In this repo at the moment the line between the 2 docs is not very clear since developing pretty much is contributing. The info one needed to submit to the catalog seemed spread across both so I combined them into one. Going forward the development.md is probably a good place to include info for folks maintaining automation for the catalog.
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Contributing to the catalog repo
Thank you for your interest in contributing!
This doc is about how to contribute to this repo specifically. For how to
contribute to tektoncd projects in general, see the overview in our README
and the individual CONTRIBUTING.md
files in each respective project.
All contributors must comply with the code of conduct.
PRs are welcome, and will follow the tektoncd pull request process.
How to Contribute a Task or Pipeline
The Catalog repository is intended to serve as a location where users can find
Task
s and Pipeline
s that are maintained, useful and follow established
best practices.
The process for contributing looks like this:
- Fork this repository, develop and test your
Task
s. - Create a new folder for your
Task
(s) - Ensure your Task
- Follows the guidelines
- Meets the technical requirements
- Includes OWNERS
- Submit a pull request.
Guidelines
When reviewing PRs that add new Task
s or Pipeline
s, maintainers will follow
the following guidelines:
- Submissions should be useful in real-world applications. While this repository is meant to be educational, its primary goal is to serve as a place users can find, share and discover useful components. This is not a samples repo to showcase Tekton features, this is a collection
- Submissions should follow established best practices.
Tekton is still young so this is going to be a shifting goalpost, but here are
some examples:
Task
s should expose parameters and declare input/output resources, and document them.- Submissions should be as portable as possible. They should not be hardcoded to specific repositories, clusters, environments etc.
- Images should either be pinned by digest or point to tags with documented maintenance policies. The goal here is to make it so that submissions keep working.
- Submissions should be well-documented.
- Coming Soon Submissions should be testable, and come with the required tests.
If you have an idea for a new submission, feel free to open an issue to discuss the idea with the catalog maintainers and community. Once you are ready to write your submission, please open a PR with the code, documentation and tests and a maintainer will review it.
Over time we hope to create a scalable ownership system where community members can be responsible for maintaining their own submissions, but we are not there yet.
Technical requirements
- Must pass the Task validation (aka
kubectl create -f task.yaml
should succeed) - Images should be published and maintained on an public image registry (gcr.io, docker.io, quay.io, …). A bonus if those images are auto-built.
- Images should not have any major security vulnerabilities
- Should follow Kubernetes best practices
- Provide as many default paramater values as possible
- Provide end to end tests
- (Nice to have) : provide versions with and without
PipelineResource
End to end Testing
There is two type of e2e tests launched on CI.
The first one would just apply the yaml files making sure they don't have any syntax issues. Pretty simple one, it just basically check the syntax.
The second one would do some proper functional testing, making sure the task actually ran properly.
The way the functional tests works is that if you have a directory called
tests/
inside the task, it would start creating a random Namespace
, apply
the task and then every yaml files that you have in that tests/
directory.
Usually in these other yaml files you would have a yaml file for the
test resources (PipelineResource
) and a yaml files to run the tasks
(TaskRun
).
Sometime you may need to be able to launch some scripts before applying the
tested task or the other yaml files. Some may pre-setup something on the
Namespace
or have to do something externally or sometimes you may even want to do
some manipulation of the main Task
.
For example on the image builders tasks like kaniko
or jib
we want to
upload the tasks to a registry to make sure it is actually built properly. To do
so we manipulate with a python script the
Task
(something we don't want for everyone but only for the tests) to add a
registry as a Sidecar
and make sure that the TaskRun
set the parameters to
upload there. Simple and straightforward no need to upload to an external image
registry provider having to setup the tokens and deals with the side effects...
There is two different scripts that are checked if present in the scripts
,
those scripts actually sourced via the source
bash script, so you can output
some environment variables to it that would be applied :
- pre-apply-task-hook.sh: Script to run before applying the task
- pre-apply-taskrun-hook.sh: Script to run before applying the taskruns or other yaml files.
What can you run from those scripts is whatever defined in the test-runner image, if you need to have another binary available feel free to make a PR to this Dockerfile :
https://github.com/tektoncd/plumbing/blob/master/prow/images/test-runner/Dockerfile
Owning and Maintaining a Task
Individual tasks should maintained by one or more users of GitHub. When someone maintains a Task, they have the access to merge changes to that Task. To have merge access to a Task, someone needs to:
- Be invited (and accept your invite) as a read-only collaborator on the tekton organization. If you need sponsors and have contributed to the chart, please reach out to the existing maintainers, or if you are having trouble connecting with them, please reach out to one of the main OWNERS of this repository.
- an
OWNERS
file needs to be added in theTask
folder. ThatOWNERS
file should list the maintainers' GitHub login names for both the reviewers and approvers sections.
OWNERS
The top-level OWNERS
file lists the Trusted
Collaborators. The process to becoming an
OWNER
is the same as other Tekton projects.