Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
82 lines (59 loc) · 3.04 KB

CONTRIBUTING.md

File metadata and controls

82 lines (59 loc) · 3.04 KB

Development MetaDeploy

Using Docker

To set up MetaDeploy using Docker please see the following instructions ./docs/running_docker.rst.

Using Local Machine

MetaDeploy can be configured locally. To achieve this follow the instructions provided in ./docs/running.rst.

Development Tasks

To run these tests with Docker first run the following commands,

docker-compose up -d
docker-compose exec web bash

If you are not using Docker or are using the VS Code integrated terminal inside the Docker container simply execute the commands in your project's root directory:

  • yarn serve: starts development server (with watcher) at http://localhost:8080/ (assets are served from dist/ dir)
  • yarn test:py: run Python tests
  • yarn test:py:integration: run Python integration tests
  • yarn test:js: run JS tests
  • yarn test:js:watch: run JS tests with a watcher for development
  • yarn lint: formats and lints all files
  • yarn lint:js: formats, lints, and type-checks .js files
  • yarn lint:sass: formats and lints .scss files
  • yarn lint:py: formats and lints .py files
  • yarn prettier:js: formats .js files
  • yarn lint:other: formats .json, .md, and .yml files
  • yarn tsc: runs JS type-checking
  • yarn build: builds development (unminified) static assets into dist/ dir
  • yarn prod: builds production (minified) static assets into dist/prod/ dir

Writing integration tests

For now, our Salesforce integration tests do not modify state on the Salesforce side; they only test that they could. As such, we don't need to generate scratch orgs to test against.

Instead, we will use some stable testing credentials for a stable test org.

Internationalization

To build and compile .mo and .po files for the backend, run:

$ python manage.py makemessages --locale <locale>
$ python manage.py compilemessages

These commands require the GNU gettext toolset (brew install gettext).

For the front-end, translation JSON files are served from locales/<language>/ directories, and the user language is auto-detected at runtime.

During development, strings are parsed automatically from the JS, and an English translation file is auto-generated to locales_dev/en/translation.json on every build (yarn build or yarn serve). When this file changes, translations must be copied over to the locales/en/translation.json file in order to have any effect.

Strings with dynamic content (i.e. known only at runtime) cannot be automatically parsed, but will log errors while the app is running if they're missing from the served translation files. To resolve, add the missing key:value translations to locales/<language>/translation.json.

Storybook Development Workflow

When doing development for the component library in Storybook, use the following command:

$ yarn storybook

After running, you can view the Storybook at http://localhost:6006/ in your browser.