This project utilizes the pantheon-systems/travis-scripts project in order to achieve the following things:
- Specify the Drupal modules, themes and libraries you use in a composer.json file, and build them with Composer.
- Automatically build components via Travis every commit.
- Use Behat to run tests on your site from Travis.
- Automatically deploy your site to your Pantheon dev environment, or some other branch, every time the tests pass.
Before you begin, you should first install composer.
There are two ways to quickly create a new project for your Drupal site, using this project as a template.
- Fork this project in GitHub
- Clone your fork locally
$ cd example-drupal7-travis-composer
composer install
$ ./bin/init-new-project
The init-new-project
script will set up the local files you will need, and commit them to your local git repository.
$ composer create-project pantheon-systems/example-drupal7-travis-composer my-new-project-name
The composer create-project
will download the base files you need for your new project, then run the init-new-poroject
script to set things up. The results are committed to a local git repository. You might wish to push your repository up to GitHub.
Once you have created a new project, you will still need to do some customization steps to suit your particular needs. See the travis-scripts README for instructions on how to do this.
The folder 'scripts' contain some starting scripts that you may use to customize the environment you need for your tests.
$ ./bin/local-test
The local-test
script will set up a local Drupal site, run it with the PHP built-in webserver, and then run the Behat test suite. This is analagous to what happens on Travis on every commit.
You may place your custom modules and themes in drupal/sites/all/modules/custom
and drupal/sites/all/themes/custom
, respectively, and commit them to the same repository that contains your composer.json file.
If you prefer, you may instead create a Composer project for your custom components, and add them to your composer.json file. It is not necessary to make your code publicly accessible in order to do this; it is possible to create a local composer package definition that points to a private GitHub repository. See Creating your very own Composer Package for details on different ways to create composer packages.
Additional modules may be added using Composer:
$ cd my-new-project-name
$ composer require drupal/devel '7.*'
This will put the specified module in sites/all/modules/contrib
, and will also update your composer.json file with the information on the module that was just added.