Setting Up a Development Environment¶
This page describes how to setup a working Python development environment that can be used in developing manila on Ubuntu, Fedora or Mac OS X. These instructions assume you’re already familiar with git. Refer to Getting the code for additional information.
Following these instructions will allow you to run the manila unit tests. If you want to be able to run manila (i.e., create NFS/CIFS shares), you will also need to install dependent projects: nova, neutron, cinder and glance. For this purpose ‘devstack’ project can be used (A documented shell script to build complete OpenStack development environments). You can check out Setting up a development environment with devstack for instructions on how to enable manila on devstack.
Virtual environments¶
Manila development uses virtualenv to track and manage Python dependencies while in development and testing. This allows you to install all of the Python package dependencies in a virtual environment or “virtualenv” (a special subdirectory of your manila directory), instead of installing the packages at the system level.
Note
Virtualenv is useful for running the unit tests, but is not typically used for full integration testing or production usage.
Linux Systems¶
Note
This section is tested for manila on Ubuntu and Fedora-based distributions. Feel free to add notes and change according to your experiences or operating system.
Install the prerequisite packages.
On Ubuntu/Debian:
sudo apt-get install python-dev libssl-dev python-pip \ libmysqlclient-dev libxml2-dev libxslt-dev libpq-dev git \ git-review libffi-dev gettext graphviz libjpeg-dev
On RHEL8/Centos8:
sudo dnf install openssl-devel python3-pip mysql-devel \ libxml2-devel libxslt-devel postgresql-devel git git-review \ libffi-devel gettext graphviz gcc libjpeg-turbo-devel \ python3-tox python3-devel python3
Note
If using RHEL and yum reports “No package python3-pip available” and “No package git-review available”, use the EPEL software repository. Instructions can be found at http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/EPEL/FAQ#howtouse.
On Fedora 22 and higher:
sudo dnf install python-devel openssl-devel python-pip mysql-devel \ libxml2-devel libxslt-devel postgresql-devel git git-review \ libffi-devel gettext graphviz gcc libjpeg-turbo-devel \ python-tox python3-devel python3
Note
Additionally, if using Fedora 23, redhat-rpm-config
package should be
installed so that development virtualenv can be built successfully.
Mac OS X Systems¶
Install virtualenv:
sudo easy_install virtualenv
Check the version of OpenSSL you have installed:
openssl version
If you have installed OpenSSL 1.0.0a, which can happen when installing a
MacPorts package for OpenSSL, you will see an error when running
manila.tests.auth_unittest.AuthTestCase.test_209_can_generate_x509
.
The stock version of OpenSSL that ships with Mac OS X 10.6 (OpenSSL 0.9.8l) or Mac OS X 10.7 (OpenSSL 0.9.8r) works fine with manila.
Getting the code¶
Grab the code:
git clone https://opendev.org/openstack/manila
cd manila
Running unit tests¶
The preferred way to run the unit tests is using tox
. Tox executes tests in
isolated environment, by creating separate virtualenv and installing
dependencies from the requirements.txt
and test-requirements.txt
files,
so the only package you install is tox
itself:
sudo pip install tox
Run the unit tests with:
tox -e py{python-version}
Example:
tox -epy36
See Unit Tests for more details.
Manually installing and using the virtualenv¶
You can also manually install the virtual environment:
tox -epy36 --notest
This will install all of the Python packages listed in the
requirements.txt
file into your virtualenv.
To activate the Manila virtualenv you can run:
$ source .tox/py36/bin/activate
To exit your virtualenv, just type:
$ deactivate
Or, if you prefer, you can run commands in the virtualenv on a case by case basis by running:
$ tox -e venv -- <your command>
Contributing Your Work¶
Once your work is complete you may wish to contribute it to the project. Manila uses the Gerrit code review system. For information on how to submit your branch to Gerrit, see GerritWorkflow.