kyt
Every sizable JavaScript web app needs a common foundation: a setup to build, run, test and lint your code. kyt is a toolkit that encapsulates and manages the configuration for web apps.
Read more about kyt in our blog post.
Quick Start
- Install Node.js (v6.0+ required).
npm install -g kyt-cli
kyt-cli setup
- This will set up your project with application and configuration files so that you can get started with kyt. Learn more about setup.npm run dev
- Check out
http://localhost:3000
Features
- Optional universal support with a Node server provided for rendering front-end page requests
- Client and server hot reloading
- Custom Babel presets with ES6 support, optional React support and optimizations for polyfilling Node and browser builds.
- CSS Module and SASS support
- PostCSS support
- Static asset support
- Inline SVG support
- Style and script linter rulesets
- A pre-configured test runner with Jest
- Optional client-only mode for apps that already have a server
How it Works
kyt manages configuration for all aspects of development. It can be installed as an npm dependency into a new or existing project. kyt’s goal is to encapsulate only development tools, giving users the freedom to control their source directory and make important decisions about app architecture. kyt provides a command line interface for running all development tools.
Developers design their own architecture, choosing the tools they need for rendering, styling, and handling data.
For advanced use cases, kyt enables developers to add additional tools and configuration. See our config override instructions for details, and our recipes for examples.
In an attempt to gather feedback to set future priorities, we're running a brief user survey asking: what are you using modifyWebpackConfig
for?
Setting up a kyt project
kyt-cli is a utility for bootstrapping kyt projects. It can be installed globally and run to create a new project or integrate kyt with an existing project.
kyt-cli setup
See the kyt-cli documentation for more details.
Command line
kyt includes a command line program with all the commands needed for development.
Running kyt-cli setup
includes these commands as scripts in your package.json:
npm run dev
Or you can run a command using node_modules/.bin/kyt command
:
node_modules/.bin/kyt build
Here are the available commands:
dev
starts a development environmentbuild
compiles server and client code for production usetest
runs all tests in /srcproto
starts the prototyping applint
lints src code using ESLintlint-style
lints src code using Stylelinthelp
shows commands and their documentation
See our CLI docs for further details.
Conventions
kyt follows a few simple conventions.
All projects must have the following structure:
src/
client/
index.js
server/
index.js
Each index.js
file acts as the build entry.
(Note that server/index.js
is not required if hasServer
is false
in config).
If you're setting up a new project see our full list of conventions.
Configuration
kyt allows you to specify options in a kyt.config.js
file.
See the kyt config docs for instructions.
kyt uses Webpack to compile src code and run tests. See our recipes for extending configuration.
To configure Babel, kyt respects .babelrc
files defined at the root of user projects, and provides presets to provide opinionated configurations. (If no .babelrc
is defined in the user project, babel-preset-kyt-core
is used.)
starter-kyts
While kyt can be easily integrated into new or existing Node projects, it is even more powerful when used with a starter-kyt. A starter-kyt offers the benefits of boilerplates while minimizing the amount of new tools to learn and maintain. The kyt-cli setup
command installs any preconfigured starter-kyt git repository, adding additional dependencies and building a source directory.
See our recommended list of starter-kyts.
How to build a starter-kyt
Community supported starter-kyts can be built to support a variety of projects. See additional info on how to build a starter-kyt.
How to contribute to kyt
Want to help? See details here