Hi there! Thanks for your interest in Razzle. This guide will help you get started contributing.
- Contributing to Razzle
- optionally install add-dependencies
- or
- git checkout -b my-feature-branch master
- git checkout -b my-feature-branch three
- /home/oyvind/Documents/GitHub/razzle/
- to make sure tests pass
- to add a new example
- to work on a example
- if it is a example with webpack5 you need to do
- switch back to webpack4 later to work with webpack4
- then
- if you want to add dependencies to the example
- if you make changes to startserver plugin
- to run example tests with unreleased razzle packages with specific webpack and specific tests
- Commands being run during testing puts output and puppeteer screenshots in test-artifacts/
- Trouble with puppeteer?
Razzle is monorepo made up of a several npm packages powered by Lerna.
examples
: All examples go in here.packages
: This is where the magic happensbabel-preset-razzle
: Razzle's default Babel preset.create-razzle-app
: Razzle's CLI tool responsible for initialization of new projectsrazzle
: The core libraryrazzle-dev-utils
: Utilities and helpers
scripts
: Utility scripts related to cleaning and bootstrapping the repotest
: End-to-end tests
First, fork the repo to your GitHub account. Then clone your fork to your local machine and make a new branch for your feature/bug/patch etc. It's a good idea to not develop directly on master so you can get updates.
git clone https://github.com/<YOUR_GITHUB_USERNAME>/razzle.git
cd razzle
git checkout -B <my-branch>
NODE_ENV=development yarn install ---ignore-engines
# optionally install add-dependencies
sudo npm install add-dependencies -g
This will install all node_modules
in all the packages and symlink
inter-dependencies. Thus when you make local changes in any of the packages you can try them
immediately in all the examples. add-dependencies
can be used to just add packages to package.json
.
yarn clean
: Clean up allnode_modules
and remove all symlinks from packages and examples.yarn test --runInBand
: Runs all testsyarn test:packages
: Runs tests for packagesyarn test:e2e
: Runs end-to-end testsyarn build-docs
: Builds docs/ updates doc TOCyarn publish-all-canary
: Does arazzle@canary
release.yarn publish-all-stable
: Does a a stable release(uses the npm version released of the packages)yarn new-example
: Creates a new example from another example.yarn new-example basic new-example
.yarn bootstrap-examples
: Runyarn
with specific examples as workspaces. Automatically symlinks inter-dependent modules. Runyarn restrap
in the example to reinstall.yarn test:examples:simple
: Runs tests for all simple examples (uses the npm version released of the packages)yarn test:examples:complex
: Runs tests for all complex examples (uses the npm version released of the packages)yarn test:examples
: Runs tests for all examples (uses the npm version released of the packages)
git clone https://github.com/<YOUR_GITHUB_USERNAME>/razzle.git
cd razzle
git checkout -b my-feature-branch canary
# or
# git checkout -b my-feature-branch master
# git checkout -b my-feature-branch three
sudo npm install add-dependencies yalc -g
pwd
# /home/oyvind/Documents/GitHub/razzle/
NODE_ENV=development yarn install ---ignore-engines
# to make sure tests pass
yarn test --runInBand
# to add a new example
yarn new-example existingexample with-somefeature
# to work on a example
cd examples/basic
example="$(basename $PWD)"
pushd ../..
# if it is a example with webpack5 you need to do
yarn add -W [email protected] [email protected]
# switch back to webpack4 later to work with webpack4
yarn add -W [email protected] [email protected]
# then
yarn bootstrap-examples $example
popd
yarn build
# if you want to add dependencies to the example
add-dependencies somedependency
yarn restrap
# if you make changes to startserver plugin
pushd ../..
cd packages/razzle-start-server-webpack-plugin
yarn build
popd
# to run example tests with unreleased razzle packages with specific webpack and specific tests
WEBPACK_DEPS="[email protected] [email protected]" PACKAGE_MANAGER="yalc" NPM_TAG="development" yarn test:examples --runInBand -t with-tailwindcss
WEBPACK_DEPS="[email protected] [email protected]" PACKAGE_MANAGER="yalc" NPM_TAG="development" yarn test:examples --runInBand -t with-tailwindcss
# Commands being run during testing puts output and puppeteer screenshots in test-artifacts/
# Trouble with puppeteer?
sudo sysctl -w kernel.unprivileged_userns_clone=1
When you want to pull down changes to your fork enter the following into your terminal:
git checkout master
git pull origin master
If you'd like to add an example, I suggest you duplicate the examples/basic
folder yarn new-example basic your-example
and use that as kind of base template. Before you start adding stuff, go ahead and change the name of the package in the your new example's package.json
. Then go back to the project root and run yarn bootstrap-examples your-example
. This will make sure that your new example is using your local version of all the packages
.
All example folders should be named with-<thing-you-are-demonstrating>
. Each example's npm package name (found in it's package.json
) should look like razzle-examples-with-<thing-you-are-demonstrating>
.
- Make sure to comment the important parts of your code and include a well-written "Idea behind the example" section. This is more important to me than your actual code.
- Keep your example limited to one idea / library / feature (e.g. don't submit
with-styled-components-and-material-ui
). That being said, there are times when this rule will be relaxed such as if you are showing how to use Apollo and Redux or <Flux Library> + React Router. - Your example MUST implement Hot Module Replacement. If it does not update when you make edits, you have broken something.
- Your example should be minimalistic and concise, or a direct copy of another prominent example from the original library (like copying an example directly from react-redux).
I will do my best to write out my reasoning before closing a PR, but 80% of the time it falls under one of these...
- You did not read this document
- Your code breaks an internal application (I will be transparent about this)
- Your code conflicts with some future plans (I will be transparent about this too)
- You've said something inappropriate or have broken the Code of Conduct
We use the project README to recognize the contributions of members of the project community.
To add a contributor: all-contributors add github_username doc,code
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