Skip to content
This repository has been archived by the owner on Nov 13, 2021. It is now read-only.

Latest commit

 

History

History

Exercise 01 - Installing the CAP related tools

In this exercise you'll install all the tools required to work comfortably with the Node.js flavor of CAP in a local environment.

Successfully completing this exercise relies on the hardware and software prerequisites published for this CodeJam. These prerequisites describe the requirement for some software preinstalled; this includes VS Code and Node.js. This exercise will focus on tools relating to both of these. (If you haven't already installed Node.js, we recommend version 10 (LTS)).

Steps

After completing these steps you'll have a working local environment for development of CAP based projects with Node.js, using the CAP "development kit" package @sap/cds-dk.

1. Install the CDS command line tool

The CDS command line tool is the heart of everything you do when developing CAP services locally. It is Node.js based and comes in the form of an NPM package (which further depends on other packages). The package and its dependencies are in the @sap namespace and are available from the SAP NPM registry.

👉 First, delete the reation of the @sap namespace to the SAP NPM registry (It's not updated anymore since June 2020):

user@host:~
=> npm config delete "@sap:registry"

👉 Check that this setting is now saved in your configuration, with:

user@host:~
=> npm config ls

You should see output similar to this:

; cli configs
metrics-registry = "https://registry.npmjs.org/"
scope = ""
user-agent = "npm/6.4.1 node/v10.15.3 linux x64"

; userconfig /user/.npmrc
@sap:registry = "https://npm.sap.com"

; node bin location = /user/.nvm/versions/node/v10.15.3/bin/node
; cwd = /
; HOME = /user
; "npm config ls -l" to show all defaults.

👉 Next, explore the information about the @sap/cds-dk package, including its dependencies, with:

user@host:~
=> npm info @sap/cds-dk

This will show you that it has dependencies on other @sap namespaced packages, and also that there is a 'binary' (in other words an executable) called cds that's delivered as part of the package.

👉 Now, install the @sap/cds-dk package globally:

user@host:~
=> npm install --global @sap/cds-dk

This produces a fair amount of output as it works, but should eventually end with a couple of lines similar to this:

+ @sap/cds-dk@1.4.2
added 471 packages from 381 contributors in 33.398s

Here you can see that the version of the @sap/cds-dk package just installed is 1.4.2. It may be that the version of @sap/cds-dk that is installed when you do this exercise will be different (newer).

2. Install the CDS extension for VS Code

To efficiently and comfortably develop CAP based services with CDS, there is an extension for the VS Code IDE. This is available to download from the SAP Development Tools website.

Extensions can be installed directly in VS Code from the extension marketplace, or manually from a file. In this case the extension for CDS language support is available in the form of a file.

👉 Go to the Cloud section of the SAP Development Tools website and find the "CDS Language Support for Visual Studio Code" section. Follow the instructions there to download and subsequently install the extension.

To install the downloaded extension in VS Code have a look at the screenshot below:

CDS Extension installation in VS Code

When successfully installed, you should see the extension thus (again, the version number may be different):

CDS Language Support extension installed in VS Code

For macOS users only: To be able to open VS Code from the command line (which you will be doing in a subsequent exercise) you need to add the installation path of VS Code to the environment variable PATH. There's an option to do this via the Command Palette in VS Code.

Open the Command Palette with ⇧⌘P. You can also open it via the menu bar: View -> Command Palette.

Command Palette navigation in the menu bar

Search for code and press Enter.

search for code in the command palette

A success message for the process should then appear at the bottom right of the screen.

message that the 'code' command was successfully installed

3. Verify your development environment

👉 Run the following command from the terminal to check whether all required tools are installed (this is an experimental tool, please contact the instructor if you have any questions):

npx check-sap-cloud-readiness -codejam-cap

You should see an output similar to this: out

If necessary, double check the prerequisites to install the missing tools. Please contact the instructor of this CodeJam if you need help.

Summary

You've now installed the key tools for developing with CAP locally, and are all set to create your first project.

Questions

  1. What are the benefits of using NPM here?
  1. What are the @sap namespaced packages upon which @sap/cds-dk depends?
  1. What is the significance of using the --global option when installing the @sap/cds-dk package?
  1. What is the meaning of the .vsix file type for the VS Code extension? Can we dig into that to see what's inside?