Satis Control Panel
Satis Control Panel (SCP) is a simple web UI for managing your Satis Repository for Composer Packages.
SCP backend is written in Laravel and with a React + Typescript combo.
Features
- simple UI for managing your Satis configuration file for both - private packages and public packages mirrored from Packagist
- no database required - only PHP and optional Nodejs server for automatic generation of Satis configuration file
- RESTful API for integration with CI services
- SCP comes with Atlassian plugins for Bamboo and Stash to ease managing package building
- Cron job for automatic build of public packages mirrored from Packagist
Installation
You can install SCP directly with Composer by running
composer create-project realshadow/satis-control-panel [--stability-dev]
After that you can rename example.env
to .env
and set required configuration options.
Building javascript
npm run build
// or
npm run build-win
During development you can start Webpack dev server with
npm start
or run Gulp watcher for less
files with
gulp watch
Satis configuration file
In resources/
directory you will find satis.json.dist
file which holds default Satis configuration, copy this file and
rename it to satis.json
and edit the name
and homepage
property.
cp resources/satis.json.dist resources/satis.json
When you are done, you have to set correct permissions for your configuration file for web user. E.g. www-data, should be able to read/write this file). More in next Permissions section.
Permissions
For building to work correctly you have to set correct permissions to few directories/directories:
- bootstrap/cache/
- storage/
- public/private/
- public/public/
- resources/satis.json
Each directory/file should be readable/writable by web user, e.g. www-data. For example:
chmod -R ug+rwx bootstrap/cache storage public/private public/public
chmod ug+rwx resources/satis.json
Webserver setup
Your document root should point to the public
folder in the root as per default Laravel setup
Apache - example vhost
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName satis.example.com
DocumentRoot /var/www/html/satis.example.com/public
</VirtualHost>
Nginx - example vhost
server {
listen 80 default_server;
root /var/www/html/satis.example.com/public;
index index.php index.html index.htm;
location / {
try_files $uri $uri/ /index.php$is_args$args;
}
# pass the PHP scripts to FastCGI server liste_ning on /var/run/php5-fpm.sock
location ~ \.php$ {
try_files $uri /index.php =404;
fastcgi_pass unix:/var/run/php5-fpm.sock;
fastcgi_index index.php;
fastcgi_param SCRIPT_FILENAME $document_root$fastcgi_script_name;
include fastcgi_params;
}
}
Visiting your control panel and generated packages
The control panel is located at http://{host}/control-panel
and the packages will be generated (after first build of course) at http://{host}/public
and http://{host}/private
respectively.
Separating them like this adds a bit more configuration options. If for example you want to only use private packages,
you can change the directory of private_repository
configuration option to public
instead of public/private
and have your
packages generated at http://{host}
and still have a functioning control panel.
Configuration options
Here is a list of configuration options that can be set in config/satis.php
(some of them can be set in .env
file as well for convenience):
Option | Description | Default value | Can be set in .env |
---|---|---|---|
config | Path to satis configuration file | resources/satis.json | Yes |
composer_home | Composer home directory (thi | storage/composer | Yes |
composer_cache | Composer cache directory | storage/composer/cache | Yes |
memory_limit | Memory limit that will be set before running Satis build command | 2G | No |
build_verbosity | Verbosity of Satis build command (more info will be stored in logs) | vvv | No |
private_repository | Directory where Satis will generate private repository. This also serves as a way to distinguish public and private repositories in repository address, e.g. satis.example.com/private | private | No |
public_repository | Directory where Satis will generate public repository. This also serves as a way to distinguish public and private repositories in repository address, e.g. satis.example.com/public | public | No |
proxy.http | Proxy address that will be used by Satis/Composer for HTTP requests | null | Yes |
proxy.https | Proxy address that will be used by Satis/Composer for HTTPS requests | null | Yes |
proxy.https | See https://www.selenic.com/mercurial/hg.1.html#environment-variables for details | null | Yes |
Note: if you change the default directory, remember to set correct permissions for your new directory.
How it works
SCP manages a single Satis configuration file which is generated on the fly when specific UI actions are performed. During each generation cycle the file is split into public and private repository configuration file, because private packages use funcionality that doesn't work well with Packagist (it will try to mirror whole Packagist repository).
Besides adding, editing and removing packages/repositories from configuration file, UI allows you to build/rebuild every package or run a complete rebuild of all registered packages/repositories.
Build process can run synchronously or asynchronously (by redirecting output to /dev/null
and spawning a new process). By default,
all builds run asynchronously, except on Windows where they are forced to run synchronously. This can be also forced during during API
request by setting async_mode
to false
.
Missing or broken mirrored configuration files
Since the configuration files mirroring is triggered by any UI action, it is not always the correct behaviour. If you want to manually trigger config generation, for example when you make changes directly on the server, you can trigger the config generation with this artisan command
php artisan satis:make:config
UI State
During build process whole UI is locked. During asynchronous builds UI state is handled by Node server, but running it is completely optional.
It can be started with
npm run server
and will run on port 9010
by default. This can be changed in node/config.json
file.
If for some reason UI will stay locked even though no packages are currently being build, it can be unlocked by running:
php artisan satis:persister:unlock
Composer auth
Composer file auth.json
can be put in COMPOSER_HOME
directory where you can put your Github token or credentials for
needed for private repositories.
Private packages
Private packages are identified by repository URL address. When you will add/edit a new repository you can choose its type.
By default, all repositories are considered as VCS
repository. Building and rebuilding is handled by partial update
functionality introduced in this PR only repositories that have a URL can be
managed in UI. Those include:
- vcs
- hg
- pear
- composer
- artifact
- path
Adding support for more repository types is planned in future.
Private packages use the repositories
config key with require-all
options set to true
, thus all known packages are
taken out of registered repositories, which means that Packagist must be disabled by default. This is handled when configs
are split into private public part.
Public (packagist) packages
Public packages are used for mirroring of existing packages that can be installed from Packagist if you are behind a corporate proxy, thus speeding up overall development and deployment time.
All packages added here are fully mirrored with all their dependencies (but we still skip dev-dependencies
). Currently
only one version constraint is used and that's *
so we can get a complete packagist clone.
Adding support for custom version constraints is planned in future.
Since full rebuild in this case could potentionally take few hours, you can use provided Cron task for a daily rebuild (see Cron task section).
Note though that you should not try to mirror whole Packagist repository!
RESTful API
SCP comes with built in API for esier integration with your favorite CI solution.
Private packages
Private packages use md5
encoded repository url as ID.
- get all repositories
GET control-panel/api/repository
- get one repository
GET control-panel/api/repository/{repository_id}
- add new repository
POST control-panel/api/repository
{
'url': 'foo',
'type: 'bar'
}
- update existing repository
PUT control-panel/api/repository/{repository_id}
{
'url': 'foo',
'type: 'bar'
}
- delete existing repository
DELETE control-panel/api/repository/{repository_id}
All methods return HTTP 404
if no repository is found.
Note: same API can be used for public packages as well by replacing repository
by package
. Although remote control of public packages is not necessary.
Additional API options
During both POST
and PUT
requests two additional options can be provided:
- async_mode - true/false => if the build should run synchronously or asynchronously (all builds run asynchronously by default)
- disable_build - true/false => if set to
true
Satis build command won't be run
Logs
All logs can be found in storage/logs
directory. Logs are divided into:
- api_request.log - logs all API requests
- builder_async.log - logs all builds that run asynchronously, keep in mind that each asynchronous build has its own log file in
async
subdirectory identified by its timestamp - builder_sync.log - logs all builds that run synchronously
- cron.log - for cron task logs
Cron task
Since mirroring of public packages can take some time and running full rebuild from UI is not a good idea, because this will lock it during the build process, SCP comes with a built in cron task that runs daily and will rebuild all repositories. It can be triggered with a cron entry similar to this:
* * * * * php /path/to/satis-folder/artisan schedule:run >> /dev/null 2>&1
Alternatively, you can add this cron entry:
00 00 * * * curl --request POST --header "Content-Length: 0" --header "X-Requested-With: XMLHttpRequest" http://{scp-url-address}/control-panel/build-public
This can be used for private packages as well
00 00 * * * curl --request POST --header "Content-Length: 0" --header "X-Requested-With: XMLHttpRequest" http://{scp-url-address}/control-panel/build-private
Atlassian plugins
SCP was created in an environment which uses Atlassian Stash and Bamboo as part of CI and thus two plugins were needed to completely integrate Composer packages into our build process.
- Stash Satis Build Hook - a post receive hook that will register and trigger a build/rebuild of your package in SCP (if you want to skip deployment process)
- Bamboo Satis Build - a deployment task for rebuilding currently deployed Composer package in Satis repository
Both use partial update
functionality which was introduced in this PR.
TODO
- option to import composer.lock file for public packages
- option to use more types of private packages
- option to write custom version constraints for public packages
- option to see what's going during long running builds of public packages
- better handling of race conditions during simultaneous writes/reads
- authentification? (this can be simply handled with htpasswd)
- ????
PR's are welcome