1 unstable release
0.2.1 | Mar 28, 2019 |
---|
#9 in #reservation
68KB
1.5K
SLoC
Bellhop
Bellhop is a web application for reserving different assets, like machines or IP addresses
Introduction
Purpose
Are you part of a team of ten that shares three testing environments? Do you keep a spreadsheet of who's using what IP addresses? Need a way to keep track of who's borrowing which virtual machine?
If you answered yes to any of those questions, Bellhop might be able to help. Bellhop is a super simple asset reservation tool that keeps track of who's using what, until when.
For more information, including a live demo, checkout bellhop.rs.
Project Structure
bellhop/
- The core library that implements most of Bellhop's features.bellhop-demo/
- A runnable example that demos adding hooks and starting the server.bellhop-hook-email/
- A hook that sends an email when your lease is expiring.bellhop-hook-jenkins/
- A hook that starts a Jenkins job for each event.bellhop-auth-dummy/
- Authentication plugin that only requires an email address.bellhop-auth-header/
- Authentication plugin that creates users based on a header.
Design
Bellhop is designed to be heavily customized and installed internally. Additional functionality
can be added by writing hooks (like bellhop-hook-jenkins
.) Authentication is customizable as
well, with pluggable modules like bellhop-auth-header
.
Usage
At this point, Bellhop is more like a set of crates you assemble yourself into a web application than a web application itself.
A good starting point is getting bellhop-demo
running, then using that as an example to build
your own deployment.
First Time Setup
The following instructions are roughly tailored for Ubuntu, but should be relatively similar regardless of the platform. Bellhop is regularly compiled for Ubuntu and OS X, and should compile on Windows as well.
Installing Rust
The project requires the latest Rust nightly. You can install that with rustup:
$ curl https://sh.rustup.rs -sSf | sh -s -- --default-toolchain nightly
Installing PostgreSQL
Bellhop uses PostgreSQL as its database. Any version greater than or equal to 9.5 should work.
Ubuntu/Debian
# Install the server and client libraries.
$ sudo apt install postgresql-9.5 postgresql-client libpq-dev
# Create a user, identified with a password.
$ sudo -u postgres createuser -P bellhop
# Create a new database owned by the same user.
$ sudo -u postgres createdb -O bellhop bellhop
OS X (Homebrew)
Install Homebrew at https://brew.sh/
# Install the server and client libraries.
brew install postgres
brew services start postgresql
# Create a user, identified with a password.
createuser -P bellhop
# Create a new database owned by the same user.
createdb -O bellhop bellhop
Installing Diesel
To perform database migrations, you'll need to install diesel_cli
:
$ cargo install diesel_cli --no-default-features --features postgres
Obtain Bellhop
The easiest way to grab all the components is to clone the Bellhop repository:
$ git clone https://github.com/bellhop-rs/bellhop
Perform Migrations
The core application, as well as some hooks, will have database migrations that need to be applied for the application to function.
# Make sure to update this line with the password supplied earlier.
$ export DATABASE_URL=postgres://bellhop:<password>@localhost/bellhop
# Apply the core application's migrations. Note: `bellhop` refers to this repo's `bellhop` subdirectory.
$ cd bellhop
$ diesel migration run
# Apply any hook's migrations.
$ cd ../bellhop-hook-jenkins
$ diesel migration run
Run Bellhop, Finally
To run Bellhop in "demo" mode:
$ cargo run --bin bellhop-demo
Note that bellhop-demo
doesn't require any kind of passwords to log in. It really isn't suitable
for production use without some customization.
Development
Generating bellhop-client
bellhop-client
is generated with openapi-generator
.
To regenerate the API client library:
$ openapi-generator generate \
-i bellhop/openapi/bellhop.yaml \
-g rust \
-o bellhop-client \
--skip-validate-spec \
--library reqwest \
--additional-properties packageName=bellhop-client
License
Bellhop is licensed under:
- Apache License, Version 2.0, (LICENSE-APACHE or http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0)
Contribution
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in Bellhop by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.
Dependencies
~41MB
~806K SLoC