Signed-off-by: Markus Heiser <markus.heiser@darmarit.de>
6.2 KiB
Makefile Targets
build environment
Before looking deeper at the targets, first read about make pyenv
.
To install system requirements follow buildhosts
.
With the aim to simplify development cycles, started with 1756
a Makefile
based boilerplate was added. If you are not familiar with Makefiles, we recommend to read gnu-make introduction.
The usage is simple, just type make {target-name}
to build a target. Calling the help
target gives a first overview (make help
):
bash -c "cd ..; make --no-print-directory help"
Contents
Python environment
activate environment
source ./local/py3/bin/activate
With Makefile we do no longer need to build up the virtualenv manually (as described in the devquickstart
guide). Jump into your git working tree and release a make pyenv
:
cd ~/searx-clone
$ make pyenv
$ PYENV usage: source ./local/py3/bin/activate
...
With target pyenv
a development environment (aka virtualenv) was build up in ./local/py3/
. To make a developer install of searx (setup.py
) into this environment, use make target install
:
make install
$ PYENV usage: source ./local/py3/bin/activate
PYENV using virtualenv from ./local/py3
PYENV install .
You have never to think about intermediate targets like pyenv
or install
, the Makefile
chains them as requisites. Just run your main target.
drop environment
To get rid of the existing environment before re-build use clean target
<make clean>
first.
If you think, something goes wrong with your ./local environment or you change the setup.py
file (or the requirements listed in requirements-dev.txt
and requirements.txt
), you have to call make clean
.
make run
To get up a running a developer instance simply call make run
. This enables debug option in searx/settings.yml
, starts a ./searx/webapp.py
instance, disables debug option again and opens the URL in your favorite WEB browser (xdg-open
):
make run
$ PYENV usage: source ./local/py3/bin/activate
PYENV install .
./local/py3/bin/python ./searx/webapp.py
...
INFO:werkzeug: * Running on http://127.0.0.1:8888/ (Press CTRL+C to quit)
...
make clean
Drop all intermediate files, all builds, but keep sources untouched. Includes target pyclean
which drops ./local environment. Before calling make clean
stop all processes using make pyenv
.
make clean
$ CLEAN pyclean
CLEAN clean
make docs docs-live docs-clean
We describe the usage of the doc*
targets in the How to contribute /
Documentation <contrib docs>
section. If you want to edit the documentation read our make docs-live
section. If you are working in your own brand, adjust your settings global
.
make books/{name}.html books/{name}.pdf
info
To build PDF a XeTeX is needed, see buildhosts
.
The books/{name}.*
targets are building books. A book is a sub-directory containing a conf.py
file. One example is the user handbook which can deployed separately (docs/user/conf.py
). Such conf.py
do inherit from docs/conf.py
and overwrite values to fit book's needs.
With the help of Intersphinx (reST smart ref
) the links to searx’s documentation outside of the book will be bound by the object inventory of DOCS_URL
. Take into account that URLs will be picked from the inventary at documentation's build time.
Use make docs-help
to see which books available:
bash -c "cd ..; make --no-print-directory docs-help"
make gh-pages
To deploy on github.io first adjust your settings global
. For any further read deploy on github.io
.
make test
Runs a series of tests: test.pep8
, test.unit
, test.robot
and does additional pylint checks <make pylint>
. You can run tests selective, e.g.:
make test.pep8 test.unit test.sh
$ . ./local/py3/bin/activate; ./manage.sh pep8_check
Running pep8 check
[!] . ./local/py3/bin/activate; ./manage.sh unit_tests
Running unit tests [!]
make pylint
Before commiting its recommend to do some (more) linting. Pylint is known as one of the best source-code, bug and quality checker for the Python programming language. Pylint is not yet a quality gate within our searx project (like test.pep8 <make test>
it is), but Pylint can help to improve code quality anyway. The pylint profile we use at searx project is found in project's root folder .pylintrc
.
Code quality is a ongoing process. Don't try to fix all messages from Pylint, run Pylint and check if your changed lines are bringing up new messages. If so, fix it. By this, code quality gets incremental better and if there comes the day, the linting is balanced out, we might decide to add Pylint as a quality gate.
make pybuild
Build Python packages in ./dist/py
.
make pybuild
$ ...
BUILD pybuild
running sdist
running egg_info
...
ls ./dist/py/
$ searx-0.15.0-py3-none-any.whl searx-0.15.0.tar.gz
To upload packages to PyPi, there is also a upload-pypi
target. It needs twine to be installed. Since you are not the owner of searx
you will never need the latter.