If you haven’t set up your developer environment, please do so before continuing with this section.
Join the Developers community channel to ask questions from community members and the Mattermost core team.
Here’s a general workflow for a Mattermost developer working on the mattermost repository:
Review the repository structure to familiarize yourself with the project:
On your fork, create a feature branch for your changes. Name it MM-$NUMBER_$DESCRIPTION
where $NUMBER
is the Jira ticket number you are working on and $DESCRIPTION
is a short description of your changes. Example branch names are MM-18150_plugin-panic-log
and MM-22037_uppercase-email
.
Make the code changes required to complete your ticket.
Ensure that unit tests are written or modified where appropriate. For the server repository in general, Mattermost follows the opinionated way of testing in Go. You can learn more about this process in DigitalOcean's How To Write Unit Tests in Go tutorial. Test files must always end with _test.go
, and should be located in the same folder where the code they are checking lives. For example, check out download.go and download_test.go, which are both located in the app
folder. Please also use testify for new tests.
If you made changes to the store, run make store-mocks
and make store-layers
to update test mocks and timing layer.
To test your changes, run make run-server
from the root directory of the server repository. This will start up the server at http://localhost:8065
. To get changes to the server it must be restarted with make restart-server
. If you want to test with the web app, you may also run make run
which will start the server and a watcher for changes to the web app.
Once everything works to meet the ticket requirements, stop Mattermost by running make stop
in the server repository, then run make check-style
to check your syntax.
Run the tests using one or more of the following options:
make test
to run all the tests in the project. This may take a long time and provides very little feedback while it’s running.go test -run "TestName" ./<directory>
.go test app
.Running every single unit test takes a lot of time while making changes, so you can run a subset of the server-side unit tests by using the following:
go test -v -run='<test name or regex>' ./<package containing test>
For example, if you want to run TestUpdatePost
in app/post_test.go
, you would execute the following:
go test -v -run='TestUpdatePost' ./app
If you added or changed any localization strings you will need to run make i18n-extract
to generate the new/updated strings.
mattermost
binary in /opt/gitlab/embedded/bin/mattermost
./opt/gitlab/embedded/service/mattermost
.Some useful make
commands include:
make run
runs the server, creates a symlink for your mattermost-webapp folder, and starts a watcher for the web app.make stop
stops the server and the web app watcher.make run-server
runs only the server and not the client.make debug-server
will run the server in the delve
debugger.make stop-server
stops only the server.make update-docker
stops and updates your Docker images. This is needed if any changes are made to docker-compose.yaml
.make clean-docker
stops and removes your Docker images and is a good way to wipe your database.make clean
cleans your local environment of temporary files.make config-reset
resets the config/config.json
file to the default.make nuke
wipes your local environment back to a completely fresh start.make package
creates packages for distributing your builds and puts them in the ./dist
directory. You will first need to run make build
and make build-client
.If you would like to run the development environment without Docker you can set the MM_NO_DOCKER
environment variable. If you do this, you will need to set up your own database and any of the other services needed to run Mattermost.
During development you may want to reset the database and generate random data for testing your changes. For this purpose, Mattermost has the following commands in the Mattermost CLI:
First, install the server with go install ./cmd/mattermost
in the server repository.
You can reset your database to the initial state using:
mattermost db reset
The following commands need to be run via the mmctl tool.
You can generate random data to populate the Mattermost database using:
mmctl sampledata
Create an account using the following command:
mmctl user create --email user@example.com --username test1 --password mypassword
Optionally, you can assign that account System Admin rights with the following command:
mmctl user create --email user@example.com --username test1 --password mypassword --system_admin
You can customize variables of the Makefile by creating a config.override.mk
file or setting environment variables. To get started, you can copy the config.mk
file to config.override.mk
and change the values in your newly copied file.
If you create a docker-compose.override.yaml
file at the root of the project, it will be automatically loaded by all the Makefile
tasks using docker-compose
, allowing you to define your own services or change the configuration of the ones Mattermost provides.