telegram-bot-bash/doc/7_develop.md
Kay Marquardt (Gnadelwartz) 15e7f014bd add file description to doc
2019-05-24 16:49:11 +02:00

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Notes for bashbot developers

This section is about help and best practices for new bashbot developers. The main focus on is creating new versions of bashbot, not on develop your individual bot. Nevertheless the rules and tools described here can also help you with your bot development.

bashbot development is done on github. If you want to provide fixes or new features fork bashbot on githup and provide changes as pull request on github.

Debugging Bashbot

In normal mode of operation all bashbot output is discarded. To get these messages (and more) you can start bashbot in the current shell ./bashbot.sh startbot. Now you can see all output or erros from bashbot. In addition you can change the change the level of verbosity by adding a third argument after startbot.

	"debug"		redirects all output to "DEBUG.log", in addtion every update is logged in "MESSAGE.LOG" and "INLINE.log"
	"debugterm"	same as debug but output and errors are sent to terminal

	"xdebug"	same as debug plus set bash option '-x' to log any executed command
	"xdebugterm"	same as xdebug but output and errors are sent to terminal

Create a stripped down Version of your Bot

Currently bashbot is more a bot development environment than a bot, containing examples, developer scripts, modules, documentation and more. You don't need all these files after you're finished with your cool new bot.

Let's create a stripped down version:

  • delete all modules you do not need from 'modules', e.g. 'modules/inline.sh' if you don't use inline queries
  • delete not needed standard commands and messages from 'commands.sh'
  • delete not needed commands and functions from 'mycommands.sh'
  • run dev/make-standalone.sh to create a a stripped down version of your bo

Now have a look at the directory 'standalone', here you find the files 'bashbot.sh' and 'commands.sh' containing everything to run your bot. Download make-standalone.sh from github.

Setup your develop environment

  1. install git, install shellcheck
  2. setup your environment for UTF-8
  3. clone your bashbot fork to a new directory git clone https://github.com/<YOURNAME>/telegram-bot-bash.git, replace <YOURNAME> with your username on github
  4. create and change to your develop branch git checkout -b <YOURBRANCH>, replace <YOURBRANCH> with the name you want to name it, e.g. 'develop'
  5. give your (dev) fork a new version tag: git tag vx.xx(optional)
  6. setup github hooks by running dev/install-hooks.sh (optional)

Test, Add, Push changes

A typical bashbot develop loop looks as follow:

  1. start developing - change, copy, edit bashbot files ...
  2. after changing a bash sript: shellcheck -x scipt.sh
  3. dev/all-tests.sh - in case if errors back to 2.
  4. dev/git-add.sh - check for changed files, update version string, run git add
  5. git commit -m "COMMIT MESSAGE"; git push

If you setup your dev environment with hooks and use the scripts above, versioning, addding and testing is done automatically.

common commands

We state bashbot is a bash only bot, but this is not true. bashbot is a bash script using bash features PLUS external commands. Usually bash is used in a unix/linux environment where many (GNU) commands are availible, but if commands are missing, bashbot may not work.

To avoid this and make bashbot working on as many platforms as possible - from embedded linux to mainframe - I recommed to restrict ourself to the common commands provided by bash and coreutils/busybox/toybox. See Bash Builtins, coreutils, busybox and toybox

Availible commands in bash, coreutils, busybox and toybox. Do you find curl on the list?

	.*, [*, [[*, basename, break, builtin*, bzcat, caller*, cat, cd*, chattr,
	chgrp, chmod, chown, clear, command*, continue *, cp, cut, date, declare*,
	dc, dd, df, diff, dirname, du, echo*, eval*, exec*, exit *, expr*, find,
	fuser, getopt*, grep, hash*, head, hexdump, id, kill, killall, last, length,
	less, let*, ln, local*, logname, ls, lsattr, lsmod, man, mapfile*, md5sum, mkdir,
	mkfifo, mknod, more, mv, nice, nohup, passwd, patch, printf*, ps, pwd*, read*,
	readarray*, readonly* return*, rm, rmdir, sed, seq, sha1sum, shift*, sleep,
	source*, sort, split, stat, strings, su, sync, tail, tar, tee, test,
	time, times*, timeout, touch, tr, trap*, true, umask*, usleep, uudecode,
	uuencode, wc, wget, which, who, whoami, xargs, yes

commands marked with * are bash builtins, all others are external programms. Calling an external programm is more expensive then using bulitins or using an internal replacement. Here are some examples of internal replacement for external commands:

HOST="$(hostname)" -> HOST="$HOSTNAME"

seq 1 100 -> {0..100}

data="$(cat file)" -> data="$(<"file")"

DIR="$(dirname $0) -> DIR=""${0%/*}/""

IAM="($basename $0)" -> IAM="${0##*/}*

VAR="$(( 1 + 2 ))" -> (( var=1+2 ))

INDEX="$(( ${INDEX} + 1 ))" -> (( INDEX++ ))

For more examples see Pure bash bible

Prepare a new version

After some development it may time to create a new version for the users. a new version can be in sub version upgrade, e.g. for fixes and smaller additions or a new release version for new features. To mark a new version use git tag NEWVERSION and run dev/version.sh to update all version strings.

Usually I start with pre versions and when everything looks good I push out a release candidate (rc) and finally the new version.

 v0.x-devx -> v0.x-prex -> v0.x-rc -> v0.x  ... 0.x+1-dev ...

If you release a new Version run dev/make-distribution.sh to create the zip and tar.gz archives in the dist directory and attach them to the github release. Do not forget to delete directory dist afterwards.

Versioning

Bashbot is tagged with version numbers. If you start a new development cycle you can tag your fork with a version higher than the current version. E.g. if you fork 'v0.60' the next develop version should tagged as git tag "v0.61-dev" for fixes or git tag "v0.70-dev" for new features.

To get the current version name of your develepment fork run git describe --tags. The output looks like v0.70-dev-6-g3fb7796 where your version tag is followed by the number of commits since you tag your branch and followed by the latest commit hash. see also comments in version.sh

To update the Version Number in files run dev/version.sh files, it will update the line '#### $$VERSION$$ ###' in all files to the current version name. To update version in all files run 'dev/version.sh' without parameter.

Shellcheck

For a shell script running as a service it's important to be paranoid about quoting, globbing and other common problems. So it's a must to run shellchek on all shell scripts before you commit a change. this is automated by a git hook activated in Setup step 6.

To run shellcheck for a single script run shellcheck -x script.sh, to check all schripts run dev/hooks/pre-commit.sh.

bashbot tests

Starting with version 0.70 bashbot has a test suite. To start testsuite run dev/all-tests.sh. all-tests.sh will return 'SUCCESS' only if all tests pass.

enabling / disabling tests

All tests are placed in the directory test. To disable a test remove the execute flag from the '*-test.sh' script, to (re)enable a test make the script executable again.

creating new tests

To create a new test run test/ADD-test-new.sh and answer the questions, it will create the usually needed files and dirs:

Each test consists of a script script named after p-name-test.sh (where p is test pass 'a-z' and name the name of your test) and an optional dir p-name-test/ (script name minus '.sh') for additional files.

Tests with no dependency to other tests will run in pass 'a', tests which need an initialized bahsbot environment must run in pass 'd' or later. A temporary test environment is created when 'ALL-tests.sh' starts and deleted after all tests are finished.

The file ALL-tests.inc.sh must be included from all tests and provide the test environment as shell variables:

# Test Evironment
 TESTME="$(basename "$0")"
 DIRME="$(pwd)"
 TESTDIR="$1"
 LOGFILE="${TESTDIR}/${TESTME}.log"
 REFDIR="${TESTME%.sh}"
 TESTNAME="${REFDIR//-/ }"

# common filenames
 TOKENFILE="token"
 ACLFILE="botacl"
 COUNTFILE="count"
 ADMINFILE="botadmin"
 DATADIR="data-bot-bash"

# SUCCESS NOSUCCES -> echo "${SUCCESS}" or echo "${NOSUCCESS}" 
 SUCCESS="   OK"
 NOSUCCESS="   FAILED!"

# default input, reference and output files
 INPUTFILE="${DIRME}/${REFDIR}/${REFDIR}.input"
 REFFILE="${DIRME}/${REFDIR}/${REFDIR}.result"
 OUTPUTFILE="${TESTDIR}/${REFDIR}.out"

Example test

#!/usr/bin/env bash
# file: b-example-test.sh

# include common functions and definitions
# shellcheck source=test/ALL-tests.inc.sh
source "./ALL-tests.inc.sh"

if [ -f "${TESTDIR}/bashbot.sh" ]; then
	echo "${SUCCESS} bashbot.sh exist!"
	exit 0
else
	echo "${NOSUCCESS} ${TESTDIR}/bashbot.sh missing!"
	exit 1
fi

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$$VERSION$$ v0.80-18-g6b88656