/treetracker-admin-client

The Admin Panel is the part of the Treetracker project for verifying, processing and managing data collected by the Treetracker app

Primary LanguageJavaScriptGNU Affero General Public License v3.0AGPL-3.0

Greenstand Treetracker Admin Panel – Client

The Admin Panel is the part of the Treetracker project for verifying, processing and managing data collected by the Treetracker app.

This is the React web frontend of the Admin Panel, built with create-react-app and Material UI.

The legacy Admin Panel API is managed separately under Greenstand/treetracker-admin-api. The API specification is (partially) documented in OpenAPI format: treetracker-admin.v1.yaml

The Admin Panel project is in the process of migrating away from a single, dedicated API to use the latest Greenstand microservices, including:

The spec for each of these APIs can be found in the docs/api/spec directory of each project.

Please add any missing content to this readme as a pull request.

Development Environment Quick Start

There are three main options for development in the Admin Panel:

  • For frontend work only (recommended):
    1. Follow the steps below to fork and clone this repo
  • For API work only:
    1. Follow setup instructions in the treetracker-admin-api project
  • As a completely local development environment (not normally required):
    1. Install postgres and postgis locally, install a database seed, and run database migrations
    2. Install and run the backend API, configured to use your local database
    3. Install and run the frontend, configured to user you local backend API

Step 1: Install git

See https://git-scm.com/downloads for instructions.

Step 2: Install Node.js

Node.js version 16.x works best for now; later versions have exhibited some strange behaviour with this project. If you encounter issues with the server, check your version of Node.js first. This includes CORS related issues when fetching the API.

We recommend using nvm to install and manage your Node.js instances. More details here: https://www.sitepoint.com/quick-tip-multiple-versions-node-nvm/

  1. Make sure a profile exists for your terminal, run touch ~/.profile; touch ~/.zshrc
  2. Install nvm: curl -o- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/nvm-sh/nvm/v0.38.0/install.sh | bash
  3. Install the latest version of Node.js 16: nvm install 16
  4. Use the installed Node.js: nvm use 16

Alternatively, you can install Node.js directly from https://nodejs.org/dist/latest-v16.x/

On MacOS, you can alleviate the need to run as sudo by using nvm or by following John Papa's instructions.

Step 3: Fork and clone this repository

  1. Click Fork on this GitHub repo and follow the steps to fork the repo to your account
  2. Open terminal
  3. Go to a folder where you would like to install the project. Then type the following, replacing <username> with your GitHub username:
git clone https://github.com/<username>/treetracker-admin-client

Move into the new source code directory and add Greenstand as a remote:

cd treetracker-admin-client
git remote add upstream https://github.com/Greenstand/treetracker-admin-client

Step 4: Get configuration files

Only required if you are also developing and running the backend/API locally

  1. Add a .env.local file in the root directory containing the following line:
REACT_APP_API_ROOT=http://localhost:3000

Step 5: Install npm dependencies

npm install

Step 6: Start the client

npm start

Step 7: View the Treetracker Admin Panel

Visit http://localhost:3001

Valid login credentials for the Admin Panel within the development environment can be found pinned to the #admin_panel_chat channel in Slack.

Getting an Issue Assigned

  1. Look through the open issues for one that looks interesting. Use labels to look for good first issues, or to filter by size: you could start small, or get your teeth into something more substantial (medium or large).
  2. If you're not sure what to work on, ask in the #admin_panel_chat channel on Slack and we'll find a good issue for you.
  3. Add a comment to the selected issue to say you'd like to work on it, and ask for any clarification you need. Some of the info you need to solve the problem may be missing from the description of the issue.
  4. One of the Greenstand leads will then assign it to you and try to help with any questions.

There are lots of opportunities to offer ideas and take ownership of larger pieces of work, so don't be afraid to ask!

Working on an Issue

  1. Create a branch for the issue in your local repo
  2. Make your changes and test everything works locally
  3. Push your changes to your fork on GitHub and create a pull request into Greenstand/master
  4. Fill in as much info as you can in the PR, including screenshots or videos of the change to help the reviewer understand what you've done
  5. A member of the review team will review your changes (it can take a little while, since lots of us are volunteers) and may request changes
  6. Make the requested changes, asking for clarification in the PR if necessary, and push the updated code
  7. When the reviewer is happy, they will approve and merge your changes

You can work one more than one issue at a time, while you wait for your PR to be reviewed or questions to be answered, but remember to keep each issue on a separate branch. If two issues are closely related, you can combine them in one branch and PR.

Commit Message and PR Title Format

We use automatic semantic versioning, which looks at commit messages to determine how to increment the version number for deployment.

Your commit messages will need to follow the Conventional Commits format, for example:

feat(account): add new button

Since we squash commits on merging PRs into master, this applies to PR titles as well.

Keeping Your Fork in Sync

Your forked repo won't automatically stay in sync with Greenstand, so you'll need to occassionally sync manually (typically before starting work on a new feature).

git checkout master
git pull upstream master --rebase
git push origin master

If there are merge conflicts in your PR, you may need to rebase your branch. Ask a member of the team if you need help with this.

git checkout <feature_branch>
git pull upstream master --rebase
git push origin <feature_branch> --force

Code style guide

We follow the Airbnb JavaScript style guide. The superficial aspects of this style are enforced by a pre-commit hook in the project that runs Prettier when you commit a change.

If you are using VSCode as your IDE, please follow this guide to set up Prettier and automatically format your code on file save.

You can also manually run npm run prettier. Configuration files are already included in this repo.

Rules

Indention 2 Spaces for indentation

Semicolon Use semicolons at the end of each line

Characters 80 characters per line

Quotes Use single quotes unless you are writing JSON

const foo = 'bar';

Braces Opening braces go on the same line as the statement

if (true) {
  console.log('here');
}

Variable declaration Declare one Variable per statement

const dog = ['bark', 'woof'];
let cat = ['meow', 'sleep'];

Variable, properties and function names Use lowerCamelCase for variables, properties and function names

const adminUser = db.query('SELECT * From users ...');

Class names Use UpperCamelCase for class names

class Dog {
  bark() {
    console.log('woof');
  }
}

Descriptive conditions Make sure to have a descriptive name that tells the use and meaning of the code

const isValidPassword =
  password.length >= 4 && /^(?=.*\d).{4,}$/.test(password);

Object/Array creation Use trailing commas and put short declarations on a single line. Only quote keys when your interpreter complains:

var a = ['hello', 'world'];
var b = {
  good: 'code',
  'is generally': 'pretty',
};

Testing

We follow the React/Jest convention for writng tests. All test file are located at the same directory with the file under test, named xxx.test.js.

Please ensure that at least all the model unit tests under ./src/model/ pass.

To run tests:

npm test

Cypress

Make your own /cypress/fixtures/login.json file containing the actual credentials in order to run the cypress tests.

How to log

We use loglevel for logging, with some conventions. Using loglevel, we will be able to open/close a single file's log by chaining the level of log on the fly, even in production env.

The default of log level is set in the file: ./src/init.js

log.setDefaultLevel('info');

To use loglevel in js file, we recommend following this convention:

import * as loglevel from 'loglevel'

const log = loglevel.getLogger('../components/TreeImageScrubber')

... ...

	log.debug('render TreeImageScrubber...')

The convention is: call the loglevel.getLogger() function with argument of 'the path to current file'. In the above example, the js file is: /src/components/TreeImageScrumbber.js, so pass the path string: ../components/TreeImageScrubber in, just like what we do in 'import' statement, but the path just points to itself.

Actually, we can pass in any string, following this convention is just for a UNIQUE key for the log object, now we can set the log level in browser to open/close log. To do so, open DevTools -> application -> localstorage -> add a key: 'loglevel:[the path]' and value: [the log level] (e.g. loglevel:../components/TreeImageScrubber -> DEBUG ) snapshot

About Material-UI

We use Material-UI (4.0 currently) to build our UI.

We made some custom by setting the theme of Material-UI to fit our UI design. The customized theme file is located at ./src/components/common/theme.js. If you find components do not work as you expect, please check section: overrides and props in theme, we override some default styles and behaviors.

We create some basic components, such as 'alert', 'confirm', 'form', feel free to pick what you want or copy the sample code. You can find them in our Storybook components gallery.

You can also pick the typographies and colors as you want in Storybook -> MaterialUITheme -> theme/typography/palette.

About Storybook

We use Storybook to develop/test components independently.

Run the following command to start Storybook:

npm run storybook

Visit this URL in the browser: http://localhost:9009

All the stories are located at ./src/stories/

Advanced local development using docker ## Currently broken ##

For developers familiar with docker, we offer a dockerized setup for local development.

To run docker on a local machine, you will have to install Docker first. Docker is a linux container technology, so running it on Mac or Windows requires an application with an attached linux VM. Docker provides one for each OS by default.

Mac

Install Docker for Mac using homebrew, using the following command

$ brew cask install docker

You can alternatively install Docker via: Docker for Mac

Once Docker is installed, lauch Docker from the Applications GUI.

Windows

For most versions of Windows: Docker for Windows

For some older versions or Win10 Home: Docker Toolbox. At least on one machine, to get this to work, when you get to the step to do QuickStart terminal script, instead, run:

docker-machine create default --virtualbox-no-vtx-check

then re-run the QuickStart terminal script.

If you use Docker Toolbox, check the IP address in the output of the QuickStart terminal script. You will use this IP address later instead of localhost.

Linux

To install on linux, you can run sudo apt-get install -y docker-ce but there is additional setup to verify keys, etc.

Install, build docker containers and go

Run the setup script. This script installs node modules, builds docker containers, and starts them

./dev/scripts/setup.sh

You can now view the Treetracker Admin Panel at http://localhost:8080.

Note: If you try to access the site on port 3001 you will recieve a CORS error

Note: If you used Docker Toolbox, you may need to use the IP address it reported, such as http://192.168.99.100:8080_

It may take a few seconds for the web and api servers to come up. You can monitor them using the docker logs commands as:

docker logs -f treetracker-admin-web
docker logs -f treetracker-admin-api

Also see Scripts below

The REST API documentation can be viewed and explored by visiting http://localhost:3000/api/explorer

To stop the dev environment use

./dev/scripts/down.sh

To start the dev environment back up use

./dev/scripts/up.sh

Just edit as you normally would to view changes in your development environment.

Alternative setup for MS Windows (Works on Linux and Mac also)

On Windows the easiest way to develop and debug Node.js applications is using Visual Studio Code. It comes with Node.js support out of the box.

https://code.visualstudio.com/docs

Still can not figure it out?

Here is our wiki page for troubleshooting, take a look.

Help us to improve it by adding your experience solving this problem.

Scripts

Useful scripts are contained in /dev/scripts. Their uses are described here. Scripts are run from the repository root as /dev/scripts/{script-name}.sh

install.sh install or update npm modules for server and client projects

build.sh build docker images

up.sh bring up docker containers in docker as described by docker-compose.yml

setup.sh run install.sh, build.sh, and up.sh

down.sh bring down docker containers

logs-api.sh show logs for api server

logs-web.sh show logs for React.js dev server

docker-clear-images.sh clear out all docker images

docker-remove-containers.sh clear out all docker containers

Further reading

See Contributing to the Cause