This guide will help you understand our infrastructure stack and how we maintain our platforms. While this guide does not have exhaustive details for all operations, it could be used as a reference for your understanding of the systems.
Let us know, if you have feedback or queries, and we will be happy to clarify.
# Flight Manual - Code deployments
This repository is continuously built, tested and deployed to **separate sets of infrastructure (Servers, Databases, CDNs, etc.)**.
This involves three steps to be followed in sequence:
1. New changes (both fixes and features) are merged into our primary development branch (`main`) via pull requests.
2. These changes are run through a series of automated tests.
3. Once the tests pass we release the changes (or update them if needed) to deployments on our infrastructure.
#### Building the codebase - Mapping Git Branches to Deployments.
Typically, [`main`](https://github.com/freeCodeCamp/freeCodeCamp/tree/main) (the default development branch) is merged into the [`prod-staging`](https://github.com/freeCodeCamp/freeCodeCamp/tree/prod-staging) branch once a day and is released into an isolated infrastructure.
This is an intermediate release for our developers and volunteer contributors. It is also known as our "staging" or "beta" release.
It is identical to our live production environment at `freeCodeCamp.org`, other than it using a separate set of databases, servers, web-proxies, etc. This isolation lets us test ongoing development and features in a "production" like scenario, without affecting regular users of freeCodeCamp.org's main platforms.
Once the developer team [`@freeCodeCamp/dev-team`](https://github.com/orgs/freeCodeCamp/teams/dev-team/members) is happy with the changes on the staging platform, these changes are moved every few days to the [`prod-current`](https://github.com/freeCodeCamp/freeCodeCamp/tree/prod-current) branch.
This is the final release that moves changes to our production platforms on freeCodeCamp.org.
#### Testing changes - Integration and User Acceptance Testing.
We employ various levels of integration and acceptance testing to check on the quality of the code. All our tests are done through software like [GitHub Actions CI](https://github.com/freeCodeCamp/freeCodeCamp/actions) and [Azure Pipelines](https://dev.azure.com/freeCodeCamp-org/freeCodeCamp).
We have unit tests for testing our challenge solutions, Server APIs and Client User interfaces. These help us test the integration between different components.
> [!NOTE] We are also in the process of writing end user tests which will help in replicating real world scenarios like updating an email or making a call to the API or third-party services.
Together these tests help in preventing issues from repeating themselves and ensure we do not introduce a bug while working on another bug or a feature.
#### Deploying Changes - Pushing changes to servers.
We have configured continuous delivery software to push changes to our development and production servers.
Once the changes are pushed to the protected release branches, a build pipeline is automatically triggered for the branch. The build pipelines are responsible for building artifacts and keeping them in a cold storage for later use.
The build pipeline goes on to trigger a corresponding release pipeline if it completes a successful run. The release pipelines are responsible for collecting the build artifacts, moving them to the servers and going live.
Status of builds and releases are [available here](#build-test-and-deployment-status).
## Trigger a build, test and deploy
Currently, only members on the developer team can push to the production branches. The changes to the `production-*` branches can land only via fast-forward merge to the [`upstream`](https://github.com/freeCodeCamp/freeCodeCamp).
2. Make sure your `maim` branch is pristine and in sync with the upstream.
```sh
git checkout main
git fetch --all --prune
git reset --hard upstream/main
```
3. Check that the GitHub CI is passing on the `main` branch for upstream.
The [continuous integration](https://github.com/freeCodeCamp/freeCodeCamp/actions) tests should be green and PASSING for the `main` branch. Click the green check mark next to the commit hash when viewing the `main` branch code.
> If they do, you may have done something incorrectly and you should just start over.
The above steps will automatically trigger a run on the build pipeline for the `prod-staging` branch. Once the build is complete, the artifacts are saved as `.zip` files in a cold storage to be retrieved and used later.
The release pipeline is triggered automatically when a fresh artifact is available from the connected build pipeline. For staging platforms, this process does not involve manual approval and the artifacts are pushed to the Client CDN and API servers.
### Pushing changes to Production Applications.
The process is mostly the same as the staging platforms, with a few extra checks in place. This is just to make sure, we do not break anything on freeCodeCamp.org which can see hundreds of users using it at any moment.
| Do NOT execute these commands unless you have verified that everything is working on the staging platform. You should not bypass or skip any testing on staging before proceeding further. |
> If they do, you may have done something incorrectly and you should just start over.
The above steps will automatically trigger a run on the build pipeline for the `prod-current` branch. Once a build artifact is ready, it will trigger a run on the release pipeline.
**Additional Steps for Staff Action**
One a release run is triggered, members of the developer staff team will receive an automated manual intervention email. They can either _approve_ or _reject_ the release run.
If the changes are working nicely and have been tested on the staging platform, then it can be approved. The approval must be given within 4 hours of the release being triggered before getting rejected automatically. A staff can re-trigger the release run manually for rejected runs, or wait for the next cycle of release.
For staff use:
| Check your email for a direct link or [go to the release dashboard](https://dev.azure.com/freeCodeCamp-org/freeCodeCamp/_release) after the build run is complete. |
We welcome you to test these releases in a **"public beta testing"** mode and get early access to upcoming features to the platforms. Sometimes these features/changes are referred to as **next, beta, staging,** etc. interchangeably.
Your contributions via feedback and issue reports will help us in making the production platforms at `freeCodeCamp.org` more **resilient**, **consistent** and **stable** for everyone.
We thank you for reporting bugs that you encounter and help in making freeCodeCamp.org better. You rock!
### Identifying the upcoming version of the platforms
Currently a public beta testing version is available at:
> [!NOTE] The domain name is different than **`freeCodeCamp.org`**. This is intentional to prevent search engine indexing and avoid confusion for regular users of the platform.
> The above list not exhaustive of all the applications that we provision. Also not all language variants are deployed in staging to conserve resources.
### Identifying the current version of the platforms
**The current version of the platform is always available at [`freeCodeCamp.org`](https://www.freecodecamp.org).**
The dev-team merges changes from the `prod-staging` branch to `prod-current` when they release changes. The top commit should be what you see live on the site.
You can identify the exact version deployed by visiting the build and deployment logs available in the status section. Alternatively you can also ping us in the [contributors chat room](https://chat.freecodecamp.org/channel/contributors) for a confirmation.
### Known Limitations
There are some known limitations and tradeoffs when using the beta version of the platform.
- #### All data / personal progress on these beta platforms `will NOT be saved or carried over` to production.
**Users on the beta version will have a separate account from the production.** The beta version uses a physically separate database from production. This gives us the ability to prevent any accidental loss of data or modifications. The dev team may purge the database on this beta version as needed.
- #### There are no guarantees on the uptime and reliability of the beta platforms.
Deployment is expected to be frequent and in rapid iterations, sometimes multiple times a day. As a result there will be unexpected downtime at times or broken functionality on the beta version.
- #### Do not send regular users to this site as a measure of confirming a fix
The beta site is and always has been to augment local development and testing, nothing else. It's not a promise of what’s coming, but a glimpse of what is being worked upon.
- #### Sign in page may look different than production
We use a test tenant for freecodecamp.dev on Auth0, and hence do not have the ability to set a custom domain. This makes it so that all the redirect callbacks and the login page appear at a default domain like: `https://freecodecamp-dev.auth0.com/`. This does not affect the functionality is as close to production as we can get.
## Reporting issues and leaving feedback
Please open fresh issues for discussions and reporting bugs.
You may send an email to `dev[at]freecodecamp.org` if you have any queries. As always all security vulnerabilities should be reported to `security[at]freecodecamp.org` instead of the public tracker and forum.
> 1. The guide applies to the **freeCodeCamp Staff members only**.
> 2. These instructions should not be considered exhaustive, please use caution.
As a member of the staff, you may have been given access to our cloud service providers like Azure, Digital Ocean, etc.
Here are some handy commands that you can use to work on the Virtual Machines (VM), for instance performing maintenance updates or doing general houeskeeping.
> [!NOTE] While you may already have SSH access to the VMs, that alone will not let you list VMs unless you been granted access to the cloud portals as well.
You should keep the VMs up to date by performing updates and upgrades. This will ensure that the virtual machine is patched with latest security fixes.
> - Make sure that the VM has been provisioned completely and there is no post-install steps running.
> - If you are updating packages on a VM that is already serving an application, make sure the app has been stopped / saved. Package updates will cause network bandwidth, memory and/or CPU usage spikes leading to outages on running applications.
We are running load balanced (Azure Load Balancer) instances for our web servers. These servers are running NGINX which reverse proxy all of the traffic to freeCodeCamp.org from various applications running on their own infrastructures.
Code changes need to be deployed to the API instances from time to time. It can be a rolling update or a manual update. The later is essential when changing dependencies or adding enviroment variables.
> [!DANGER] The automated pipelines are not handling dependencies updates at the minute. We need to do a manual update before any deployment pipeline runs.
Code changes need to be deployed to the API instances from time to time. It can be a rolling update or a manual update. The later is essential when changing dependencies or adding enviroment variables.
> [!DANGER] The automated pipelines are not handling dependencies updates at the minute. We need to do a manual update before any deployment pipeline runs.