Development Guide

This document describes how to build, test and run Flagger from source.

Setup dev environment

Flagger is written in Go and uses Go modules for dependency management.

On your dev machine install the following tools:

  • go >= 1.18
  • git >;= 2.20
  • bash >= 5.0
  • make >= 3.81
  • kubectl >= 1.22
  • kustomize >= 4.4
  • helm >= 3.0
  • docker >= 19.03

You’ll also need a Kubernetes cluster for testing Flagger. You can use Minikube, Kind, Docker desktop or any remote cluster (AKS/EKS/GKE/etc) Kubernetes version 1.22 or newer.

To start contributing to Flagger, fork the repository on GitHub.

Create a dir inside your GOPATH:

mkdir -p $GOPATH/src/github.com/fluxcd

Clone your fork:

cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/fluxcd
git clone https://github.com/YOUR_USERNAME/flagger
cd flagger

Set Flagger repository as upstream:

git remote add upstream https://github.com/fluxcd/flagger.git

Sync your fork regularly to keep it up-to-date with upstream:

git fetch upstream
git checkout main
git merge upstream/main

Build

Download Go modules:

go mod download

Build Flagger binary:

make build

Build load tester binary:

make loadtester-build

Code changes

We require all commits to be signed. By signing off with your signature, you certify that you wrote the patch or otherwise have the right to contribute the material by the rules of the DCO.

If your user.name and user.email are configured in your Git config, you can sign your commit automatically with:

git commit -s

Before submitting a PR, make sure your changes are covered by unit tests.

If you made changes to go.mod run:

go mod tidy

If you made changes to pkg/apis regenerate Kubernetes client sets with:

make codegen

Run code formatters:

go install golang.org/x/tools/cmd/goimports@latest

make fmt

Run unit tests:

make test

API changes

If you made changes to pkg/apis regenerate the Kubernetes client sets with:

make codegen

Update the validation spec in artifacts/flagger/crd.yaml and run:

make crd

Note that any change to the CRDs must be accompanied by an update to the Open API schema.

Manual testing

Install a service mesh and/or an ingress controller on your cluster and deploy Flagger using one of the install options listed here.

If you made changes to the CRDs, apply your local copy with:

kubectl apply -f artifacts/flagger/crd.yaml

Shutdown the Flagger instance installed on your cluster (replace the namespace with your mesh/ingress one):

kubectl -n istio-system scale deployment/flagger --replicas=0

Port forward to your Prometheus instance:

kubectl -n istio-system port-forward svc/prometheus 9090:9090

Run Flagger locally against your remote cluster by specifying a kubeconfig path:

go run cmd/flagger/ -kubeconfig=$HOME/.kube/config \
-log-level=info \
-mesh-provider=istio \
-metrics-server=http://localhost:9090

Another option to manually test your changes is to build and push the image to your container registry:

make build
docker build -t <YOUR-DOCKERHUB-USERNAME>/flagger:<YOUR-TAG> .
docker push <YOUR-DOCKERHUB-USERNAME>/flagger:<YOUR-TAG>

Deploy your image on the cluster and scale up Flagger:

kubectl -n istio-system set image deployment/flagger flagger=<YOUR-DOCKERHUB-USERNAME>/flagger:<YOUR-TAG>
kubectl -n istio-system scale deployment/flagger --replicas=1

Now you can use one of the tutorials to manually test your changes.

Integration testing

Flagger end-to-end tests can be run locally with Kubernetes Kind.

Create a Kind cluster:

kind create cluster

Build Flagger container image and load it on the cluster:

make build
docker build -t test/flagger:latest .
kind load docker-image test/flagger:latest

Run the Istio e2e tests:

./test/istio/run.sh

For each service mesh and ingress controller, there is a dedicated e2e test suite, choose one that matches your changes from this list.

When you open a pull request on Flagger repo, the unit and integration tests will be run in CI.