Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: airbyte-source-onesignal
Version: 1.1.5
Summary: Source implementation for One Signal.
Home-page: https://airbyte.com
License: MIT
Author: Airbyte
Author-email: contact@airbyte.io
Requires-Python: >=3.9,<3.12
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.9
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.10
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.11
Requires-Dist: airbyte-cdk (>=1,<2)
Project-URL: Documentation, https://docs.airbyte.com/integrations/sources/source-onesignal
Project-URL: Repository, https://github.com/airbytehq/airbyte
Description-Content-Type: text/markdown

# Onesignal Source

This is the repository for the Onesignal configuration based source connector.
For information about how to use this connector within Airbyte, see [the documentation](https://docs.airbyte.com/integrations/sources/onesignal).

## Local development

### Prerequisites

- Python (~=3.9)
- Poetry (~=1.7) - installation instructions [here](https://python-poetry.org/docs/#installation)

### Installing the connector

From this connector directory, run:

```bash
poetry install --with dev
```

### Create credentials

**If you are a community contributor**, follow the instructions in the [documentation](https://docs.airbyte.com/integrations/sources/onesignal)
to generate the necessary credentials. Then create a file `secrets/config.json` conforming to the `source_onesignal/spec.yaml` file.
Note that any directory named `secrets` is gitignored across the entire Airbyte repo, so there is no danger of accidentally checking in sensitive information.
See `sample_files/sample_config.json` for a sample config file.

### Locally running the connector

```
poetry run source-onesignal spec
poetry run source-onesignal check --config secrets/config.json
poetry run source-onesignal discover --config secrets/config.json
poetry run source-onesignal read --config secrets/config.json --catalog integration_tests/configured_catalog.json
```

### Running unit tests

To run unit tests locally, from the connector directory run:

```
poetry run pytest unit_tests
```

### Building the docker image

1. Install [`airbyte-ci`](https://github.com/airbytehq/airbyte/blob/master/airbyte-ci/connectors/pipelines/README.md)
2. Run the following command to build the docker image:

```bash
airbyte-ci connectors --name=source-onesignal build
```

An image will be available on your host with the tag `airbyte/source-onesignal:dev`.

### Running as a docker container

Then run any of the connector commands as follows:

```
docker run --rm airbyte/source-onesignal:dev spec
docker run --rm -v $(pwd)/secrets:/secrets airbyte/source-onesignal:dev check --config /secrets/config.json
docker run --rm -v $(pwd)/secrets:/secrets airbyte/source-onesignal:dev discover --config /secrets/config.json
docker run --rm -v $(pwd)/secrets:/secrets -v $(pwd)/integration_tests:/integration_tests airbyte/source-onesignal:dev read --config /secrets/config.json --catalog /integration_tests/configured_catalog.json
```

### Running our CI test suite

You can run our full test suite locally using [`airbyte-ci`](https://github.com/airbytehq/airbyte/blob/master/airbyte-ci/connectors/pipelines/README.md):

```bash
airbyte-ci connectors --name=source-onesignal test
```

### Customizing acceptance Tests

Customize `acceptance-test-config.yml` file to configure acceptance tests. See [Connector Acceptance Tests](https://docs.airbyte.com/connector-development/testing-connectors/connector-acceptance-tests-reference) for more information.
If your connector requires to create or destroy resources for use during acceptance tests create fixtures for it and place them inside integration_tests/acceptance.py.

### Dependency Management

All of your dependencies should be managed via Poetry.
To add a new dependency, run:

```bash
poetry add <package-name>
```

Please commit the changes to `pyproject.toml` and `poetry.lock` files.

### Publishing a new version of the connector

You've checked out the repo, implemented a million dollar feature, and you're ready to share your changes with the world. Now what?

1. Make sure your changes are passing our test suite: `airbyte-ci connectors --name=source-onesignal test`
2. Bump the connector version in `metadata.yaml`: increment the `dockerImageTag` value. Please follow [semantic versioning for connectors](https://docs.airbyte.com/contributing-to-airbyte/resources/pull-requests-handbook/#semantic-versioning-for-connectors).
3. Make sure the `metadata.yaml` content is up to date.
4. Make the connector documentation and its changelog is up to date (`docs/integrations/sources/onesignal.md`).
5. Create a Pull Request: use [our PR naming conventions](https://docs.airbyte.com/contributing-to-airbyte/resources/pull-requests-handbook/#pull-request-title-convention).
6. Pat yourself on the back for being an awesome contributor.
7. Someone from Airbyte will take a look at your PR and iterate with you to merge it into master.

