package github-hooks
Install
Dune Dependency
Authors
Maintainers
Sources
sha256=bbcd887dc1860eb05a21a63b1abb46669fe30e724dd72cbdab0e5f5712347fe2
md5=a38ffb298e3efeebf683106f37f4cb7d
Description
Library to create GitHub webhook server.
Web hook tests
This repository contains a GitHub web hook test harness that confirms
that ocaml-github can parse both polled and web-hook-received events and
that the expected events are delivered in the correct order. To run the
test_hook_server
program, you must have a publicly accessible IP
address with a DNS A
record and a TLS certificate. You can use Let's
Encrypt to get a TLS certificate for your
domain for free. test_hook_server
should be run from an account on the
public-facing machine which also has agent access to an SSH key which is
registered with GitHub. I recommend using a remote VM for the domain and
forwarding a local ssh agent with something like ssh -A example.net
.
Once this is configured, place your TLS certificate in the file
webhook.crt
and the key for that certificate in
webhook.key
. Generate a personal GitHub token named test
with git jar make --scopes=admin:repo_hook,delete_repo,repo [GitHub token username] test
(with the git-jar
subcommand from
mirage/ocaml-github) which has
admin:repo_hook
, delete_repo
, and repo
authority scopes. This
token has quite a lot of authority so it is important to keep safe or
use a test account rather than your primary GitHub account.
Finally, run make test
and then _build/test/test_hook_server.native https://example.net:4433 [GitHub token username] test-github-hooks [GitHub SSH username]
to run the tests on your server at example.net
on port 4433
as the user [GitHub token username]
but git-pushing as the
user [GitHub SSH username]
. The test program will create and delete the
repository test-github-hooks
in the process of running. If the tests
fail, you may have to remove the cloned repository called
test-github-hooks
and the GitHub repository [GitHub token username]/test-github-hooks
.
README
github-hooks -- GitHub API web hook listener library
Library to create GitHub webhook server.
Web hook tests
This repository contains a GitHub web hook test harness that confirms that ocaml-github can parse both polled and web-hook-received events and that the expected events are delivered in the correct order. To run the test_hook_server
program, you must have a publicly accessible IP address with a DNS A
record and a TLS certificate. You can use Let's Encrypt to get a TLS certificate for your domain for free. test_hook_server
should be run from an account on the public-facing machine which also has agent access to an SSH key which is registered with GitHub. I recommend using a remote VM for the domain and forwarding a local ssh agent with something like ssh -A example.net
.
Once this is configured, place your TLS certificate in the file webhook.crt
and the key for that certificate in webhook.key
. Generate a personal GitHub token named test
with git jar make --scopes=admin:repo_hook,delete_repo,repo [GitHub token username] test
(with the git-jar
subcommand from mirage/ocaml-github) which has admin:repo_hook
, delete_repo
, and repo
authority scopes. This token has quite a lot of authority so it is important to keep safe or use a test account rather than your primary GitHub account.
Finally, run make test
and then _build/test/test_hook_server.native https://example.net:4433 [GitHub token username] test-github-hooks [GitHub SSH username]
to run the tests on your server at example.net
on port 4433
as the user [GitHub token username]
but git-pushing as the user [GitHub SSH username]
. The test program will create and delete the repository test-github-hooks
in the process of running. If the tests fail, you may have to remove the cloned repository called test-github-hooks
and the GitHub repository [GitHub token username]/test-github-hooks
.