Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
168 lines (116 loc) · 7.16 KB

HACKING.md

File metadata and controls

168 lines (116 loc) · 7.16 KB

HACKING

Welcome to the Radicle "Heartwood" hacking guide!

We appreciate your interest in contributing to the Radicle project. If you come across a bug or a missing feature, please feel free to submit a patch. This guide is meant as an introduction to the codebase, on how to debug issues, write tests and navigate the repository.

Please make sure to read CONTRIBUTING.md before submitting code, and follow the included guidelines. To download a development version of Radicle, see the README.md.

For an architectural overview of Heartwood, see ARCHITECTURE.md.


The repository is structured in crates, as follows:

  • radicle: The Radicle standard library that contains shared libraries used across the project.
  • radicle-cli: the Radicle command-line interface (rad).
  • radicle-cli-test: The Radicle CLI testing framework, for writing documentation tests.
  • radicle-cob: Radicle Collaborative Objects (COBs). Provides a way of creating and traversing edit histories.
  • radicle-crdt: Conflict-free replicated datatypes (CRDTs) used for things like discussions and patches.
  • radicle-crypto: A wrapper around Ed25519 cryptographic signing primitives .
  • radicle-dag: A simple directed acyclic graph implementation used by radicle-cob.
  • radicle-httpd: The radicle HTTP daemon that serves API clients and Git fetch requests.
  • radicle-node: The radicle peer-to-peer daemon that enables users to connect to the network and share code.
  • radicle-remote-helper: A Git remote helper for rad:// remotes.
  • radicle-ssh: OpenSSH functionality, including a library used to interface with ssh-agent.
  • radicle-term: A generic terminal library used by the Radicle CLI.
  • radicle-tools: Tools used to aid in the development of Radicle.

Running in debug mode

To run the services or the CLI in debug mode, use cargo run -p <package>.

For example, the equivalent of rad auth in debug mode would be:

$ cargo run -p radicle-cli --bin rad -- auth

Arguments after the -- are passed directly to the rad executable.

When running the radicle node, you may specify an alternate port for the git-daemon like so:

$ cargo run -p radicle-node -- --git-daemon 127.0.0.1:9876

This is useful if you are running multiple nodes on the same machine. You can also specify different listen addresses for the peer-to-peer protocol using --listen. To view all options, run cargo run -p radicle-node -- --help.

You may want to set the appropriate environment variables before running these commands to prevent them from interfering with an existing installation of radicle. See the following section on environment variables.

Environment variables

When developing radicle, some environment variables may be used to make the development environment more friendly.

RAD_HOME

Set this to a path on your file system where you'd like radicle to store keys and repositories. Typically you'll want to set this to a temporary folder, eg. /tmp/radicle, that can be safely deleted. If set, all radicle data will be stored within this folder.

RAD_SEED

Set this to a 32-byte hexadecimal string to generate deterministic Node IDs when creating new profiles. For example, integration tests use the following setting:

RAD_SEED=ffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffff

RAD_PASSPHRASE

Set this to the passphrase chosen during profile initialization (rad auth) to skip the passphrase prompt. It's recommended to set this while developing to avoid storing development keys with ssh-agent.

Logging

Logging for radicle-node and radicle-httpd is turned on by default. Check the respective --help output to set the log level.

Writing tests

Documentation tests

When implementing changes to the CLI, or adding a new sub-command, it's a good idea to add a documentation test. You can find examples of these in radicle-cli/examples.

Each documentation test must be accompanied by a regular unit test. These are located in radicle-cli/tests/commands.rs. To keep tests deterministic, environment variables are used. If your document test output is changing on each test run, make sure to account for any variability in the test environment (clocks, RNGs, etc.).

Node service logic tests

When testing the core service logic, eg. the gossip protocol; tests can be added to radicle-node/src/tests.rs. These service-level tests simply test inputs and outputs and do not perform any I/O.

Node end-to-end tests

If you find the need to test the replication protocol or networking layer, it's possible to write an end-to-end test. These tests can be found in radicle-node/src/tests/e2e.rs.

Debugging

Repository storage

Radicle stores git repositories inside $RAD_HOME/storage, which defaults to ~/.radicle/storage on UNIX-based operating systems. You can use standard git tooling to inspect references and other git objects inside storage. Each radicle repository is stored under its own folder under storage as a bare Git repository.

Once inside a repository folder, the following commands may come in handy.

git show-ref to show all references:

$ git show-ref
f60b291752bc38be7dfc90c4c4034de13e01a66b refs/heads/master
f60b291752bc38be7dfc90c4c4034de13e01a66b refs/namespaces/z6MkqTY5aQepDGNCrkPqzdmzveX3D4oAmyVXUDDVQaDGdyVH/refs/heads/master
805b7d0df927dcbc4d3911ab07cd497953eecbd1 refs/namespaces/z6MkqTY5aQepDGNCrkPqzdmzveX3D4oAmyVXUDDVQaDGdyVH/refs/rad/id
86136a42a69572015466bac2d974154ee76f0853 refs/namespaces/z6MkqTY5aQepDGNCrkPqzdmzveX3D4oAmyVXUDDVQaDGdyVH/refs/rad/sigrefs
5575035d8b4faf1f18c532b08516f18031dd7b28 refs/namespaces/z6MkuGSynjxM8SLhcsiEPWZgDeGLAVNXf5g7WePmc1Tri1FS/refs/heads/master
805b7d0df927dcbc4d3911ab07cd497953eecbd1 refs/namespaces/z6MkuGSynjxM8SLhcsiEPWZgDeGLAVNXf5g7WePmc1Tri1FS/refs/rad/id
89e4f0baa327595c7b2849189fc8808388a29033 refs/namespaces/z6MkuGSynjxM8SLhcsiEPWZgDeGLAVNXf5g7WePmc1Tri1FS/refs/rad/sigrefs

git cat-file to examine refs:

$ git cat-file -p f60b291752bc38be7dfc90c4c4034de13e01a66b

tree 1afc38724d2b89264c7b3826d40b0655a95cfab4
author cloudhead <cloudhead@anonymous.xyz> 1678097961 +0100
committer cloudhead <cloudhead@anonymous.xyz> 1678097961 +0100
gpgsig -----BEGIN SSH SIGNATURE-----
 U1NIU0lHAAAAAQAAADMAAAALc3NoLWVkMjU1MTkAAAAgvjrQogRxxLjzzWns8+mKJAGzEX
 4fm2ALoN7pyvD2ssQAAAADZ2l0AAAAAAAAAAZzaGE1MTIAAABTAAAAC3NzaC1lZDI1NTE5
 AAAAQHXhUf7QjXNlgCjDbGSG+zoyIlE4S9/d9qjvG7x9jw8J/fXDVIMkh/Lkp743g7EliM
 X+88wqit9BeQoHXuxj2Ao=
 -----END SSH SIGNATURE-----

Init

You can also run git ls-remote rad from inside a working copy to examine the remote refs in storage.

Connecting to your local node

The radicle node listens on a UNIX domain socket located at $RAD_HOME/node/control.sock. Make sure this file is accessible and has the required permissions for your user to read and write to it.

Radicle keys

Radicle uses Ed25519 keys that are located in $RAD_HOME/keys. These keys are encoded in the standard OpenSSH format. It's therefore possible to use standard OpenSSH tools to interact with them, eg. ssh-add.

Your radicle secret key is protected with a passphrase (See: $RAD_PASSPHRASE).