Front-end infrastructure and code to complement mozilla/addons-server.
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- Node 4.x LTS
- npm 3.x
The easiest way to manage multiple node versions in development is to use nvm.
- npm install
- npm run dev
Generic scripts that don't need env vars. Use these for development:
Script | Description |
---|---|
npm run dev:admin | Starts the dev server (admin app) |
npm run dev:amo | Starts the dev server (amo) |
npm run dev:disco | Starts the dev server (discovery pane) |
npm run eslint | Lints the JS |
npm run stylelint | Lints the SCSS |
npm run lint | Runs all the JS + SCSS linters |
npm run version-check | Checks you have the minimum node + npm versions |
npm test | Runs the unittest, servertests + lint |
npm run unittest | Runs just the unittests |
npm run unittest:dev | Runs the unittests and watches for changes |
npm run unittest:server | Starts a unittest server for use with unittest:run |
npm run unittest:run | Executes unittests (requires unittest:server ) |
npm run servertest | Runs the servertests |
You can run the entire test suite with npm test
but there are a few other ways
to run tests.
You can use npm run unittest:dev
to run all unit tests in a loop while you
edit the source code.
If you don't want to run the entire unit test suite, first you have to start a unittest server:
npm run unittest:server
When you see "Connected on socket," the server has fully started.
Now you can execute a more specific mocha command,
such as using --grep
to run only a few tests. Here is an example:
npm run unittest:run -- --grep=InfoDialog
This would run all tests that either fall under the InfoDialog
description grouping
or have InfoDialog
in their behavior text.
Any option after the double dash (--
) gets sent to mocha
. Check out
mocha's usage for ideas.
The npm run unittest
command generates a report of how well the unit tests
covered each line of source code.
The continuous integration process will give you a link to view the report.
To see this report while running tests locally, type:
open ./coverage/index.html
The dev
scripts above will connect to a hosted development API by default.
If you want to run your own
addons-server
API or make any other local changes, just add a local configuration
file for each app. For example, to run your own discovery pane API, first create
a local config file:
touch config/local-development-disco.js
Be sure to prefix the file with local-development- so that it doesn't pollute the
test suite.
Here's what local-development-disco.js
would look like when
overriding the apiHost
parameter so that it points to your docker container:
module.exports = {
apiHost: 'http://olympia.dev',
};
When you start up your front-end discover pane server, it will now apply overrides from your local configuration file:
npm run dev:disco
Consult the config file loading order docs to learn more about how configuration is applied.
The following are scripts that are used in deployment - you generally won't need unless you're testing something related to deployment or builds.
The env vars are:
NODE_APP_INSTANCE
this is the name of the app e.g. 'disco'
NODE_ENV
this is the node environment. e.g. production, dev, stage, development.
Script | Description |
---|---|
npm run start | Starts the express server (requires env vars) |
npm run build | Builds the libs (all apps) (requires env vars) |
Example: Building and running a production instance of the admin app:
NODE_APP_INSTANCE=admin NODE_ENV=production npm run build && npm run start
This project will hold distinct front-ends e.g:
- Editors' admin/search tool
- Discovery Pane
- and beyond...
We've made a conscious decision to avoid "premature modularization" and keep this all in one repository. This will help us build out the necessary tooling to support a universal front-end infrastructure without having to worry about cutting packages and bumping versions the entire time.
At a later date if we need to move things out into their own project we still can.
- Based on Redux + React
- Code written in ES2015+
- Universal rendering via node
- Unit tests with high coverage (aiming for 100%)