Dashy is a frontend to CI software. It animates, it makes noises, it remembers past build states, it is just a simple webpage, and it gets you new friends.
Because CI is boring and monotonous. Dashy is made of the opposite.
Dashy only supports Hudson at the moment because Hudson is the only CI system in the entire world to support JSONp. (remember Dashy is a dumb webpage frontend)
- Get code
- Drop the '.sample' from public/javascript/config.js.sample
- Configure config.js to meet your needs
- Serve up public/ in something like Apache
- Load it up in a browser
- Get some sleep, you look tired
The only code you need to touch is in public/javascripts/config.js
Here are a few tips:
- the ci property in each project should always be 'Hudson' (it's the only system supported at the moment)
- the url property in each project should always point to the jsonp feed of the last build
- the pings array should contain Hudson builds that ping a server and return true or false, therefore follow the same rules above.
Here is a sample config.js file
var config = {
title:"Dashy, He's always watching",
refreshInterval:5000,
projects:[
{
name:'Android app',
url:'http://builder/job/AndroidApp/lastBuild/api/json?jsonp=?',
ci:'Hudson'
},{
name:'iPhone app',
url:'http://builder/job/iPhoneApp/lastBuild/api/json?jsonp=?',
ci:'Hudson'
}
],
pings:[
{
name:'Builder',
url:'http://builder/job/PingBuilder/lastBuild/api/json?jsonp=?',
ci:'Hudson'
}, {
name:'Filestore',
url:'http://builder/job/PingFilestore/lastBuild/api/json?jsonp=?',
ci:'Hudson'
}
]
}
Send any feedback you have. Want to help? Fork!
- Email roy.kolak@gmail.com
- Or create an issue