!"
75
</pre>
76
77
This settings file enables the plugin (by default all plugins are disabled), and overrides :hello_greeting parameter. Plugin settings can be accessed through .settings method of the Plugin class, for example: ExamplePlugin.settings.hello_greeting. Global Smart-Proxy parameters are accessible through Proxy::SETTINGS, for example Proxy::SETTINGS.foreman_url returns Foreman url configured for this Smart-Proxy. 
78
79
h2. Bundler Configuration
80
81
Smart-Proxy relies on bundler to load its dependencies and plugins. We recommend to create a dedicated bundler config file for your plugin, and name it after the plugin. For example:
82
<pre><code class="ruby">
83
  gem 'smart_proxy_example'
84
  group :example do
85
    gem 'json'
86
  end
87
</code></pre>
88
 
89
You'll need to create a dedicated bundler group for additional dependencies of your plugin. By default the group shares the name with the plugin, but you can override it using bundler_group parameter in Plugin Descriptor. Please refer to [[How_to_Install_a_Smart-Proxy_Plugin]] for additional details on "from source" plugin installations.
90 5 Anonymous
91
h2. Testing
92
93 7 Anonymous
Make sure that Gemgile includes "smart-proxy" gem as a development dependency:
94
95
<pre><code class="ruby">
96
group :development do
97
  gem 'smart_proxy', :git => "https://github.com/theforeman/smart-proxy.git"
98
end
99
</code></pre>
100
101
Load 'smart_proxy_for_testing' in your tests:
102 5 Anonymous
103
<pre><code class = "ruby">
104
$: << File.join(File.dirname(__FILE__), '..', 'lib')
105
106
require 'smart_proxy_for_testing'
107
require 'test/unit'
108
require 'webmock/test_unit'
109
require 'mocha/test_unit'
110
require "rack/test"
111
112
require 'smart_proxy_pulp_plugin/pulp_plugin'
113
require 'smart_proxy_pulp_plugin/pulp_api'
114
115
class PulpApiTest < Test::Unit::TestCase
116
  include Rack::Test::Methods
117
118
  def app
119
    PulpProxy::Api.new
120
  end
121
122
  def test_returns_pulp_status_on_200
123
    stub_request(:get, "#{::PulpProxy::Plugin.settings.pulp_url.to_s}/api/v2/status/").to_return(:body => "{\"api_version\":\"2\"}")
124
    get '/status'
125
126
    assert last_response.ok?, "Last response was not ok: #{last_response.body}"
127
    assert_equal("{\"api_version\":\"2\"}", last_response.body)
128
  end
129
end
130
</code></pre>
131
132
Please refer to "Sinatra documention":http://www.sinatrarb.com/testing.html for detailed information on testing of Sinatra applications.