This repo contains the frontend and backend for the Lighthouse CI server.
Lighthouse can be setup as part of your CI on Travis. As new pull requests come in, the Lighthouse CI tests the changes and reports back the new score.
To audit pull requests, do the following:
First, add lighthousebot as a collaborator on your repo. Lighthouse CI uses an OAuth token scoped to the repo
permission in order to update the status of your PRs and post comments on the issue.
We recommend deploying your PR to a real staging server instead of running a local server on Travis. A staging environment will produce realistic performance numbers that are more representative of your production setup. The Lighthouse report will be more accurate.
In .travis.yml
, add an after_success
that deploys the PR's changes to a staging server.
after_success:
- ./deploy.sh # TODO(you): deploy the PR changes to your staging server.
Since every hosting environment has different deployment setups, the implementation of deploy.sh
is left to the reader.
Tip: Using Google App Engine? Check out
deploy_pr_gae.sh
which shows how to install the GAE SDK and deploy PR changes programmatically.
Install the script:
yarn add --dev https://github.com/ebidel/lighthouse-ci
Next, in .travis.yml
call runlighthouse.js
as the last step in after_success
:
install:
- npm install # make sure to install the deps when Travis runs.
after_success:
- ./deploy.sh # TODO(you): deploy the PR changes to your staging server.
- node node_modules/lighthouse-ci/runlighthouse.js https://staging.example.com
When Lighthouse is done auditing the URL, the CI will post a comment to the pull request containing the updated scores:
You can also opt-out of the comment by using the --no-comment
flag.
Lighthouse CI can prevent PRs from being merged when the overall score falls below
a specified value. Just include the --score
flag:
after_success:
- ./deploy.sh # TODO(you): deploy the PR changes to your staging server.
- node node_modules/lighthouse-ci/runlighthouse.js --score=96 https://staging.example.com
$ node runlighthouse.js -h
Usage:
runlighthouse.js [--score=<score>] [--no-comment] [--runner=chrome,wpt] <url>
Options:
--score Minimum score for the pull request to be considered "passing".
If omitted, merging the PR will be allowed no matter what the score. [Number]
--no-comment Doesn't post a comment to the PR issue summarizing the Lighthouse results. [Boolean]
--runner Selects Lighthouse running on Chrome or WebPageTest. [--runner=chrome,wpt]
--help Prints help.
Examples:
Runs Lighthouse and posts a summary of the results.
runlighthouse.js https://example.com
Fails the PR if the score drops below 93. Posts the summary comment.
runlighthouse.js --score=93 https://example.com
Runs Lighthouse on WebPageTest. Fails the PR if the score drops below 93.
runlighthouse.js --score=93 --runner=wpt --no-comment https://example.com
By default, runlighthouse.js
runs your PRs through Lighthouse hosted in the cloud. As an alternative, you can test on real devices using the WebPageTest integration:
node node_modules/lighthouse-ci/runlighthouse.js --score=96 --runner=wpt https://staging.example.com
At the end of testing, your PR will be updated with a link to the WebPageTest results containing the Lighthouse report!
This repo contains several different pieces for the Lighthouse CI: a backend, frontend, and frontend UI.
Quick way to try Lighthouse: https://lighthouse-ci.appspot.com/try
Relevant source:
frontend/public/
- UI for https://lighthouse-ci.appspot.com/try.
Server that responds to requests from Travis.
REST endpoints:
https://lighthouse-ci.appspot.com/run_on_chrome
https://lighthouse-ci.appspot.com/run_on_wpt
Note: runlighthouse.js
does this for you.
POST https://lighthouse-ci.appspot.com/run_on_chrome
Content-Type: application/json
{
testUrl: "https://staging.example.com",
minPassScore: 96,
addComment: true,
repo: {
owner: "<REPO_OWNER>",
name: "<REPO_NAME>"
},
pr: {
number: <PR_NUMBER>,
sha: "<PR_SHA>"
}
}
Relevant source:
frontend/server.js
- server which accepts Github pull requests and updates the status of your PR.
Server that runs Lighthouse against a URL, using Chrome.
REST endpoints:
https://lighthouse-ci.appspot.com/ci
Note: runlighthouse.js
does this for you.
curl -X POST \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
--data '{"format": "json", "url": "https://staging.example.com"}' \
https://builder-dot-lighthouse-ci.appspot.com/ci
Relevant source:
Contains example Dockerfiles for running Lighthouse using Headless Chrome and full Chrome. Both setups us Google App Engine Flexible containers (Node).
builder/Dockerfile.nonheadless
- Dockerfile for running full Chrome.builder/Dockerfile.headless
- Dockerfile for running headless Chrome.builder/server.js
- The/ci
endpoint that runs Lighthouse.
TODO: fill me in
- Add a
CI_HOST
parameter to Travis settings.
Initial setup:
- Ask an existing dev for the oauth2 token. If you need to regenerate one, see below.
- Create
frontend/.oauth_token
and copy in the token value.
Run the dev server:
cd frontend
yarn start
This will start a web server and use the token in .oauth_token
. The token is used to update PR status in Github.
In your test repo:
- Run
yarn add --dev https://github.com/ebidel/lighthouse-ci
- Follow the steps in Auditing Github Pull Requests for setting up your repo.
Notes:
- If you want to make changes to the builder, you'll need Docker and the GAE Node SDK.
- To make changes to the CI server, you'll probably want to run ngrok so you can test against a local server instead of deploying for each change. In Travis settings,
add a
CI_HOST
env variable that points to your ngrok instance.
If you need to generate a new OAuth token:
- Sign in to the `lighthousebot Github account. The credentials are in the usual v password tool.
- Visit personal access tokens: https://github.com/settings/tokens.
- Regenerate the token. Important: this invalidates the existing token so other developers will need to be informed.
- Update token in
frontend/.oauth_token
.
Deploy the frontend:
./deploy.sh YYYY-MM-DD frontend
Deploy the CI builder backend:
./deploy.sh YYYY-MM-DD builder
Github's Deployment API would be ideal, but it has some downsides:
- Github Deployments happen after a pull is merged. We want to support blocking PR merges based on a LH score.
- We want to be able to audit changes as they're add to the PR.
pull_request
/push
events are more appropriate for that.
The main downside of a Github webhook is that there's no way to include custom data in the payload Github sends to the webhook handler. For example, how would Ligthhouse know what url to test? With a webhook, the user also has to setup it up and configure it properly.
Future work: Lighthouse CI could define a file that developer includes in their
repo. The CI endpoint could pull a .lighthouse_ci
file that includes meta
data {minLighthouseScore: 96, testUrl: 'https://staging.example.com'}
. However,
this requires work from the developer.