Skip to content
/ salto Public
forked from salto-io/salto

Salto enables you to manage your business applications' configuration in code

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

netama/salto

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Salto Monorepo

Knuckles

CircleCI Coverage Status code style: prettier

Salto allows you to manage your business applications' configuration in code. By doing so, it enables modern devops style methodologies for development, testing and deployment for these business applications.

Salto consists of 3 main components:

  1. The NaCl language — a declarative configuration language (follows the syntax of hcl), specifically designed to describe the configuration of modern business applications.
  2. The Salto command line interface — a tool which uses NaCl files to manage the configuration of business applications, with operations such as deploy (to deploy configuration changes to a business application) and fetch (to fetch the latest state of a business application into NaCl files). This tool is composed of a core processing engine, and various adapters to interact with the different business applications.
  3. The Salto vs-code extension — An extension to the popular vs-code IDE to easily interact with NaCl files.

For more information, see the user guide and the FAQ.

To report issues or ask about using the Salto CLI - please join our public Slack channel here.

Installing salto

CLI

Please head to our releases page. There you'll find prebuilt binaries for major OSes (MacOS, Linux, Windows).

VSCode extension

See the vscode package documentation

Running using docker

docker build --tag salto-cli .
docker run salto-cli

Building from source

  1. Install Node.js 18.9.0. You can download it directly from here, or use Node Version Manager (NVM) (simply run nvm use) to install it.
  2. Run Corepack: corepack enable to install and set up the relevant yarn version
  3. Verify Yarn and Node.js versions using node -v (should be 18.9.x) and yarn -v (should be 3.1.0)
  4. Fetch dependencies and build:
$ yarn
$ yarn build

Running tests

$ yarn test

E2E tests

By default, yarn test will run only unit tests - stored at the tests directory of each package.

E2E (end-to-end) tests are stored at the e2e_tests directories. To run them, define the RUN_E2E_TESTS=1 environment variable:

RUN_E2E_TESTS=1 yarn test

E2E tests are run on CircleCI builds, and you should also run them locally before creating a PR.

Important E2E tests for the cli and salesforce-adapter need valid SFDC credentials to run.

Creating a release

Salto is versioned using the semantic versioning scheme. Therefore, when composing a new release, we would:

  1. Bump the version in the packages' package.json files. For that, we're using lerna
  2. Tag the git repository with the new version
  3. Publish the packages in this repo to npm
  4. Build artifacts and attach them to a new release in this repository

Here is how to do it:

TL;DR Quick method

Install GitHub CLI and configure it (for example by running gh pr status). Make sure you're on main, no local changes, CI status is passing, and run:

yarn lerna-version-pr [BUMP]

Where BUMP is a lerna version; default is patch

This will create a PR labeled VERSION. Once the PR is merged, the version will be published and a git tag will be created.

Create a PR manually

1. Create a new version
yarn lerna-version [BUMP]
2. Commit and push the version to git

Submit a PR and have it merged.

Once the PR is merged, the version will be published and a git tag will be created.

Usage instructions

See READMEs of individual packages under the packages directory.

License

Licensed under the Salto Terms of Use

About

Salto enables you to manage your business applications' configuration in code

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • TypeScript 99.1%
  • Python 0.4%
  • JavaScript 0.4%
  • Shell 0.1%
  • Apex 0.0%
  • CSS 0.0%