PRs in this repo are merged using the rebase
method. This keeps
the git history clean by adding the PR commits to the most recent end of the commit history. It also has
the benefit of keeping all the relevant commits for a given PR together, rather than spread throughout the
git history based on when the commits were first created.
If the changes in your PR do not conflict with any of the existing code in the project, then Github supports automatic rebasing when the PR is accepted into the code. However, if there are conflicts (there will be a warning on the PR that reads "This branch cannot be rebased due to conflicts"), you will need to manually rebase the branch on master, fixing any conflicts along the way before the code can be merged.
The Helm chart ships with both unit and acceptance tests.
The unit tests don't require any active Kubernetes cluster and complete
very quickly. These should be used for fast feedback during development.
The acceptance tests require a Kubernetes cluster with a configured kubectl
.
To run the unit tests:
bats ./test/unit
To run the acceptance tests:
bats ./test/acceptance
You can edit two parameters as part of the acceptance tests.
-
TF_CLI_CONFIG_FILE
environment variable. This is the file path to the Terraform Cloud credentials you want to use. By default, it will use${HOME}/.terraformrc
. -
test/acceptance/values.yaml
withtest.organization
defined. By default, it will use the organization value in the top-levelvalues.yaml
of the chart.
If the acceptance tests fail, deployed resources in the Kubernetes cluster may not be properly cleaned up. We recommend recycling the Kubernetes cluster to start from a clean slate.
Changes to the Helm chart should be accompanied by appropriate unit tests.
-
Put tests in the test file in the same order as the variables appear in the
values.yaml
. -
Start tests for a chart value with a header that says what is being tested, like this:
#-------------------------------------------------------------------- # annotations
-
Name the test based on what it's testing in the following format (this will be its first line):
@test "<section being tested>: <short description of the test case>" {
When adding tests to an existing file, the first section will be the same as the other tests in the file.
Bats provides a way to run commands in a shell and inspect the output in an automated way. In all of the tests in this repo, the base command being run is helm template which turns the templated files into straight yaml output. In this way, we're able to test that the various conditionals in the templates render as we would expect.
Each test defines the files that should be rendered using the -x
flag, then it might adjust chart values by adding --set
flags as well.
The output from this helm template
command is then piped to yq.
yq
allows us to pull out just the information we're interested in, either by referencing its position in the yaml file directly or giving information about it (like its length).
The -r
flag can be used with yq
to return a raw string instead of a quoted one which is especially useful when looking for an exact match.
The test passes or fails based on the conditional at the end that is in square brackets, which is a comparison of our expected value and the output of helm template
piped to yq
.
The | tee /dev/stderr
pieces direct any terminal output of the helm template
and yq
commands to stderr so that it doesn't interfere with bats