To run the project locally, clone the repository and install the dependencies.
git clone https://github.com/amadeus4dev/amadeus-node.git
cd amadeus-node
npm install
To run tests, simply run npm test
or npm run test:watch
to keep watching the source for changes and test accordingly.
We are trying to keep 100% coverage, so keep an eye on the coverage
folder for an overview of the coverage.
To build the source, run npm run build
or npm run build:watch
to keep watching the source for changes and build accordingly.
To use a library locally as a dependency, simply import or require the lib/amadeus.js
.
var Amadeus = require('./lib/amadeus');
To install your local build into a different project using NPM, first install this library globally, then link it to a new project.
cd amadeus-node
npm install
npm install -g ./
cd ../your-node-project
npm link amadeus
npm install
You can then simply include it as if pulling the library from NPM.
var Amadeus = require('amadeus');
To make a new release, follow the following steps:
- Update the version in
package.json
using semver rules - Update the
CHANGELOG.md
with the new version - Push all changes and ensure all tests pass on Travis
- Tag your release in git using
git --tag vX.X.X
- Push the new tag
git push --tags
- Update the Releases tab on GitHub with a new release for the tag, copying the description from the
CHANGELOG.md
Travis will bow build the package and release it to NPM.
-
Ensure the bug was not already reported by searching on GitHub under Issues.
-
If you're unable to find an open issue addressing the problem, open a new one. Be sure to include a title and clear description, as much relevant information as possible, and a code sample or an executable test case demonstrating the expected behavior that is not occurring.
-
Open a new GitHub pull request with the patch.
-
Ensure the PR description clearly describes the problem and solution. Include the relevant issue number if applicable.
-
Suggest your change in a new issue and start writing code.
-
Make sure your new code does not break any tests and include new tests.
-
With good code comes good documentation. Try to copy the existing documentation and adapt it to your needs.
-
Close the issue or mark it as inactive if you decide to discontinue working on the code.
- Ask any question about how to use the library by raising a new issue.
Excellent, to get start developing this library ensure you have Node 6+ installed and clone the repository.
Then, you should be able to run the tests.
npm install # ensure all dependencies are installed
npm run docs:dev # watches for changes and updates docs