This document describes how to set up a development environment for Calico, as well as how to build and test development code.
This guide is broken into the following main sections:
These build instructions assume you have a Linux build environment with:
- Docker
- git
- make
To build all of Calico, run the following command from the root of the repository.
make image DEV_REGISTRY=my-registry
This will produce several docker-images, each tagged with the registry provided.
To build just one image, you can run the same command in a particular sub-directory.
For example, to build calico/node
, run the following:
make -C node image
By default, images will be produced for the build machine's architecture. To cross-compile, pass the ARCH
environment variable. For example, to
build for arm64, run the following:
make image ARCH=arm64
- Now, build the YAML manifests that are used to install calico:
make dev-manifests
The build uses the go package cache and local vendor caching to increase build speed. To perform a clean build, use the dev-clean
target.
make dev-clean dev-image
The following are the standard Makefile
targets that are in every project directory.
make build
: build the binary for the current architecture. Normally will be inbin/
ordist/
and namedNAME-ARCH
, e.g.felix-arm64
ortypha-amd64
. If there are multiple OSes available, then namedNAME-OS-ARCH
, e.g.calicoctl-darwin-amd64
.make build ARCH=<ARCH>
: build the binary for the givenARCH
. Output binary will be inbin/
ordist/
and follows the naming convention listed above.make build-all
: build binaries for all supported architectures. Output binaries will be inbin/
ordist/
and follow the naming convention listed above.make image
: create a docker image for the current architecture. It will be namedNAME:latest-ARCH
, e.g.calico/felix:latest-amd64
orcalico/typha:latest-s390x
. If multiple operating systems are available, will be namedNAME:latest-OS-ARCH
, e.g.calico/ctl:latest-linux-ppc64le
make image ARCH=<ARCH>
: create a docker image for the givenARCH
. Images will be named according to the convention listed above.make image-all
: create docker images for all supported architectures. Images will be named according to the convention listed above inmake image
.make test
: run all testsmake ci
: run all CI steps for build and test, likely other targets. WARNING: It is not recommended to runmake ci
locally, as the actions it takes may be destructive.make cd
: run all CD steps, normally pushing images out to registries. WARNING: It is not recommended to runmake cd
locally, as the actions it takes may be destructive, e.g. pushing out images. For your safety, it only will work if you runmake cd CONFIRM=true
, which only should be run by the proper CI system.
Each directory has its own set of automated tests that live in-tree and can be run without the need to deploy an end-to-end Kubernetes system. The easiest way to run the tests is to submit a PR with your changes, which will trigger a build on the CI system.
If you'd like to run them locally we recommend running each directory's test suite individually,
since running the tests for the entire codebase can take a very long time. Use the test
target in a particular directory to run that
directory's tests.
make test
For information on how to run a subset of a directory's tests, refer to the documentation and Makefile in that directory.