open-vault/ui/README.md
Matthew Irish f982899f1e
embed yarn (#7740)
* embed yarn binary using yarn policies set-version and loosen the restriction on yarn in the dockerfile and the package.json

* don't lint the embedded yarn package
2019-10-25 16:00:45 -05:00

8.9 KiB

Table of Contents

Vault UI

This README outlines the details of collaborating on this Ember application.

Prerequisites

You will need the following things properly installed on your computer.

* lint-staged is an optional dependency - running yarn will install it. If don't want optional dependencies installed you can run yarn --ignore-optional. If you've ignored the optional deps previously and want to install them, you have to tell yarn to refetch all deps by running yarn --force.

In order to enforce the same version of yarn across installs, the yarn binary is included in the repo in the .yarn/releases folder. To update to a different version of yarn, use the yarn policies set-version VERSION command. For more information on this, see the documentation.

Running / Development

To get all of the JavaScript dependencies installed, run this in the ui directory:

  • yarn

If you want to run Vault UI and proxy back to a Vault server running on the default port, 8200, run the following in the ui directory:

  • yarn start

This will start an Ember CLI server that proxies requests to port 8200, and enable live rebuilding of the application as you change the UI application code. Visit your app at http://localhost:4200.

If your Vault server is running on a different port you can use the long-form version of the npm script:

ember server --proxy=http://localhost:PORT

Code Generators

Make use of the many generators for code, try ember help generate for more details

Running Tests

Running tests will spin up a Vault dev server on port 9200 via a pretest script that testem (the test runner) executes. All of the acceptance tests then run, proxing requests back to that server.

  • yarn run test-oss
  • yarn run test-oss -s to keep the test server running after the initial run.
  • yarn run test -f="policies" to filter the tests that are run. -f gets passed into QUnit's filter config
  • yarn run test:browserstack to run the kv acceptance tests in Browserstack

Automated Cross-Browser Testing

Vault uses Browserstack Automate to run all the kv acceptance tests on various browsers. You can view the list of browsers we test by viewing testem.browserstack.js.

Running Browserstack Locally

To run the Browserstack tests locally you will need to add your BROWSERSTACK_USERNAME and BROWSERSTACK_ACCESS_KEY to your environment. Then run yarn run test:browserstack. You can view the currently running tests at localhost:7357 or log in to Browserstack Automate to view a previous build.

To run the tests locally in a browser other than IE11, swap out launch_in_ci: ['BS_IE_11'] inside testem.browserstack.js.

Linting

  • yarn lint:hbs
  • yarn lint:js
  • yarn lint:js -- --fix

Building Vault UI into a Vault Binary

We use go-bindata-assetfs to build the static assets of the Ember application into a Vault binary.

This can be done by running these commands from the root directory run: make static-dist make dev-ui

This will result in a Vault binary that has the UI built-in - though in a non-dev setup it will still need to be enabled via the ui config or setting VAULT_UI environment variable.

Vault Storybook

The Vault UI uses Storybook to catalog all of its components. Below are details for running and contributing to Storybook.

Storybook Commands at a Glance

Command Description
yarn storybook run storybook
ember generate story [name-of-component] generate a new story
ember generate story [name-of-component] -ir [name-of-engine-or-addon] generate a new story in the specified engine or addon
yarn gen-story-md [name-of-component] update a story notes file
yarn gen-story-md [name-of-component] [name-of-engine-or-addon] update a story notes file in the specified engine or addon

Writing Stories

Each component in vault/ui/app/components should have a corresponding [component-name].stories.js and [component-name].md files within vault/ui/stories. Components in the core addon located at vault/ui/lib/core/addon/components have corresponding stories and markdown files in vault/ui/lib/core/stories.

Adding a new story

  1. Make sure the component is well-documented using jsdoc. This documentation should at minimum include the module name, an example of usage, and the params passed into the handlebars template. For example, here is how we document the ToggleButton Component:
/**
 * @module ToggleButton
 * `ToggleButton` components are used to expand and collapse content with a toggle.
 *
 * @example
 * ```js
 *   <ToggleButton @openLabel="Encrypt Output with PGP" @closedLabel="Encrypt Output with PGP" @toggleTarget={{this}} @toggleAttr="showOptions"/>
 *  {{#if showOptions}}
 *     <div>
 *       <p>
 *         I will be toggled!
 *       </p>
 *     </div>
 *   {{/if}}
 * ```
 *
 * @param {String} toggleAttr=null - The attribute upon which to toggle.
 * @param {Object} attrTarget=null - The target upon which the event handler should be added.
 * @param {String} [openLabel=Hide options] - The message to display when the toggle is open. //optional params are denoted by square brackets
 * @param {String} [closedLabel=More options] - The message to display when the toggle is closed.
 */

Note that placing a param inside brackets (e.g. [closedLabel=More options] indicates it is optional and has a default value of 'More options'.)

  1. Generate a new story with ember generate story [name-of-component]
  2. Inside the newly generated stories file, add at least one example of the component. If the component should be interactive, enable the Storybook Knobs addon.
  3. Generate the notes file for the component with yarn gen-story-md [name-of-component] (e.g. yarn gen-md alert-banner). This will generate markdown documentation of the component and place it at vault/ui/stories/[name-of-component].md. If your component is a template-only component, you will need to manually create the markdown file.

See the Storybook Docs for more information on writing stories.

Code Generators

It is important to add all new components into Storybook and to keep the story and notes files up to date. To ease the process of creating and updating stories please use the code generators using the commands listed above.