Various ways to factor out common data in a pipeline file - having them
in one place rather than spread out over many pages, will help newbies
like me.
This PR introduces two new server configuration options, for providing a
custom .JS and .CSS file.
These can be used to show custom banner messages, add
environment-dependent signals, or simply a corporate logo.
### Motivation (what problem I try to solve)
I'm operating Woodpecker in multiple k8s clusters for different
environments.
When having multiple browser tabs open, I prefer strong indicators for
each environment.
E.g. a red "PROD" banner, or just a blue "QA" banner.
Also, we sometimes need to have the chance for maintenance, and instead
of broadcasting emails,
I prefer a banner message, stating something like: "Heads-up: there's a
planned downtime, next Friday, blabla...".
Also, I like to have the firm's logo visible, which makes Woodpecker
look more like an integral part of our platform.
### Implementation notes
* Two new config options are introduced ```WOODPECKER_CUSTOM_CSS_FILE```
and ```WOODPECKER_CUSTOM_JS_FILE```
* I've piggy-bagged the existing handler for assets, as it seemed to me
a minimally invasive approach
* the option along with an example is documented
* a simple unit test for the Gin-handler ensures some regression safety
* no extra dependencies are introduced
### Visual example
The documented example will look like this.
![Screenshot 2023-05-27 at 17 00
44](https://github.com/woodpecker-ci/woodpecker/assets/1189394/8940392e-463c-4651-a1eb-f017cd3cd64d)
### Areas of uncertainty
This is my first contribution to Woodpecker and I tried my best to align
with your conventions.
That said, I found myself uncertain about these things and would be glad
about getting feedback.
* The handler tests are somewhat different than the other ones because I
wanted to keep them simple - I hope that still matches your coding
guidelines
* caching the page sometimes will let the browser not recognize changes
and a user must reload. I'm not fully into the details of how caching is
implemented and neither can judge if it's a real problem. Another pair
of eyes would be good.
Add Kubernetes Deployments and StatefulSet update and Dockle Scan Plugins.
For Kubernetes plugin, I based on the Drone unmaintened Kubernetes
plugin and took the statefulset management evolutions. I added sync/wait
and force redeploy capabilities + updates dependencies
For Dockle plugin, I took example on Trivy plugin.
Add plugin [Nextcloud Upload](https://github.com/Ellpeck/WoodpeckerPlugins/tree/main/nextcloud-upload) to the official plugin list.
there's already an official plugin that allows uploading
files using WebDAV, but my plugin has two Nextcloud-specific additions
that aren't part of the regular WebDAV spec:
- The ability to chunk uploads, which is necessary for larger files if
Nextcloud is hosted behind Cloudflare (which restricts uploads to a
maximum of 100MB)
- The ability to apply Nextcloud tags, which allows automatically
categorizing items and using Nextcloud's Retention plugin to easily
auto-remove older artifacts.
This add a simple implementation of requests/limits for individual
steps. There is no validation of what the resource actually is beyond
checking that it can successfully be converted to a Quantity, so it can
be used for things other than just memory/CPU.
close#1809
# Summary
This PR drops the outdated former swagger.yaml/json and introduced
automatic API document generation from Go code.
The generated code is also used to generate documentation/markdown for
the community page,
as well as enable the Woodpecker server to serve a Swagger Web UI for
manual tinkering.
I did opt-in for gin-swagger, a middleware for the Gin framework, to
ease implementation and have a sophisticated output.
This middleware only produces Swagger v2 specs. AFAIK the newer OpenApi
3x tooling is not yet that mature,
so I guess that's fine for now.
## Implemenation notes
- former swagger.json files removed
- former // swagger godocs removed
- introduced new dependency gin-swagger, which uses godoc annotations on
top of Gin Handler functions.
- reworked Makefile to automatically generate Go code for the server
- introduce new dependency go-swagger, to generate Markdown for
documentation purposes
- add a Swagger Web UI, incl. capabilities for manual API exploration
- consider relative root paths in the implementation
- write documentation for all exposed API endpoints
- incl. API docs in the community website (auto-generated)
- provide developer documentation, for the Woodpecker authors
- no other existing logic/code was intentionally changed
---------
close#292
---------
Co-authored-by: qwerty287 <80460567+qwerty287@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de>
it did make sense to have it still supported within v0.15.0,
but as we move future away and with the release of v1.0.0
we should not give the appearance of still support the original drone
v0.8 config
Gogs support is broken (and we won't fix it because we don't care about
it...) because it does not support OAuth, at least after we introduced
the new Vue UI.
See:
77d830d5b5/server/forge/gogs/gogs.go (L84)
This route is not present in the new UI.