Admin UI
This directory contains the client-side code for CockroachDB's web-based admin UI, which provides details about a cluster's performance and health. See the Admin UI docs for an expanded overview.
Getting Started
To start developing the UI, be sure you're able to build and run a CockroachDB
node. Instructions for this are located in the top-level README. Every Cockroach
node serves the UI, by default on port 8080, but you can customize the port with
the --http-port flag. If you've started a node with the default options,
you'll be able to access the UI at http://localhost:8080.
Our UI is compiled using a collection of tools that depends on Node.js and are managed with Yarn, a package manager that offers more deterministic package installation than NPM. NodeJS 6.x and Yarn 1.7.0 are known to work. Chrome, Google's internet browser. Unit tests are run using Chrome's "Headless" mode.
With Node and Yarn installed, bootstrap local development by running make in
this directory. This will run yarn install to install our Node dependencies,
run the tests, and compile the assets. Asset compilation happens in two steps.
First, Webpack runs the TypeScript compiler and CSS
preprocessor to assemble assets into the dist directory. Then, we package
those assets into embedded.go using
go-bindata. When you later run make build in the parent directory, embedded.go is linked into the cockroach
binary so that it can serve the admin UI when you run cockroach start.
Developing
When making changes to the UI, it is desirable to see those changes with data from an existing cluster without rebuilding and relaunching the cluster for each change. This is useful for rapidly visualizing local development changes against a consistent and realistic dataset.
We've created a simple NodeJS proxy to accomplish this. This server serves all requests for web resources (JavaScript, HTML, CSS) out of the code in this directory, while proxying all API requests to the specified CockroachDB node.
To use this proxy, run
$ make watch TARGET=<target-cluster-http-uri>then navigate to http://localhost:3000 to access the UI.
To proxy to a cluster started up in secure mode, use:
$ make watch-secure TARGET=<target-cluster-https-uri>then navigate to https://localhost:3000 to access the UI.
While the proxy is running, any changes you make in the src directory will
trigger an automatic recompilation of the UI. This recompilation should be much
faster than a cold compile—usually less than one second—as Webpack can reuse
in-memory compilation artifacts from the last compile.
If you get cryptic TypeScript compile/lint failures upon running make that
seem completely unrelated to your changes, try removing yarn.installed and
node_modules before re-running make (do NOT run yarn install directly).
Be sure to also commit modifications resulting from dependency changes, like
updates to package.json and yarn.lock.
DLLs for speedy builds
To improve Webpack compile times, we split the compile output into three bundles, each of which can be compiled independently. The feature that enables this is Webpack's DLLPlugin, named after the Windows term for shared libraries ("dynamic-link libraries").
Third-party dependencies, which change infrequently, are contained in the vendor DLL. Generated protobuf definitions, which change more frequently, are contained in the protos DLL. First-party JavaScript and TypeScript are compiled in the main app bundle, which is then "linked" against the two DLLs. This means that updating a dependency or protobuf only requires rebuilding the appropriate DLL and the main app bundle, and updating a UI source file doesn't require rebuilding the DLLs at all. When DLLs were introduced, the time required to start the proxy was reduced from over a minute to under five seconds.
DLLs are not without costs. Notably, the development proxy cannot determine when
a DLL is out-of-date, so the proxy must be manually restarted when dependencies
or protobufs change. (The Make build system, however, tracks the DLLs'
dependencies properly, so a top-level make build will rebuild exactly the
necessary DLLs.) DLLs also make the Webpack configuration rather complicated.
Still, the tradeoff seems well worth it.
CCL Build
In CCL builds, code in pkg/ui/ccl/src overrides code in pkg/ui/src at build
time, via a Webpack import resolution rule. E.g. if a file imports
src/views/shared/components/licenseType, it'll resolve to
pkg/ui/src/views/shared/components/licenseType in an OSS build, and
pkg/ui/ccl/src/views/shared/components/licenseType in a CCL build.
CCL code can import OSS code by prefixing paths with oss/, e.g.
import "oss/src/myComponent". By convention, this is only done by a CCL file
importing the OSS version of itself, e.g. to render the OSS version of itself
when the trial period has expired.
Running tests
To run the tests outside of CI:
$ make testManaging dependencies
The NPM registry (and the Yarn proxy in front of it) have historically proven
quite flaky. Errors during yarn install were the leading cause of spurious CI
failures in the first half of 2018.
The solution is to check our JavaScript dependencies into version control, like we do for our Go dependencies. Checking in the entire node_modules folder is a non-starter: it clocks in at 230MB and 28k files at the time of writing. Instead, we use a Yarn feature called the offline mirror. We ship a .yarnrc file that instructs Yarn to save a tarball of each package we depend on in the yarn-vendor folder. These tarballs are then checked in to version control. To avoid cluttering the main repository, we've made the yarn-vendor folder a Git submodule that points at the cockroachdb/yarn-vendored repository.
Adding a dependency
Let's pretend you want to add a dependency on left-pad. Just use yarn add
like you normally would:
$ cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/cockroachdb/cockroach/pkg/ui
$ yarn add FOOWhen Yarn finishes, git status will report something like this:
$ git status
Changes not staged for commit:
modified: pkg/ui/package.json
modified: pkg/ui/yarn-vendor (untracked content)
modified: pkg/ui/yarn.lockThe changes to package.json and yarn.lock are the normal additions of the new dependency information to the manifest files. The changes to yarn-vendor are unique to the offline mirror mode. Let's look more closely:
$ git -C yarn-vendor status
Untracked files:
left-pad-1.3.0.tgzYarn has left you a tarball of the new dependency. Perfect! If you were adding a more complicated dependency, you'd likely see some transitive dependencies appear as well.
The process from here is exactly the same as updating any of our other vendor submodules. Make a new branch in the submodule, commit the new tarball, and push it:
$ cd yarn-vendor
$ git checkout -b YOURNAME/add-left-pad
$ git add .
$ git commit -m 'Add left-pad@1.3.0'
$ git push origin add-left-padBe sure to push to cockroachdb/yarn-vendored directly instead of a personal fork. Otherwise TeamCity won't be able to find the commit.
Then, return to the main repository and commit the changes, including the new submodule commit. Push that and make a PR:
$ cd ..
$ git checkout -b add-left-pad
$ git add pkg/ui
$ git commit -m 'ui: use very smart approach to pad numbers with zeros'
$ git push YOUR-REMOTE add-left-padThis time, be sure to push to your personal fork. Topic branches are not permitted in the main repository.
When your PR has been approved, please be sure to merge your change to yarn-vendored to master and delete your topic branch:
$ cd yarn-vendor
$ git checkout master
$ git merge add-left-pad
$ git push origin master
$ git push origin -d add-left-padThis last step is extremely important! Any commit in yarn-vendored that is
referenced by the main repository must remain forever accessible, or it will be
impossible for future git clones to build that version of Cockroach. GitHub
will garbage collect commits that are not accessible from any branch or tag, and
periodically, someone comes along and cleans up old topic branches in
yarn-vendored, potentially removing the only reference to a commit. By merging
your commit on master, you ensure that your commit will not go missing.
Verifying offline behavior
Our build system is careful to invoke yarn install --offline, which instructs
Yarn to exit with an error if it would need to reach out to the network. Running
CI on your PR is thus sufficient to verify that all dependencies have been
vendored correctly.
You can perform the verification locally if you'd like, though:
$ cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/cockroachdb/cockroach/pkg/ui
$ rm -r node_modules yarn.installed
$ yarn cache clean
$ makeIf make succeeds, you've vendored dependencies correctly.
Removing a dependency
To remove a dependency, just run yarn remove.
Note that removing a dependency will not remove its tarball from the yarn-vendor folder. This is not as bad as it sounds. When Git fetches submodules, it always performs a full clone, so it would wind up downloading deleted tarballs anyway when it fetched older commits.
TODO(benesch): Yarn's offline mode has an additional option,
yarn-offline-mirror-pruning, that cleans up removed dependencies' tarballs.
Look into using this once dcodeIO/protobuf.js#716 is resolved. At the moment,
ProtobufJS tries to install some dependencies at runtime by invoking npm install itself (!); we avoid this by running yarn install on its behalf, but
this means two separate packages share the same yarn-vendor folder and this
confuses Yarn's pruning logic.
If the size of the yarn-vendored repository becomes problematic, we can look into offloading the large files into something like Git LFS. This is contingent upon resolving the above TODO.