PatternFly reference implementation
This reference implementation of PatternFly is based on Bootstrap v3. Think of PatternFly as a "skinned" version of Bootstrap with additional components and customizations. For information on how to quickly get started using PatternFly, see the Quick Start Guide.
PatternFly can be installed and managed through Bower. To do so, either add patternfly
as a dependency in your bower.json
or run the following:
bower install patternfly
PatternFly can be installed and managed through npm. To do so, run the following:
npm install patternfly
PatternFly is also available as an RPM. See https://copr.fedoraproject.org/coprs/patternfly/patternfly2/.
A Sass port of PatternFly is available, as is a Sass-based Rails Gem.
A set of common AngularJS directives for use with PatternFly is available.
PatternFly incorporates other libraries and components; therefore, in addition to the contents of dist
, the contents of components
are also required for a complete installation of PatternFly.
Development setup requires nodejs and Ruby. If you do not already have nodejs, npm, and Ruby installed on your system, see https://github.com/joyent/node/wiki/Installing-Node.js-via-package-manager and https://www.ruby-lang.org/en/downloads.
After ensuring nodejs and npm are available, install Bower globally:
npm install -g bower
Bower is used to install and update PatternFly's dependencies.
The development includes the use of a number of helpful tasks. In order to setup your development environment to allow running of these tasks, you need to install the local nodejs packages declared in package.json
. To do this run:
npm install
This will install all necessary development packages into node_modules/
. At this point, the gruntjs tasks are available for use such as starting a local development server or building the master CSS file.
Additionally you may need to install the grunt command line utility. To do this run:
npm install -g grunt-cli
Test pages are generated using Jekyll. After ensuring Ruby is installed and available, run:
gem install jekyll
A local development server can be quickly fired up by using the Gruntjs server task:
grunt server
This local static asset server (i.e., http://localhost:9000) has the advantage of having livereload integration. Thus, if you start the Gruntjs server, any changes you make to .html
or .less
files will be automatically reloaded into your browser and the changes reflected almost immediately. This has the obvious benefit of not having to refresh your browser and still be able to see the changes as you add or remove them from your development files. Additionally, any changes made to Jekyll source files (tests-src/
) will trigger a Jekyll build.
- Indentation
- Use spaces (not tabs)
- Indentation size is 2 spaces
- Filenames
- All filenames will use a lowercase-hyphenated naming convention (e.g., single-select-dropdown.less)
- LESSCSS
- CSS class names use lowercase-hyphenated naming convention (e.g., .navbar-nav)
- Alphabetize rules by selector
- Alphabetize properties by declaration
- Define or override variables centrally in less/variables.less
- Define or override mixins centrally in less/mixins.less
In development, styling is written and managed through multiple lesscss files. In order to generate a CSS file of all styling, run the build Gruntjs task:
grunt build
This task will compile and minify the lesscss files into CSS files located at dist/css/patternfly.min.css
and dist/css/patternfly-additional.min.css
.
PatternFlyIcons font is generated using IcoMoon. Load PatternFlyIcons-webfont.json
as a new project in IcoMoon and update as necessary. Please commit the updated PatternFlyIcons-webfont.json
file in addition to the updated font files and supporting LESS/CSS changes.
The tests/
directory contains HTML pages with component and pattern examples in order to facilitate development. Please consult the official documentation (see below) for full details on how to use PatternFly.
The HTML pages in tests/
are generated using Jekyll. Do not edit these files directly. See tests-src/
to change these files.
PatternFly is released through the Bower, npm, and RPM.
To release a new version version of PatternFly, edit bower.json
, package.json
, and MAKEFILE
accordingly.
Update the version listed in bower.json
by editing the file and changing the line:
"version": "<new_version>"
Update the version listed in package.json
by editing the file and changing the line:
"version": "<new_version>"
Update the MAKEFILE
by editing the file and changing the following lines:
VERSION=<new_version>
MILESTONE=
# PACKAGE_RPM_RELEASE=0.0.$(MILESTONE)
PACKAGE_RPM_RELEASE=1
Commit the version bump:
git commit -a -m "Version bump to <new_version>"
Tag and push upstream (assuming you have commit access):
git tag <new_version>
git push && git push --tags
The Bower package manager determines available versions and installs based upon git tags, so the new version will now be automatically available via Bower.
To publish a new version to npm, run:
npm publish
RPMs of PatternFly Bower releases are built using Fedora or RHEL and rpm-build.
Verify MAKEFILE
is properly configured.
Make the dist:
make dist
Copy the resulting tarball from the previous step to your rpmbuild/SOURCES directory.
e.g., cp patternfly-1.1.1.tar.gz ~/rpmbuild/SOURCES
Build the RPM:
rpmbuild -ba patternfly.spec
Commit the source RPM [1] to https://github.com/patternfly/patternfly-srpms.
[1] e.g., ~/rpmbuild/SRPMS/patternfly1-1.1.1-1.fc20.src.rpm
Serve the commited source RPM via RawGit.
Ask @rhamilto or @gregsheremeta to add a new build on Fedora Copr using the URL created in the previous step.
Edit MAKEFILE
as follows and commit the change:
VERSION=<new_version + 1>
MILESTONE=master
PACKAGE_RPM_RELEASE=0.0.$(MILESTONE)
# PACKAGE_RPM_RELEASE=1
See https://www.patternfly.org and http://getbootstrap.com/.
Since PatternFly is based on Bootstrap, PatternFly supports the same browsers as Bootstrap excluding Internet Explorer 8, plus the latest version of Firefox for Linux.
Important: starting with the v2.0.0 release, PatternFly no longer supports Internet Explorer 8.
See https://patternfly.atlassian.net/secure/RapidBoard.jspa?projectKey=PTNFLY&rapidView=4&view=planning.
Official tracking of bugs occurs in Jira. See https://patternfly.atlassian.net/issues/?filter=10300
Modifications to Bootstrap are copyright 2013 Red Hat, Inc. and licensed under the Apache License 2.0.