Sitecore.Ship
Sitecore.Ship is a lightweight means to install Sitecore Update packages via HTTP requests.
API Documentation
The Sitecore.Ship documentation can be found on Apiary.io
Instructions for Use
The latest release versions of the Sitecore.Ship packages can be found in the NuGet package gallery
Early releases of the Sitecore.Ship packages can be found on a public feed from MyGet
Installing Sitecore.Ship via NuGet
Ensure that the website project is set to run with .NET Framework 4.5
Ensure that the web.config file for the target project if already existing is included into your project.
Run the following powershell command in the package manager console of the Visual Studio solution for the target website:
PM:> install-package Sitecore.Ship
or
PM:> install-package Sitecore.Ship.AspNet
Installing the package will do the following:
-
Add a new
packageInstallation
section to yourweb.config
file. You can set configuration options in this section to enable remote access to the installer and to enable the package streaming functionality. These options are safe by default, that is, no remote access and package streaming disabled. Note: the configuration settings are ignored in this branch of Sitecore.Ship. -
Register a single new HTTP handler section in
<system.webserver>
. Support for classic mode in IIS has been removed. -
Add a
ship.config
Sitecore include file to theApp_Config\include
folder.
Configuration Options
Shown below is a fully specified configuration section for Sitecore.Ship:
<packageInstallation enabled="true" allowRemote="true" allowPackageStreaming="true" recordInstallationHistory="true">
<Whitelist>
<add name="local loopback" IP="127.0.01" />
<add name="Allowed machine 1" IP="10.20.3.4" />
<add name="Allowed machine 2" IP="10.40.4.5" />
</Whitelist>
</packageInstallation>
Default configuration:
- enabled = false
- allowRemote = false
- allowPackageStreaming = false
- recordInstallationHistory = false
- IP address whitelisting is disabled if no elements are specified below the
<Whitelist>
element or if the element is omited.
When recordInstallationHistory
has been set to true packages should follow the naming conventions set out below:
Packages should follow the following naming conventions. Id should be an int.
{ID}-DescriptiveName.{Extension}
where:
- ID should be an integer
- Extension should be either update or zip
For example:
01-AboutPage.update
02-HomePage.zip
Uninstalling Sitecore.Ship
Run the following commands:
PM:> uninstall-package Sitecore.Ship
Working with the Sitecore.Ship Source Code
-
Clone this repository to your local file system
-
You will need to specify the location of your Sitecore assemblies. This can be down in the
build\build.proj
file. Set the LibsSrcPath to where your Sitecore assemblies are located. -
From a command prompt type
.\build
and press Enter
A successful command line build will generate a NuGet package in the artifacts\Packages\
folder.
Tools
- POSTMAN is a powerful HTTP client that runs as a Chrome browser extension and greatly helps with testing test REST web services.
References:
- cUrl Documentation - see section 4.3 File Upload POST
Contributing to the Project
If you are interested in contributing to the growth and development of Sitecore.Ship in even a small way, please read the notes below.
The project can be built and tested from the command line by entering:
.\build
Please ensure that there are no compilation or test failures and no code analysis warnings are being reported.
Running the Smoke Tests
The build.proj
file contains a set of smoke tests to verify that the Sitecore.Ship features all run successfully when the package has been installed in a Sitecore website.
In order to run these smoke tests you will need to:
-
Have a local install of Sitecore.
-
Set the TestWebsitePath and TestWebsiteUrl in the build\environment.props to reference the local Sitecore website.
-
Ensure that the test website has the Ship package installed by running the following in the Package Manager Console:
install-package Sitecore.Ship -Source
<path to folder containing your sitecore.ship nupkg file>
You can then run the smoke tests by entering:
.\build RunSmokeTests
A series of curl commands fire off HTTP requests to the Sitecore.Ship service routes and the results are printed out to the console. Each of these commands should execute successfully before you send a pull request back to the main project.
Your participation in the project is very much welcomed.