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Remote Settings

Remote Settings is a Mozilla service that makes it easy to manage evergreen settings data in Firefox. A simple API is available in Firefox for accessing the synchronized data.

https://img.shields.io/badge/Status-Sustain-green

Content

This Remote Settings repository contains the following files and directories of note:

  • bin/: container entry point and script(s)
  • config/: example configuration file(s)
  • docs/: documentation source files
  • kinto-remote-settings/: Kinto plugin specific to Remote Settings
  • tests/: browser/integration/gatekeeper tests
  • pyproject.toml: contains dependency information and (most) config settings
  • VERSION: SemVer version number that serves as both the version of the service and the kinto-remote-settings plugin

Setup

You will need:

Usage

make start

Your Remote Settings instance is now ready at http://localhost:8888. See the *Setup a Local Server* tutorial for more details.

Test Locally

Kinto Remote Settings Unit Tests

To run unit tests, you need Postgres installed and a database testdb available. This can be created with:

make build-db

After this setup is complete, tests can be run with pytest using make:

make test

Browser Tests

With Docker and docker-compose, test that all components are working as expected with:

make build
make browser-test

Note

The docker-compose run web migrate command is only needed once, to prime the PostgreSQL server (this is done automatically for you in the make command). You can flush all the Kinto data in your local persistent PostgreSQL with curl -XPOST http://localhost:8888/v1/__flush__

That will start memcached, postgresql, autograph and Kinto (at web:8888) and lastly the tests container that primarily uses pytest to test various things against http://web:8888/v1.

When you're done running the above command, the individual servers will still be running and occupying those ports on your local network. When you're finished, run:

make stop

Test Remote Server

Browser tests can be executed on a remote server or against the docker-compose containers.

To run the test suite, first build the tests container

docker-compose build tests

or download a pre-built container from Dockerhub.

Next run the tests, supplying config values as necessary. Config values are set as environment variables provided to the Docker container. See tests/conftest.py for descriptions of all of the config options that are available.

Note that the tests assume that the server has the attachments, changes, history, and signer plugins enabled. It may optionally have the email plugin installed.

The credentials passed in SETUP_AUTH should have the permission to create users, buckets, and collections. These credentials will be in the form SETUP_AUTH=username:password or SETUP_AUTH="Bearer some_token"

  • All tests will run under the integration-tests collection in the main-workspace bucket - If the collection does not exist it will be created

  • There should be two users available - one user should be added to the editors group of the available collection - the other should be added to the reviewers group of the available collection - the credentials of these users should be passed in the EDITOR_AUTH and

    REVIEWER_AUTH config options respectively

Running browser tests on the Remote Settings DEV server should look something like:

docker run --rm \
    --env SERVER=https://remote-settings-dev.allizom.org/v1 \
    --env MAIL_DIR="" `#disables test cases related to emails` \
    --env EDITOR_AUTH=<username:password, credentials available in 1Password> \
    --env REVIEWER_AUTH=<username:password, available in 1Password> \
remotesettings/tests browser-test
Because the tests are capable of running against environments with existing data, there are limitations to what they can do. Examples:
  • Test setup is global
  • Test setup and may be partially skipped if the bucket, collection and users already exist
  • All tests have access to the same bucket, collection, and users
  • Tests are not allowed to delete the bucket(s), collection(s) or users
  • Test collection records are purged before each test
  • Test collection is expected to have one property named "title" and a required file attachment

Debugging Locally (simple)

The simplest form of debugging is to run a suite of tests against the Kinto server:

make browser-test

Debugging Locally (advanced)

Suppose you want to play with running the Kinto server, then go into a bash session like this:

docker-compose run --service-ports --user 0 web bash

Now you're root so you can do things like apt-get update && apt-get install jed to install tools and editors. Also, because of the --service-ports if you do start a Kinto server on :8888 it will be exposed from the host.

For example, instead of starting Kinto with uwsgi you can start it manually with kinto start:

kinto start --ini config/local.ini

Another thing you might want to debug is the tests container that tests against the Kinto server.

docker-compose run --rm tests bash

Now, from that bash session you can reach the other services like:

http http://autograph:8000/__heartbeat__
http http://web:8888/v1/__heartbeat__

Upgrade Things

Dependabot is enabled on this repository, so it should keep dependencies up to date.

To manually edit dependency versions, use standard poetry commands. Because our usecase is somewhat complex with multiple groups and some dependencies appearing in multiple groups, sometimes the easiest way to update packages is to edit pyproject.toml to the specified package version, then run:

poetry lock --no-update

to update the lockfile.

To test that this installs run:

make install

About versioning

We respect SemVer here. However, the "public API" of this package is not the user-facing API of the service itself, but is considered to be the set of configuration and services that this package and its dependencies use. Accordingly, follow these rules:

  • MAJOR must be incremented if a change on configuration, system, or third-party service is required, or if any of the dependencies has a major increment
  • MINOR must be incremented if any of the dependencies has a minor increment
  • PATCH must be incremented if no major nor minor increment is necessary.

In other words, minor and patch versions are uncomplicated and can be deployed automatically, and major releases are very likely to require specific actions somewhere in the architecture.

Releasing

  1. Go to project's releases on Github https://github.com/mozilla/remote-settings/releases
  2. Publish a new release and tag vX.Y.Z, using autogenerated changelog
  3. Watch for deployment notifications in the Mozilla #kinto-standup Slack channel.

In order to deploy to production:

  1. Go to deployment workflow page
  2. Click on Run workflow
  3. Pick Branch=main, Environment=prod, ref=refs/tags/vX.Y.Z, and click Run workflow
  4. Go to deployment workflow page
  5. Click on the latest prod run
  6. Review pending deployments and click Approve and deploy

See Environments section for more details about deployments.