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The Manifold's Provider Documentation is the best place to get started on adding your product to the Manifold's Marketplace.

Introduction

Grafton is a super simple CLI tool used by service providers (and Manifold) to test their integrations with Manifold.

Using this CLI tool, a provider can test the following:

  • Provisioning/Deprovisioning of Resources
  • Provisioning/Deprovisioning of Credentials
  • Rotation of Credentials
  • Resizing of Resources
  • Pulling Resource Measures (optional)

Requests generated by Grafton are the exact same shape and style as those made by the Provisioning service. Using this tool, a provider should be able to implement and test their integration without needing real requests from Manifold.

Installation

Precompiled binaries are build for each release of Grafton for the following platforms:

  • linux / amd64
  • darwin (macos) / amd64
  • windows / amd64

The zip files of these binaries are in the downloads section of each release (i.e. the latest release).

To install, download and unzip the appropriate binary for your system, and run the grafton program inside. You may want to add it to a directory in your PATH for ease of use.

Usage

  1. Generate Keypair

To use, a provider must generate a local public keypair used for signing ephemereal live keypairs. This allows Grafton to generate and sign requests using the same algorithms as Manifold.

$ grafton generate

When a keypair is generated it will be written to a masterkey.json file in the current working directory.

The public key contained in this file can be used by the implemented service to verify the authenticity of the requests made by Grafton

  1. Run Tests

Now that a key has been generated, you can run the tests which will provision a resource, create credentials, create another set of credentials, and then deprovision those before resizing the resource. Finally, Grafton will deprovision the resource.

grafton test --product=bonnets --plan=small --region=aws::us-east-1 \
    --client-id=21jtaatqj8y5t0kctb2ejr6jev5w8 \
    --client-secret=3yTKSiJ6f5V5Bq-kWF0hmdrEUep3m3HKPTcPX7CdBZw \
    --connector-port=3001 \
    --new-plan=large \
    http://localhost:4567

Grafton test output

  1. Mini-Marketplace Connector API

Grafton provides a simple version of Manifold Marketplace that allows to test provision, deprovision and SSO manually.

grafton serve --product=bonnets --plan=simple-hood --region=east-coast --provider-api=http://yourlocalserver/v1

Excluding Features

When testing it is possible to exclude of one more features from being run. To disable Resource Measures and Resize, for example, you can pass: --exclude resource-measures --exclude plan-change.

A full list of available tests you can exclude (which is all of them):

  • cleanup
  • credentials
  • resource-measures
  • provision
  • plan-change
  • sso
  • credential-rotation

Note : resource-measures is a test you are ONLY required to pass if you are using metered pricing. If you are not, you can exclude it.

Developing

Backward compatibility

We strongly enforce Grafton changes to be backward compatible, which means changes to the API should not break existing clients. If a breaking change is necessary, it should be done either as a new endpoint or a new spec version, eg: v2.

In order to guarantee compatibility, we expect any API change to also be implemented for our go example client first, before the change can be approved in Grafton. Our CI takes cares of getting the latest version of the client and test against the new changes.

OpenAPI spec

provider.yaml is a manual copy of an internally generated file. It, in turn, is used to generate the client code under generated.

Until we automate more of this, the following has to be kept in mind:

  • Any changes to provider.yaml should not be merged here directly, but instead ported to the internal file first.
  • If the internal source of provider.yaml changes, the updates must be brought over here.
  • Whenever provider.yaml changes, make generated-clients should be run, and the changes to the generated code should be checked in.

Releasing

Releasing grafton uses promulgate.

  1. Ensure all of the required code has been merged into master.
  2. Determine whether or not the CHANGELOG.md is up to date and correct for this release, if it's not, update it!
  3. Create a tag off master (following semver), which includes the up to date CHANGELOG.md (and matches the remote sha of master on github).
  4. Done! Promulgate via Travis will take care of creating the binaries and uploading the zip files.