/drift-frontend

Primary LanguageJavaScriptApache License 2.0Apache-2.0

Build Status

Drift Frontend

Getting Started

There is a comprehensive quick start guide in the Storybook Documentation to setting up an Insights environment complete with:

Note: You will need to set up the Insights environment if you want to develop with the app due to the consumption of the chroming service as well as setting up your global/app navigation through the API.

Developing

First time setup

  1. Make sure you have Node.js and npm installed
  2. Run script to patch your /etc/hosts
  3. Make sure you are using Red Hat proxy
  4. Clone this repository
  5. Run npm install to install dependencies

Running locally

  1. Run npm run start:proxy to start chrome proxy and webpack bundler which serves the files with webpack dev server
  2. App will be running at https://stage.foo.redhat.com:1337/insights/drift/

Testing

Testing locally

  • npm run test will run all tests
  • npm run lint will run linter

Update test snapshots

  • npm run test -- -u

Debug

Ensure the following entry is in your /etc/hosts file:

127.0.0.1 prod.foo.redhat.com
127.0.0.1 stage.foo.redhat.com
127.0.0.1 qa.foo.redhat.com
127.0.0.1 ci.foo.redhat.com

how to run with Clowder drift-backend

OBS: First go through the steps in drift-dev-setup.

In terminal run:

npm run ephemeral

This will route requests to pods running in ephemeral cluster.

Note: If you see ℹ 「wdm」: Compiled successfully., you are in good shape.

Finally, hit the following URL in your browser. If you are not logged in, you will be prompted to do so.

https://ci.foo.redhat.com:1337/insights/drift

how to run with Stage drift-backend

In terminal run:

npm run stage

This will route requests to pods running in stage.

Note: If you see ℹ 「wdm」: Compiled successfully., you are in good shape.

Finally, hit the following URL in your browser. If you are not logged in, you will be prompted to do so.

https://stage.foo.redhat.com:1337/apps/drift/

how to run with local drift-backend

OBS: First go through the steps in drift-dev-setup.

And have backend services running locally with sh run_app_locally

In terminal run:

npm run local

This will route requests to services running locally.

Finally, hit the following URL in your browser. If you are not logged in, you will be prompted to do so.

https://ci.foo.redhat.com:1337/insights/drift

Testing federated modules with another application

If you want to test Drift with another application deployed locally, you can utilize LOCAL_APPS environment variable and deploy the needed application on separate ports. To learn more about the variable, see https://github.com/RedHatInsights/frontend-components/tree/master/packages/config#running-multiple-local-frontend-applications.

Example

We'll take for example insights-inventory-frontend.

Open new terminal, navigate to Inventory repository, and run it on a separate port without proxy:

npm run start -- --port=8003

In a separate terminal, run Drift with proxy enabled and list Inventory:

LOCAL_APPS=inventory:8003~http npm run start:proxy

troubleshooting

If you are updating the drift-frontend app after a long period of time away, your node_modules folder may not be up to date with the packages outlined in the package.json file. The easiest way to update this quickly and efficiently is to fun the following commands in a terminal window.

cd drift-frontend
rm -rf node_modules
npm i

After the packages are installed, you should be able to run npm run start in the same terminal to get the app up and running.

to run sonarqube

  1. Make sure that you have SonarQube scanner installed.
  2. Duplicate the sonar-scanner.properties.sample config file.
  cp sonar-scanner.properties.sample sonar-scanner.properties
  1. Update sonar.host.url, sonar.login in sonar-scanner.properties.
  2. Run the following command
java -jar /path/to/sonar-scanner-cli-4.6.0.2311.jar -D project.settings=sonar-scanner.properties
  1. Review the results in your SonarQube web instance.