Awesome
JupiterOne Integration
Development Environment
Prerequisites
You must have Node.JS installed to run this project. If you don't already have it installed, you can download the installer here. You can alternatively install Node.JS using a version manager like fnm or nvm.
Setup
Installing dependencies
From the root of this project, run npm install
to install dependencies. If you
have yarn
installed, you can install dependencies by running yarn
.
Loading credentials
Create a .env
file at the root of this project and add environment variables
to match what is in src/instanceConfigFields.ts
. The .env
file is ignored by
git, so you won't have to worry about accidentally pushing credentials.
Given this example configuration:
import { IntegrationInstanceConfigFieldMap } from '@jupiterone/integration-sdk-core';
const instanceConfigFields: IntegrationInstanceConfigFieldMap = {
clientId: {
type: 'string',
},
clientSecret: {
type: 'string',
mask: true,
},
};
export default instanceConfigFields;
You would provide a .env
file like this:
CLIENT_ID="client-id"
CLIENT_SECRET="supersecret"
The snake cased environment variables will automatically be converted and
applied to the camel cased configuration field. So for example, CLIENT_ID
will
apply to the clientId
config field, CLIENT_SECRET
will apply to
clientSecret
, and MY_SUPER_SECRET_CONFIGURATION_VALUE
will apply to a
mySuperSecretConfigurationValue
configuration field.
Running the integration
To start collecting data, run yarn start
from the root of the project. This
will load in your configuration from src/index.ts
.
Documentation
Development
Please reference the JupiterOne integration development documentation for more information on how to use the SDK.
See docs/development.md for details about how to get started with developing this integration.
Integration usage and resource coverage
More information about the resources covered by this integration and how to setup the integration in JupiterOne can be found in docs/jupiterone.md.
Versioning this project
This project is versioned using auto.
Versioning and publishing to NPM are now handled via adding GitHub labels to pull requests. The following labels should be used for this process:
- patch
- minor
- major
- release
For each pull request, the degree of change should be registered by applying the appropriate label of patch, minor, or major. This allows the repository to keep track of the highest degree of change since the last release. When ready to publish to NPM, the PR should have both its appropriate patch, minor, or major label applied as well as a release label. The release label will denote to the system that we need to publish to NPM and will correctly version based on the highest degree of change since the last release, package the project, and publish it to NPM.
Changelog
The history of this integration's development can be viewed at CHANGELOG.md.