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hacking on tangled#

We highly recommend installing nix (the package manager) before working on the codebase. The nix flake provides a lot of helpers to get started and most importantly, builds and dev shells are entirely deterministic.

To set up your dev environment:

nix develop

Non-nix users can look at the devShell attribute in the flake.nix file to determine necessary dependencies.

running the appview#

The nix flake also exposes a few app attributes (run nix flake show to see a full list of what the flake provides), one of the apps runs the appview with the air live-reloader:

TANGLED_DEV=true nix run .#watch-appview

# TANGLED_DB_PATH might be of interest to point to
# different sqlite DBs

# in a separate shell, you can live-reload tailwind
nix run .#watch-tailwind

To authenticate with the appview, you will need redis and OAUTH JWKs to be setup:

# oauth jwks should already be setup by the nix devshell:
echo $TANGLED_OAUTH_JWKS
{"crv":"P-256","d":"tELKHYH-Dko6qo4ozYcVPE1ah6LvXHFV2wpcWpi8ab4","kid":"1753352226","kty":"EC","x":"mRzYpLzAGq74kJez9UbgGfV040DxgsXpMbaVsdy8RZs","y":"azqqXzUYywMlLb2Uc5AVG18nuLXyPnXr4kI4T39eeIc"}

# if not, you can set it up yourself:
go build -o genjwks.out ./cmd/genjwks
export TANGLED_OAUTH_JWKS="$(./genjwks.out)"

# run redis in at a new shell to store oauth sessions
redis-server

running knots and spindles#

An end-to-end knot setup requires setting up a machine with sshd, AuthorizedKeysCommand, and git user, which is quite cumbersome. So the nix flake provides a nixosConfiguration to do so.

MacOS users will have to setup a Nix Builder first

In order to build Tangled's dev VM on macOS, you will first need to set up a Linux Nix builder. The recommended way to do so is to run a darwin.linux-builder VM and to register it in nix.conf as a builder for Linux with the same architecture as your Mac (linux-aarch64 if you are using Apple Silicon).

IMPORTANT: You must build darwin.linux-builder somewhere other than inside the tangled repo so that it doesn't conflict with the other VM. For example, you can do

cd $(mktemp -d buildervm.XXXXX) && nix run nixpkgs#darwin.linux-builder

to store the builder VM in a temporary dir.

You should read and follow [all the other intructions][darwin builder vm] to avoid subtle problems.

Alternatively, you can use any other method to set up a Linux machine with nix installed that you can sudo ssh into (in other words, root user on your Mac has to be able to ssh into the Linux machine without entering a password) and that has the same architecture as your Mac. See remote builder instructions for how to register such a builder in nix.conf.

WARNING: If you'd like to use nixos-lima or Orbstack, note that setting them up so that sudo ssh works can be tricky. It seems to be possible with Orbstack.

To begin, grab your DID from http://localhost:3000/settings. Then, set TANGLED_VM_KNOT_OWNER and TANGLED_VM_SPINDLE_OWNER to your DID. You can now start a lightweight NixOS VM like so:

nix run --impure .#vm

# type `poweroff` at the shell to exit the VM

This starts a knot on port 6000, a spindle on port 6555 with ssh exposed on port 2222.

Once the services are running, head to http://localhost:3000/knots and hit verify. It should verify the ownership of the services instantly if everything went smoothly.

You can push repositories to this VM with this ssh config block on your main machine:

Host nixos-shell
    Hostname localhost
    Port 2222
    User git
    IdentityFile ~/.ssh/my_tangled_key

Set up a remote called local-dev on a git repo:

git remote add local-dev git@nixos-shell:user/repo
git push local-dev main

running a spindle#

The above VM should already be running a spindle on localhost:6555. Head to http://localhost:3000/spindles and hit verify. You can then configure each repository to use this spindle and run CI jobs.

Of interest when debugging spindles:

# service logs from journald:
journalctl -xeu spindle

# CI job logs from disk:
ls /var/log/spindle

# debugging spindle db:
sqlite3 /var/lib/spindle/spindle.db

# litecli has a nicer REPL interface:
litecli /var/lib/spindle/spindle.db

If for any reason you wish to disable either one of the services in the VM, modify nix/vm.nix and set services.tangled-spindle.enable (or services.tangled-knot.enable) to false.