Diff for "Code/HowToUseCodehostingLocally"

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Revision 13 as of 2015-05-15 06:54:01
Size: 2789
Editor: blr
Comment: Add note about possible connection refused error to 5022
Revision 14 as of 2019-05-28 23:59:17
Size: 2792
Editor: cjwatson
Comment: launchpad.dev → launchpad.test
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Various parts of the codehosting system require that Apache is configured appropriately. If launchpad.dev works at all for you, you've probably already done this, but if it doesn't work, running {{{sudo make install}}} from the root of your launchpad tree should configure things appropriately. Various parts of the codehosting system require that Apache is configured appropriately. If launchpad.test works at all for you, you've probably already done this, but if it doesn't work, running {{{sudo make install}}} from the root of your launchpad tree should configure things appropriately.
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Host bazaar.launchpad.dev Host bazaar.launchpad.test
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 Hostname launchpad.dev  Hostname launchpad.test

How To Use Codehosting Locally

Just as it's possible to run the launchpad web application locally, it is also possible to run the complete codehosting stack on your development machine. The main awkwardness is that you have to manually kick off some of the things that are usually done by cronjobs.

Make sure Apache is set up

Various parts of the codehosting system require that Apache is configured appropriately. If launchpad.test works at all for you, you've probably already done this, but if it doesn't work, running sudo make install from the root of your launchpad tree should configure things appropriately.

Get things running

Getting all the servers that need to be running started is as simple as running make run_all or make run_codehosting in the root of your Launchpad tree.

Set up a user

First ensure you have an mta installed e.g. postfix. If you run ./utilities/make-lp-user <your real launchpad id>, you can use lp://dev/ shortcuts.

You can also use the 'mark' launchpad user, the only user in the sample data with an ssh key set up, but it's probably best not to these days.

Push up a branch

If you ran make-lp-user, this is just a few more keystrokes than pushing a branch to launchpad:

bzr push -d <some branch> lp://dev/~<you>/+junk/branchname

You might have to add the following to ~/.ssh/config:

Host bazaar.launchpad.test
        Port 5022
        Hostname launchpad.test

Pull and scan the branch

At this point the branch is just in the 'hosted area', and needs to be scanned (data about the branch copied into the Launchpad database).

On production, this happens via the magic of cron. Locally you can make it happen by running cronscripts/process-job-source.py IBranchScanJobSource.

Now you have a fully working and up-to-date branch -- you should be able to look at the branch page in Launchpad, view the source in codebrowse, and so on.

Troubleshooting

  • If you have troubles pushing to a local code hosting instance with an error like below, the stale /var/tmp/launchpad_forking_service.sock might be the problem. Remove it and restart code hosting.

    $ bzr push lp://dev/~danilo/translated/trunk
    exec request failed on channel 0
    bzr: ERROR: Connection closed: Unexpected end of message. Please check connectivity and permissions, and report a bug if problems persist.
  • If you are receiving connection refused to port 5022, in configs/development/launchpad-lazr.conf, under the [codehosting] heading, amend the line:

    port: tcp:5022:interface=127.0.0.88

to

    port: tcp:5022:interface=0.0.0.0

Alternatively, push from within the container.

Code/HowToUseCodehostingLocally (last edited 2021-12-09 10:57:23 by jugmac00)