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Development |
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This is a quickstart guide for building and running Headlamp for development.
Please make sure you read the Contribution Guidelines as well before starting to contribute to the project.
See platforms to find out which browsers, OS and flavors of Kubernetes we support.
These are the required dependencies to get started. Other dependencies are pulled in by the golang or node package managers (see frontend/package.json, app/package.json, backend/go.mod and Dockerfile).
- Node.js Latest LTS (20.11.1 at time of writing). Many of us use nvm for installing multiple versions of Node.
- Go, (1.22 at time of writing)
- Make (GNU). Often installed by default. On Windows this can be installed with the "chocolatey" package manager that is installed with node.
- Kubernetes, we suggest minikube as one good K8s installation for testing locally. Other k8s installations are supported (see platforms.
Headlamp is composed of a backend
and a frontend
.
You can build both the backend
and frontend
by running.
make
Or individually:
make backend
and
make frontend
The quickest way to get the backend
and frontend
running for development is
the following (respectively):
make run-backend
and in a different terminal instance:
make run-frontend
You can build the app for Linux, Windows, or Mac.
Do so on the platform you are building for. That is build the mac app on a Mac, and the linux app on a linux box.
First, we need to
make backend frontend
Then choose the relevant command.
make app-linux
make app-mac
make app-win
For Windows, by default it will produce an installer using NSIS (Nullsoft Scriptable Install System).
If you prefer an .msi
installer, then be sure to install the WiX Toolset and have its light.exe
and candle.exe
in the Windows path.
E.g., if you are using WiX Toolset version 3.11, this can be done by running the following command,
before the one above:
set PATH=%PATH%;C:\Program Files (x86)\WiX Toolset v3.11\bin
Then run the following command to generate the .msi
installer:
make app-win-msi
See the generated app files in app/dist/ .
Headlamp on WSL requires some packages installed (maybe it requires more) to run the app.
sudo apt install libgconf-2-4 libatk1.0-0 libatk-bridge2.0-0 libgdk-pixbuf2.0-0 libgtk-3-0 libgbm1 libnss3 libasound2
Some of these are also needed some of them only for the end to end tests.
sudo apt-get install firefox libgstreamer-plugins-bad1.0-0 libegl1 libnotify4 libopengl0 libwoff1 libharfbuzz-icu0 libgstreamer-gl1.0-0 libwebpdemux2 libenchant1c2a libsecret-1-0 libhyphen0 libevdev2 libgles2 gstreamer1.0-libav
The following command builds a container image for Headlamp from the current
source. It will run the frontend
from a backend
's static server, and
options can be appended to the main command as arguments.
make image
The Dockerfile takes a build argument for the base image used. You can specify the base image used using the IMAGE_BASE environment variable with make.
IMAGE_BASE=debian:latest make image
If no IMAGE_BASE is specified, then a default image is used (see Dockerfile for exact default image used).
This is useful if there are requirements on which base images can be used in an environment.
So far Debian variants (including Ubuntu), and Alpine Linux are supported. If you have other requirements, please get in touch.
With docker you can run the Headlamp image(ghcr.io/headlamp-k8s/headlamp:latest
).
Note, the mount arguments add folders that are referenced in the ~/.kube
folders - you may need to add other folders if your config refers
to more folders.
docker run --network="host" -p 127.0.0.1:4466:4466/tcp --mount type=bind,source="/home/rene/.minikube",target=$HOME/.minikube --mount type=bind,source="$HOME/.kube",target=/root/.kube ghcr.io/headlamp-k8s/headlamp:latest /headlamp/headlamp-server -html-static-dir /headlamp/frontend -plugins-dir=/headlamp/plugins
If you want to make a new container image called headlamp-k8s/headlamp:development
you can run it like this:
$ DOCKER_IMAGE_VERSION=development make image
...
Successfully tagged headlamp-k8s/headlamp:development
$ docker run --network="host" -p 127.0.0.1:4466:4466/tcp --mount type=bind,source="/home/rene/.minikube",target=$HOME/.minikube --mount type=bind,source="$HOME/.kube",target=/root/.kube headlamp-k8s/headlamp:development /headlamp/headlamp-server -html-static-dir /headlamp/frontend -plugins-dir=/headlamp/plugins
Then go to https://localhost:4466 in your browser.
These instructions are for if you want to run Headlamp "in-cluster", and test it locally on minikube with a local container image.
We assume you've already set up minikube
(probably with minikube start --driver=docker
).
First, we have to make the container image in the minikube docker environment. This is needed because minikube looks for container images in there, not ones made in the local docker environment.
eval $(minikube docker-env)
DOCKER_IMAGE_VERSION=development make image
kubectl create deployment headlamp -n kube-system --image=headlamp-k8s/headlamp:development -o yaml --dry-run -- /headlamp/headlamp-server -html-static-dir /headlamp/frontend -in-cluster -plugins-dir=/headlamp/plugins > minikube-headlamp.yaml
To use the local container image we change the imagePullPolicy
to Never.
Making kubectl use local images - which is what you want in development.
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
creationTimestamp: null
labels:
app: headlamp
name: headlamp
namespace: kube-system
spec:
replicas: 1
selector:
matchLabels:
app: headlamp
strategy: {}
template:
metadata:
creationTimestamp: null
labels:
app: headlamp
spec:
containers:
- command:
- /headlamp/headlamp-server
- -html-static-dir
- /headlamp/frontend
- -in-cluster
- -plugins-dir=/headlamp/plugins
image: headlamp-k8s/headlamp:development
name: headlamp
imagePullPolicy: Never
resources: {}
status: {}
Now we create the deployment.
kubectl apply -f minikube-headlamp.yaml
Then we expose the deployment, and get a URL where we can see it.
$ kubectl expose deployment headlamp -n kube-system --type=NodePort --port=4466
service/headlamp exposed
$ kubectl get service headlamp -n kube-system
NAME TYPE CLUSTER-IP EXTERNAL-IP PORT(S) AGE
headlamp NodePort 10.99.144.210 <none> 4466:30712/TCP 6m57s
$ minikube service headlamp -n kube-system --url
http://192.168.49.2:30342
Go to the URL printed by minikube in your browser, and get your token to login.
The Headlamp server has an option (-plugins-dir
) for indicating where to find any plugins.
Thus, a deployment of Headlamp using the Docker image can mount a plugins folder
and point to it by using the mentioned option.
An alternative is to build an image that ships some plugins in it. For that, just create a ".plugins" folder in the Headlamp project directory, as the Dockerfile will include it and point to it by default.
Here are some options that can be used when building Headlamp to change its default behavior.
In the desktop app, by default, Headlamp will check for new versions from its GitHub page and warn the user about it. It will also show the release notes after updating to a new version.
This behavior can be turned off by adding the following to a .env
file in the app/
folder:
HEADLAMP_CHECK_FOR_UPDATES=false
For building Headlamp Base (Headlamp without plugins), simply remove the app/app-build-manifest.json
and run the build commands in the sections above.