Tom Coupland 98880b5474 Add App,Trigger,Fn Equality and Clone Testing (#1159)
Creates a test that aims to assert that the Equals and Clone functions
for our three entity structs actually work.

The bulk of the code is spent creating gopter generators for the entities. See information of generative or property based testing for
explainations on that topic, but basically it's an object that is
capable of creating a stream of unique instances of the given struct.

With the generator we then make three assertions:
 1) Entities are always equal to themselves.
 2) A .Clone() of an entity is Equal to the original entity.
 3) A .Clone() of an entity that has a field modified is not equal to the
 orignal.

The third property is the worse for implementation, as it does not
generate the field to modify, it simply loops all fields for each generated
entity, and checks Equals always breaks.

Break testing shows that this would have caught earlier bugs in Equals
due to field addition. It will add to the work to add further fields,
generators have to be manually specified for each field, but that
seems a worthy cost.
2018-08-22 11:00:04 +01:00
2018-06-20 10:29:10 -07:00
2018-05-09 10:52:52 +03:00
2018-01-17 07:16:22 -08:00
2018-05-09 10:52:52 +03:00
2018-06-21 11:09:16 -07:00
2018-01-17 07:16:22 -08:00

Fn Project

Quickstart  |  Tutorials  |  Docs  |  API  |  Operating  |  Flow  |  UI

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Welcome

Fn is an event-driven, open source, Functions-as-a-Service (FaaS) compute platform that you can run anywhere. Some of its key features:

  • Open Source
  • Native Docker: use any Docker container as your Function
  • Supports all languages
  • Run anywhere
    • Public, private and hybrid cloud
    • Import Lambda functions and run them anywhere
  • Easy to use for developers
  • Easy to manage for operators
  • Written in Go
  • Simple yet powerful extensibility

The fastest way to experience Fn is to follow the quickstart below, or you can jump right to our full documentation, API Docs, or hit us up in our Slack Community!

Quickstart

Pre-requisites

  • Docker 17.10.0-ce or later installed and running
  • A Docker Hub account (Docker Hub) (or other Docker-compliant registry)
  • Log Docker into your Docker Hub account: docker login

Install CLI tool

The command line tool isn't required, but it sure makes things a lot easier. There are a few options to install it:

1. Homebrew - macOS

If you're on a Mac and use Homebrew, this one is for you:

brew install fn

2. Shell script - Linux and macOS

This one works on Linux and macOS (partially on Windows).

If you are running behind a proxy first set your http_proxy and https_proxy environmental variables:

curl -LSs https://raw.githubusercontent.com/fnproject/cli/master/install | sh

This will download a shell script and execute it. If the script asks for a password, that is because it invokes sudo.

3. Download the bin - Linux, macOS and Windows

Head over to our releases and download it.

Run Fn Server

Now fire up an Fn server:

fn start

This will start Fn in single server mode, using an embedded database and message queue. You can find all the configuration options here. If you are on Windows, check here. If you are on a Linux system where the SELinux security policy is set to "Enforcing", such as Oracle Linux 7, check here.

Your First Function

Functions are small but powerful blocks of code that generally do one simple thing. Forget about monoliths when using functions, just focus on the task that you want the function to perform. Our CLI tool will help you get started super quickly.

Create hello world function:

fn init --runtime go hello

This will create a simple function in the directory hello, so let's cd into it:

cd hello

Feel free to check out the files it created or just keep going and look at it later.

# Set your Docker Hub username
export FN_REGISTRY=<DOCKERHUB_USERNAME>

# Run your function locally
fn run

# Deploy your functions to your local Fn server
fn deploy --app myapp --local

Now you can call your function:

curl http://localhost:8080/r/myapp/hello
# or:
fn call myapp /hello

Or in a browser: http://localhost:8080/r/myapp/hello

That's it! You just deployed your first function and called it. Try updating the function code in func.go then deploy it again to see the change.

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Description
The container native, cloud agnostic serverless platform.
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