- Make sure UAAC is installed.
- Target your UAA server.
uaac target <uaa.your-domain.com>
- Login with your current UAA account.
uaac token client get <your admin account> -s <your uaa admin password>
- Create client account:
uaac client add <your-client-id> \
--authorities cloud_controller.admin,cloud_controller.read,cloud_controller.write,openid,scim.read \
--authorized_grant_types authorization_code,client_credentials,refresh_token \
--scope cloud_controller.admin,cloud_controller.read,cloud_controller.write,openid,scim.read \
-s <your-client-secret>
- Unable to create an account still? Troubleshoot here
If you are testing locally, export these variables. If you are deploying to cloud foundry, modify the manifest.yml
CONSOLE_CLIENT_ID
: Registered client id with UAA.CONSOLE_CLIENT_SECRET
: The client secret.CONSOLE_HOSTNAME
: The URL of the service itself.CONSOLE_LOGIN_URL
: The base URL of the auth service. i.e.https://login.domain.com
CONSOLE_UAA_URL
: The URL of the UAA service. i.e.https://uaa.domain.com
CONSOLE_API_URL
: The URL of the API service. i.e.http://api.domain.com
CONSOLE_LOG_URL
: The URL of the loggregator service. i.e.http://loggregator.domain.com
PPROF_ENABLED
: An optional variable. If set totrue
or1
, will turn on/debug/pprof
endpoints as seen here
Install front end dependencies
npm install
- Make sure all of your environment variables are set as mentioned above.
- Install godep
- Run
godep restore
to get all third party code go run server.go
- Navigate browser to
http://localhost:9999
go test ./...
Test can then be run with the command:
npm run tests
To get a viewable coverage report change the coverageReport
object in karma.conf.js
from json
to html
coverageReporter: {
type: 'html',
dir: 'coverage',
subdir: '.'
}
This project currently uses a combination of Agouti + Ginkgo + Gomega to provide BDD acceptance testing. All the acceptance tests are in the 'acceptance' folder.
- Make sure you have PhantomJS installed:
brew install phantomjs
- Install aogut:
go get github.com/sclevine/agouti
- Install ginkgo
go get github.com/onsi/ginkgo/ginkgo
- Install gomega
go get github.com/onsi/gomega
- To run locally, in addition to the variables in the "Set the environmnent variables" section, you will need to set two more variables in your environment
CONSOLE_TEST_USERNAME
: The username of the account you want the tests to use to login into yourCONSOLE_LOGIN_URL
CONSOLE_TEST_PASSWORD
: The password of the account you want the tests to use to login into yourCONSOLE_LOGIN_URL
CONSOLE_TEST_ORG_NAME
: The test organization the user should be navigating to.CONSOLE_TEST_SPACE_NAME
: The test space the user should be navigating to.CONSOLE_TEST_APP_NAME
: The test app the user should be navigating to.CONSOLE_TEST_HOST
: The host that the app can create a mock route for.CONSOLE_TEST_DOMAIN
: The domain for the mock route.
cd acceptance && go test -tags acceptance
cf push <optional-app-name>
This project uses Travis-CI
- The following environment variables need to be set in plain text in the global env section:
CONSOLE_API_URL
,CONSOLE_UAA_URL
,CONSOLE_LOG_URL
,CONSOLE_LOGIN_URL
,CONSOLE_HOSTNAME="http://localhost:9999"
,CONSOLE_TEST_ORG_NAME
,CONSOLE_TEST_SPACE_NAME
, andCONSOLE_TEST_APP_NAME
- In case you fork this project for your own use (no need to do this if forking to make a pull request), you will need to use the Travis-CI CLI tool to re-encrypt all the environment variables.
travis encrypt CONSOLE_CLIENT_ID='<your client id>' --add env.global
travis encrypt CONSOLE_CLIENT_SECRET='<your client secret>' --add env.global
travis encrypt CONSOLE_TEST_PASSWORD='<the test user account password>' --add env.global
travis encrypt CONSOLE_TEST_USERNAME='<the test user account username>' --add env.global
travis encrypt CF_USERNAME='<the user account username used to deploy>' --add env.global
travis encrypt CF_PASSWORD='<the user account password used to deploy>' --add env.global
From Wikipedia:
The Sprawl trilogy (also known as the Neuromancer, Cyberspace, or Matrix trilogy) is William Gibson's first set of novels, composed of Neuromancer (1984), Count Zero (1986), and Mona Lisa Overdrive (1988).
Cyberspace Deck
Also called a "deck" for short, it is used to access the virtual representation of the matrix. The deck is connected to a tiara-like device that operates by using electrodes to stimulate the user's brain while drowning out other external stimulation. As Case describes them, decks are basically simplified simstim units.