If you’re just trying to test the application, please use inmemory mode which will load the app with mock data for you. If you, however, want to contribute to the codebase, unset it back or to "development" (default) mode and rebuild.
$ export NODE_ENV=inmemory # (1)
$ export NODE_ENV=development # (2)
$ export NODE_ENV=production # (3)
<1> In-memory mode for trying-out the app
<2> Development mode for contributing to the source
<2> Production mode for deploying the application
Once you’re done setting the environment, you can proceed with the next step(s)
Note
|
If you’re directly trying to run the app in dev mode, you can skip this
step, as NODE_ENV is treated as "development" by default.
|
If you’re trying to run the app for the first time:
$ npm install
Then, start the app with:
$ npm start
If you trying to refresh your installation, you need to run:
$ npm run reinstall
Then, start the app with:
$ npm start
The package.json
file’s scripts:
section lists all the tasks we run.
Here are some of the most useful/frequently used scripts you may need to run:
Scipt | Command | Description |
---|---|---|
Lint |
|
Runs the TypeScript and Angular 2 linter |
Validation |
|
Validates the webpack build |
Unit Tests |
|
Runs the unit tests |
Functional Tests |
|
Runs the functional tests |
Continuous Tests |
|
Looks for changes in source code and runs unit tests |
To generate production build, set API URL and run build script as follows:
$ npm run build:prod
The build output will be under dist
directory.
To create a docker image, run this command immediately after the production build completion:
To build the fabric8-stack-analysis-ui as an npm library, use:
$ npm run build
The created library will be placed in dist
.
Important
|
You shouldn’t ever publish the build manually, instead you should let the CD pipeline do a semantic release. |
To build fabric8-stack-analysis-ui as an npm library and embed it into a webapp such as fabric8-ui, you should:
- Step 1: Run
npm run watch:library
in the source directory -
This will build fabric8-stack-analysis-ui as a library and then set up a watch task to rebuild any ts, html and scss files you change.
- Step 2: Run
npm link <path to fabric8-stack-analysis-ui>/dist-watch
-
In the webapp into which you are embedding. This will create a symlink from
node_modules/fabric8-stack-analysis-ui
to thedist-watch
directory and install that symlinked node module into your webapp. - Step 3: Run your webapp in development mode
-
Make sure you have a watch on
node_modules/fabric8-stack-analysis-ui
enabled. You will have access to both JS and SASS sourcemaps if your webapp is properly setup.
Note
|
fabric8-ui is setup to do reloading and sourcemaps automatically when you
run npm start .
|
-
To hit stack analysis api in standalone mode** Put a token in the environment variable with key as 'STACK_API_TOKEN'.
fabric8-stack-analysis-ui uses LESS for it’s stylesheets. It also uses the Angular emulation
of the shadow dom, so you will normally want to place your styles in the
.component.LESS
file next to the html and the typescript.
We use mixins to avoid polluting components with uncessary style classes, and to avoid an explosion of shared files.
The src/assets/stylesheets/
directory includes a shared
directory. These are
shared global styles that we will refactor out in to a shared library at some point.
Only update these styles if you are making a truly global style, and are going to
synchronise your changes across all the various UI projects.
The development guide is part of the contributors' instructions. Please check it out in order to contribute to this project.