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Polyglot Debian Engineering Sandbox Setup

If you're using Windows 10 with WSL2, create a "disposable" Debian WSL2 instance using Windows Store. This project treats the WSL2 instance as "disposable" meaning it's for development only and can easily be destroyed and recreated whenever necessary. The cost for creation and destruction for a Engineering Sandbox should be so low that it should be treated almost as a container rather than a VM.

If you're using a Debian-based distro you should be able to run this repo in any Debian user account.

1. Clone the Engineering Sandbox Git repo

cd $HOME
sudo apt-get update              # if you do not have `sudo` privileges, ask your admin
sudo apt-get install -y git vim  # if you do not have `sudo` privileges, ask your admin
git clone https://github.com/shah/engineering-sandbox-debian.git .engrsb

2. Understand how to manage your secrets and other confidential configurations

It's crucial that confidential config settings and secrets are never acccidentally stored in project Git repositories so it's important to manage secrets in your $HOME directory. You can then source them into projects as you need them explicitly.

By explicitly managing secrets you will be sure that passwords and other secrets never get put into scripts and are always sourced from the environment or external "vaults".

By convention, all secrets are stored in $HOME/.engrsb/secrets.d as separate secrets "groups" so let's prepare the directory:

cd $HOME/.engrsb
./install-secrets.sh

Edit secrets.d/git.env and secrets.d/github.com.env and add your credentials. You should segment your secrets into separate files so that they're easy to find and edit. Then, when you need them you can use this in your terminal/shell:

source $SANDBOX_CONF_HOME/secrets.env

The default $SANDBOX_CONF_HOME/secrets.env just loops through each file in $HOME/.engrsb/secrets.d and sources them into the active shell. If you only need to pull in a particular secrets group you can run something like this:

source $SANDBOX_CONF_SECRETS_HOME/git.env
source $SANDBOX_CONF_SECRETS_HOME/github.com.env

3. Initial setup

Once you've cloned the repo and setup your secrets, run the setup from your $HOME directory.

cd $HOME
sudo .engrsb/setup-privileged-common.sh   # run only when necessary, system-wide (should be done by admin)
.engrsb/setup.sh                          # run regularly, in each home (safe, does not require `sudo`)
sudo usermod --shell /bin/zsh $USER       # only required once (should be done by admin)

The above setup steps are generally idempotent and can be run multiple times, whenever you need to update your sandbox.

3.1 Upgrade setup

The sandbox prep scripts are idempotent so you can run the same to do an upgrade:

cd $HOME
sudo .engrsb/setup-privileged-common.sh   # run only when necessary, system-wide (should be done by admin)
.engrsb/setup.sh                          # run regularly, in each home (safe, does not require `sudo`)

4. Examine what was setup automatically:

  • zsh as the default shell
  • rupa/z directory navigation utility
  • Antigen and oh-my-zsh script framework
    • git-auto-fetch is turned on, see instructions to turn it off for certain repos
  • GitHub CLI (official), glab GitLab CLI (unofficial)
  • git-semver script courtesy of semtag
  • Powerline 10k Theme with nice defaults
  • fsql for SQL-esque queries on the file system
  • Python with pyenv
  • Hugo, Deno, Just in .engrsb/bin (and in $PATH)
  • Google Go in .engrsb/lang/go
  • Update Deno Dependencies (UDD) utility for deps.ts and module versions management
  • nvm, NodeJS LTS release, ESlint and Typescript as peer dependency for ESlint.
  • SDKMAN! Java toolchain (TODO: move from $HOME to .engrsb/lang/java)
  • Rust toolchain (TODO: move from $HOME/.rustup to .engrsb/lang/rustup)
  • Julia toolchain
  • Lazy Docker in /usr/local/bin
  • git-extras
  • pg_format
  • M4 text preprocessor (for code generator)
  • golang-migrate and Sqitch DB migration utilities

5. Setup optional toolchains

  • Haxe and Neko toolchain (not installed by default, use cd $HOME && .engrsb/install-haxe.sh to setup)
  • Common data engineering utilities (use cd $HOME && .engrsb/install-data-engr.sh to setup)
  • Dolt toolchain (use cd $HOME && .engrsb/install-dolt.sh to setup)

Python Notes

Python is installed using pyenv. Before using it for the first time:

pyenv install-latest
pyenv global $(pyenv install --list | grep -v - | grep -v b | tail -1)
python -m pip install --upgrade pip
pip install pylint

Java Notes

Java is installed using SDKMAN!. Before using it for the first time:

sdk install java
sdk use java <version>

NodeJS and NPM Packaging Notes

We use GitHub NPM Package Registry. Use these instructions.

Create $HOME/.npmrc with the following contents:

//npm.pkg.github.com/:_authToken=<Personal Access Token>

Then:

npm login --registry=https://npm.pkg.github.com

Julia Notes

Multiple versions of Julia are supported in $HOME/.engrsb/lang/julia/julia-X.Y.Z with $HOME/.engrsb/lang/julia/latest symlink and $HOME/.engrsb/lang/julia/latest/bin in path.

Ubuntu Notes

While this repo is mainly designed for Debian, if you're using Ubuntu you might need to do the following after calling .engsb/setup.sh per this discussion:

sudo curl -o /usr/share/zsh-antigen/antigen.zsh -sL git.io/antigen

Upgrading from 1.0.x to 1.1.x

The major change from 1.0 to 1.1 is that there is a cleaner separation of privileged (sudo required) versus unprivileged (no sudo required). The other change is that now all the languages are put into .engrsb/lang instead of the $HOME directory. This should help further isolate engineering sandbox related content from a normal $HOME directory.

To upgrade from 1.0 to 1.1.0:

cd $HOME/.engrsb
git pull
rm -rf neno haxe
cd $HOME
rm -rf .julia .npm .nvm .pyenv
sudo rm -rf /usr/local/go
.engrsb/setup.sh

Exit your shell, and then start a new shell to see the latest updates.

To upgrade from 1.1.0 to 1.1.1:

cd $HOME/.engrsb
git pull
cd $HOME
sudo .engrsb/setup-privileged-common.sh   

Exit your shell, and then start a new shell to see the latest updates.

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