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Web Javascript packages

We're using a monorepo to manage our packages, as it becomes cumbersome to manage the overhead of multiple separate repos for each package. Using lerna to manage all of our packages in one repo simplifies the process.

codecov

Development Environment

We recommend using Visual Studio Code and installing the recommended workspace extensions which VS Code will suggest when you open the repo or when you browse the extensions panel. There are a few workspace settings configured with the repo.

Use Chrome for debugging, install the React and Redux extensions.

Getting Started

We are still using node 16.x and npm 8.x. If you are using nvm, there is an .nvmrc file, so just run nvm install to get the latest 16.x/8.x versions (or set up your environment to automatically switch). Otherwise, download from the node homepage.

Scripts

  • npm install : Install all dependencies and automatically bootstrap packages. Should be run before any of the other steps.

  • npm start: Start building all packages and watching them (when possible). Use when you're developing, and your changes will be picked up automatically.

  • npm test: Start running tests in all packages and watching (when possible). Use when you're developing, and any breaking changes will be printed out automatically.

    Log messages from our log package are disabled by default in tests in jest.setup.ts. To change the log level, set the DH_LOG_LEVEL env variable. For example, to enable all log messages run DH_LOG_LEVEL=4 npm test.

    Note that log messages from other sources such as react prop types will still be printed since they do not go through our logger.

    If you want to collect coverage locally, run npm test -- --coverage

  • npm run build: Create a production build of all packages. Mainly used by CI when packaging up a production version of the app.

  • npm run preview: Runs the Vite preview server for the built code-studio, embed-grid, and embed-chart. These will open on ports 4000, 4010, and 4020.

Edit .env.local in each package to contain the following pointing to your local DHC address. These are needed for the session websocket and for things like notebooks to be proxied correctly by Vite.

VITE_CORE_API_URL=http://localhost:10000/jsapi
VITE_PROXY_URL=http://localhost:10000

Package Overview

There are many packages located in the packages directory. A few of the more important ones are:

Contributing

For details on how to contribute to this repository, please see the contributing guidelines.

Creating a New Package

Depending on what your package is, there are a couple of different templates that may be appropriate.

Application package

A standalone application with it's own entry point. Recommend copying the embed-grid package, removing any dependencies and files not required.

Component/library package

A component/library package that can be imported into other packages. Recommend copying the components package, removing any dependencies and files not required.

Releasing a New Version

When releasing a new version, you need to commit a version bump, then tag and create the release. By creating the release, the publish-packages action will be triggered, and will automatically publish the packages. Some of these steps below also make use of the GitHub CLI

  1. Bump the version:
    • Run npm run version-bump. Select the type of version bump (patch, minor, or major version). Remember the version for the next steps, and fill it in instead of <version> (should be in semver format with v prefix, e.g. v0.7.1).
    • Commit your changes. git commit --all --message="Version Bump <version>"
    • Create a pull request. gh pr create --fill --web
    • Approve the pull request and merge to main.
  2. Generate the changelog:
    • Generate a GitHub Personal access token with the public_repo scope. Copy this token and replace <token> with it below.
    • Generate the changelog: GITHUB_AUTH=<token> npm run changelog --silent -- --next-version=<version> > /tmp/changelog_<version>.md
  3. Create the tag. Use the command line to create an annotated tag (lightweight tags will not work correctly with lerna-changelog): git tag --annotate <version> --file /tmp/changelog_<version>.md
  4. Push the tag: git push origin <version>
  5. Create the release: gh release create <version> --notes-file /tmp/changelog_<version>.md --title <version>

After the release is created, you can go to the actions page to see the publish action being kicked off.

Browser Support

Support is best for Google Chrome and Chromium based browsers (such as Microsoft Edge based on Chromium). We try and maintain compatibility with Mozilla Firefox and Apple Safari as well.

If you encounter an issue specific to a browser, check that your browser is up to date, then check issues labeled with firefox or safari for a list of known browser compatibility issues before reporting the issue.

Release Strategy

All new changes (bug fixes, feature requests) are merged to main so they are always included in the latest release.

Stable Releases

Stable releases are created periodically off of the main with the dist-tag latest. These will include an appropriate version bump and release notes, detailing the changes that are in that version.

Nightly Releases

Nightly releases are published every night with the dist-tag nightly to npm. You can reference the nightly release to always be on the latest by referencing nightly as the version, though stability is not guaranteed, e.g. npm install --save @deephaven/grid@nightly.

Hotfix Releases

For Long Term Support releases, we create a new branch in Community matching the LTS version number (e.g. v0.6), then adding a matching dist-tag to the publish-packages.yml for that branch. Bug fixes/hotfixes are then either cherry-picked from main (if the fix has been merged to main), or directly merged into the hotfix branch (if code has changed in main and the fix only applies in the hotfix branch). Once the branch is pushed to origin, the publish step is kicked off by creating a release as instructed in the Releasing a New Version section.

Analyzing Bundle Size

When adding new features, it can be useful to analyze the final package size to see what's in the package. Use source-map-explorer to see what's taking up the most size in the package. First run npm run build to build a production bundle, then run npx source-map-explorer 'packages/<package-name>/build/static/js/*.js', e.g.:

npm run build
npx source-map-explorer 'packages/code-studio/build/static/js/*.js'

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