Rust version of https://gitlab.com/advian-oss/python-datastreamcorelib
Remember to add any new system packages you install via the devel_shell to the Dockerfile too. Easy way to check if you remembered everything is to rebuild the test image and run it (see below).
We need buildkit:
export DOCKER_BUILDKIT=1
And also the exact way for forwarding agent to running instance is different on OSX:
export DOCKER_SSHAGENT="-v /run/host-services/ssh-auth.sock:/run/host-services/ssh-auth.sock -e SSH_AUTH_SOCK=/run/host-services/ssh-auth.sock"
and Linux:
export DOCKER_SSHAGENT="-v $SSH_AUTH_SOCK:$SSH_AUTH_SOCK -e SSH_AUTH_SOCK"
Build image, create container and start it:
docker build --ssh default --target devel_shell -t rustdatastreamcorelib:devel_shell .
docker create --name rustdatastreamcorelib_devel -v `pwd`":/app" -it `echo $DOCKER_SSHAGENT` rustdatastreamcorelib:devel_shell
docker start -i rustdatastreamcorelib_devel
This will give you a shell with system level dependencies installed, you should do any shell things (like run tests, pre-commit checks etc) there.
If working in Docker instead of native env you need to run the pre-commit checks in docker too:
docker exec -i rustdatastreamcorelib_devel /bin/bash -c "pre-commit install"
docker exec -i rustdatastreamcorelib_devel /bin/bash -c "pre-commit run --all-files"
You need to have the container running, see above. Or alternatively use the docker run syntax but using the running container is faster:
docker run --rm -v `pwd`":/app" rustdatastreamcorelib:devel_shell -c "pre-commit run --all-files"
You can use the devel shell to run py.test when doing development, for CI use the \"test\" target in the Dockerfile:
docker build --ssh default --target test -t rustdatastreamcorelib:test .
docker run --rm -v `pwd`":/app" `echo $DOCKER_SSHAGENT` rustdatastreamcorelib:test