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63 lines
2.6 KiB
Markdown
63 lines
2.6 KiB
Markdown
# tci
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> tiny custom CI runner for your selfhosted just-git repositories
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## why
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continuous integration is really convenient when you have quite some tiny projects which you'd like to keep updated.
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this one has its doc page, that one compiles to a minified js file that i should serve, this one has a demo instance that i should restart...
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i don't want to bother doing these things every time i write some fixes!
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also, i really like the idea of keeping CI configuration committed with the repository itself
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## how
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git natively supports [hooks](https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Customizing-Git-Git-Hooks). they are extremely convenient and pleasant to use (just a shell script!), but aren't version-controlled in the repository they belong to.
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i use them on my client to validate my commits and sometimes configure/cleanup projects
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because i self-host my git repositories (did you know you just need to `git init --bare <name>` in your home and you can pull/push from there! `git clone <user>@<host>:<repo-path>` just works), i can't just use github/gitlab, and would rather not go mad configuring jenkins
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most of my CIs are super simple: `cargo doc; cp * /srv/http/docs/`, configuring something complex like jenkins seems overkill
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# introducing tci!
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`tci` is a Tiny CI runner
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just set it as `post-update` hook in your repository and, each time such repository gets updated, tci will:
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* make sure repo is allowed to run CI: checks said repo git config for `tci.allow == true`
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* create a temp dir (under `/tmp`) with unique name
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* clone your repository in that dir
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* change current working directory to be inside your freshly cloned repo
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* run `.tci` script (you can change it by setting git config `tci.script`)
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* print script's `STDOUT` to console
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* delete temporary directory
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and that's it! could not be simpler
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# using tci
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a very simple example: i'd like to auto-update cargo documentation for my project
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first step is enabling tci for such repo: `git config tci.allow true` on my server
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then i can just add a `.tci` script in the project root:
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```
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#!/bin/bash
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cargo doc
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rm -rf /srv/http/docs/*
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cp ./build/* /srv/http/docs/
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```
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just mark it executable, commit and push!
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### setting tci as default runner for every repository
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configuring tci as post-update hook for *each repository* is definitely annoying
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luckily, git allows us to configure a default hook location valid for every repository!
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inside your `~/.gitconfig` just insert:
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```
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[core]
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hooksPath = /path/to/some/directory/
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```
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inside such directory, place `tci` and rename it to `post-update`
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and done! should enable tci for all repos (if they are configured to allow it)
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