Development Tutorial for envd-server
envd-server
is the backend server for envd
. It manages environments on Kubernetes and supports multiple concurrent users.
Workflow
Here is the workflow for how an envd
environment is created on Kubernetes.
- The user creates an environment using
envd
in the envd console. envd-server
validates the environment and prepares it for provisioning on Kubernetes.envd-server
provisions the environment on Kubernetes.- The user is notified that the environment is ready to use.
- User attaches to the environment with
ssh
. - containerssh is a ssh proxy that captures and forwards the ssh connection to the desired pod.
Development Process
The steps below walk you through the setup process. If you have questions, you can ask on discord or post an issue that describes the place you are stuck, and we'll do our best to help.
First, you could run the command in envd-server
to build and push the development image.
bash
$ BASE_REGISTRY_USER=<username in docker hub> make build-image
After that, you could use helm to install the envd-server
with the new image:
bash
$ helm install --set image.repository=<username in docker hub>/envd-server --set image.tag=dev envd-server ./manifests
Then forward these two ports to localhost for debug purpose:
bash
$ export POD_NAME=$(kubectl get pods --namespace default -l "app.kubernetes.io/name=envd-server,app.kubernetes.io/instance=envd-server" -o jsonpath="{.items[0].metadata.name}")
$ kubectl --namespace default port-forward $POD_NAME 8080:8080
$ kubectl --namespace default port-forward $POD_NAME 2222:2222
Then login to the envd-server
, and create the environment to test if it works.
bash
# Create the context to tell envd to use the envd-server to run the environments.
$ envd context create --name envd-server --use --builder docker-container --runner envd-server --runner-address http://localhost:8080
# Build the image, and push it to docker hub.
$ envd build --output type=image,name=docker.io/<username>/<image>,push=true
# login to the envd-server.
$ envd login
# Create the environment and attach to the the environment.
$ envd run --image <username>/<image>