AES integration with a Git source control repository
Summarize
Summary of AES Integration with a Git Source Control Repository
AES integration with a Git source control repository enables application developers to efficiently manage application versions from a non-production instance. This integration allows for importing applications, pulling remote changes, committing local changes, creating tags, and maintaining multiple application versions through branching.
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Key Features
- Admin Role Required: Users must have admin privileges to link applications to source control.
- Network Access: The non-production instance must connect to the Git repository.
- Repository Structure: Each application should be in its own Git repository with shared user credentials for all developers.
- Management Options in App Engine Studio: Developers can edit repository credentials, commit changes, apply remote updates, create and switch branches, and import applications from a Git repository.
- Limited Production Support: Source control is not available for production instances; alternative management methods apply.
- File Management from Git: Developers can move and edit application files; the system generates a properties file for configuration and a checksum file for validation.
- Sanitization Process: Ensures application files are valid, removes unsupported files, and aborts operations if validation fails.
- MID Server Connectivity: An existing MID Server can connect to a source control repository, facilitating access through firewalls.
Key Outcomes
By integrating AES with Git, ServiceNow customers can streamline their application development processes, ensuring efficient version control and collaborative development while maintaining the integrity of application files. This integration enhances the ability to manage changes effectively, leading to improved application quality and faster deployment cycles.
Enable application developers to integrate App Engine Studio (AES) with a Git source control repository to save and manage multiple versions of an application from a non-production instance.
- Import applications from a Git repository.
- Pull and apply remote changes from a Git repository.
- Commit all local changes on the instance to a Git repository.
- Create tags to permanently link to a given version of an application.
- Create branches to maintain multiple versions of an application simultaneously.
Integration requirements
- The user must have the admin role.
- The non-production instance must have network access to the Git repository.
- Each application must be within its own Git repository.
- The repository user credentials must grant read and write access.
Options available from App Engine Studio
- Edit the application repository credentials.
- Commit all local changes on the instance.
- Apply remote changes from the repository.
- Create a branch.
- Switch branches.
- Import an application from a remote repository.
Source control integration does not support managing applications on a production instance. Instead, you can manage applications on a production instance using the application repository, an update set, or App Engine Studio. For more information about managing applications on a production instance, see Application sharing.
Options available from a Git repository
- Move application files to a different Git directory structure.
- Edit application files outside of App Engine Studio.
The system generates a properties text file called
sn_source_control.properties at the root level of the repository. To move
application files to a different Git directory structure, application developers can set the
path parameter to specify the subfolder path containing their application
files. For example, if you moved your application to the src/app subfolder,
set the path to path=src/app.
- Creates upgrade log entries for each sanitization action taken.
- Removes unsupported folders and files from the repository.
- Aborts all source control operations when a system application file fails XML schema validation. For example, if a database dictionary record fails XML schema validation, the system aborts all operations.
- Skips the current source control operation when a non-system application file fails XML schema validation.
The Git integration sanitizes only content within the application path listed in the sn_source_control.properties file. Repository content outside the application path is ignored.
MID Server support
Use an existing MID Server to connect to a source control repository. Connecting an application through a MID Server enables access to repositories behind a firewall.
Source control role permissions
For more information on roles and collaborators, see Application collaboration.