The dashboard is written in TypeScript and React. For styling it uses TailwindCSS which is a bit nicer than inlining CSS as it supports pseudo classes and a is a little more abstract/reusable.
The App.tsx
is the entry point for the SPA and it uses React-Router to register all pages.
<Switch>
<Route path="/" exact component={Workspaces} />
<Route path="/profile" exact component={Profile} />
<Route path="/notifications" exact component={Notifications} />
<Route path="/subscriptions" exact component={Subscriptions} />
<Route path="/env-vars" exact component={EnvVars} />
<Route path="/git-integration" exact component={GitIntegration} />
<Route path="/feature-preview" exact component={FeaturePreview} />
<Route path="/default-ide" exact component={DefaultIDE} />
</Switch>
Pages are loaded lazily using React.lazy
so that not everything needs to be loaded up-front but only when needed:
const Notifications = React.lazy(() => import("./account/Notifications"));
const Profile = React.lazy(() => import("./account/Profile"));
const Subscriptions = React.lazy(() => import("./account/Subscriptions"));
const DefaultIDE = React.lazy(() => import("./settings/DefaultIDE"));
const EnvVars = React.lazy(() => import("./settings/EnvVars"));
const FeaturePreview = React.lazy(() => import("./settings/FeaturePreview"));
const GitIntegration = React.lazy(() => import("./settings/GitIntegration"));
Global state is passed through React.Context
.
After creating a new component, run the following to update the license header:
leeway run components:update-license-header
Gitpod installations have a feature that - if you are authorized - allow different versions of the dashboard. This allows for front-end development with live data and super-quick turnarounds.
Preconditions
- logged in user on the respective Gitpod installation (e.g. gitpod.example.org)
- user has the
"developer"
role
Steps
- Start a workspace (on any installation), and start the dev-server with
yarn start-local
- Configure your browser to always send header
X-Frontend-Dev-URL
with value set to the result ofgp url 3000
to the Gitpod installation you want to modify (gitpod.example.org) - Visit https://gitpod.example.org, start modifying your
dashboard
in your workspace, and experience the effect live (incl. hot reloading)
*: This feature is not enabled on all installations, and requires special user privileges.
All the commands in this section are meant to be executed from the components/dashboard
directory.
Set the following 2 environment variables either via your account settings or via the command line.
You are not expected to update the values of these variables for a long time after you first set them.
🚨 Heads up! Be careful when using the command line, as the
gp
CLI will restrict the scope of the variables to the current project, meaning if you are not already working from your own personal fork you'll end up having variables you can't access when you do.
You can always go to your account settings and edit the scope for each variable to something like */gitpod
.
# Use "gitpod.io" for the SaaS version of Gitpod, or specify the host of your self-hosted gitpod
GP_DEV_HOST=gitpod.io
# Notice the cookie name (_gitpod_io_v2_) may be different if self-hosted.
# Read below for how to get the actual value to use instead of "AUTHENTICATION_COOKIE_VALUE"
GP_DEV_COOKIE="_gitpod_io_v2_=AUTHENTICATION_COOKIE_VALUE"
Replace AUTHENTICATION_COOKIE_VALUE
with the value of your auth cookie taken from your browser's dev tools while visiting your target Gitpod host (e.g. s%3Axxxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx.XXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
).
ℹ️ How to get the cookie name and value |
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🚀 After following the above steps, run yarn run start
to start developing.
You can view the dashboard at https://PORT_NUMBER
-GITPOD_WORKSPACE_URL
(PORT_NUMBER
is usually 3000
).
Open a terminal, launch the dashboard app (see instructions above):
yarn start
When the dashboard app is up and running, open another terminal using Bash as shell (this is mandatory at the moment)