![]() Because we instantiated `ContextServerManager` both in `agent` and `assistant-context-editor`, and these two entities track the running MCP servers separately, we were effectively running every MCP server twice. This PR moves the `ContextServerManager` into the project crate (now called `ContextServerStore`). The store can be accessed via a project instance. This ensures that we only instantiate one `ContextServerStore` per project. Also, this PR adds a bunch of tests to ensure that the `ContextServerStore` behaves correctly (Previously there were none). Closes #28714 Closes #29530 Release Notes: - N/A |
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.. | ||
k8s | ||
migrations | ||
migrations.sqlite | ||
migrations_llm | ||
seed | ||
src | ||
.env.toml | ||
Cargo.toml | ||
LICENSE-AGPL | ||
postgrest_app.conf | ||
postgrest_llm.conf | ||
README.md | ||
seed.default.json |
Zed Server
This crate is what we run at https://collab.zed.dev.
It contains our back-end logic for collaboration, to which we connect from the Zed client via a websocket after authenticating via https://zed.dev, which is a separate repo running on Vercel.
Local Development
Database setup
Before you can run the collab server locally, you'll need to set up a zed Postgres database. Follow the steps sequentially:
- Ensure you have postgres installed. If not, install with
brew install postgresql@15
. - Follow the steps on Brew's formula and verify your
$PATH
contains/opt/homebrew/opt/postgresql@15/bin
. - If you hadn't done it before, create the
postgres
user withcreateuser -s postgres
. - You are now ready to run the
bootstrap
script:
script/bootstrap
This script will set up the zed
Postgres database, and populate it with some users. It requires internet access, because it fetches some users from the GitHub API.
The script will create several admin users, who you'll sign in as by default when developing locally. The GitHub logins for the default users are specified in the seed.default.json
file.
To use a different set of admin users, create crates/collab/seed.json
.
{
"admins": ["yourgithubhere"],
"channels": ["zed"]
}
Testing collaborative features locally
In one terminal, run Zed's collaboration server and the livekit dev server:
foreman start
In a second terminal, run two or more instances of Zed.
script/zed-local -2
This script starts one to four instances of Zed, depending on the -2
, -3
or -4
flags. Each instance will be connected to the local collab
server, signed in as a different user from seed.json
or seed.default.json
.
Deployment
We run two instances of collab:
- Staging (https://staging-collab.zed.dev)
- Production (https://collab.zed.dev)
Both of these run on the Kubernetes cluster hosted in Digital Ocean.
Deployment is triggered by pushing to the collab-staging
(or collab-production
) tag in Github. The best way to do this is:
./script/deploy-collab staging
./script/deploy-collab production
You can tell what is currently deployed with ./script/what-is-deployed
.
Database Migrations
To create a new migration:
./script/create-migration <name>
Migrations are run automatically on service start, so run foreman start
again. The service will crash if the migrations fail.
When you create a new migration, you also need to update the SQLite schema that is used for testing.