Install Elevate
From a Chrome based browser
Go to https://thomaschampagne.github.io/elevate/
You should be able to install it in all Chrome based browser such as Chrome, Chrome Canary, Chromium, Opera, Vivaldi, Yandex, and more ...
From continuous integration
Using latest develop branch builds: https://thomaschampagne.github.io/elevate/#/builds
Install steps with a standalone build: https://github.com/thomaschampagne/elevate/wiki/How-to-install-elevate-build-archive
From the sources
Go to chapter Environment setup.
Development
Project structure description
The project is split into 2 sub-projects: the core and the embedded app.
Core
The core contains the plugin's behaviour that acts directly on strava.com website. This includes extended stats on activities & segments efforts, best splits, google maps support, etc...
The core sources are located in plugin/core directory
Embedded app
The embedded app contains features like fitness trend, year progressions, ... and global plugin settings such as common settings, athlete settings & zones settings.
The embedded app sources are located in plugin/app directory
Notice: The plugin/common directory contains sources shared by both sub-projects.
Description of frameworks & tools used.
Core and embedded app have been developed using TypeScript language. TypeScript adds typing & class-based syntax over javascript then compiles back to JavaScript. Understand TypeScript in 5 minutes.
At a glance...
Core dependencies
- Webpack as packager and dynamic EcmaScript module loader.
- Q as promise library for JavaScript.
- Chart.js for JavaScript charting.
Embedded app dependencies
- Angular as frontend framework
- Angular Material for material designed components.
- Metrics Graphics and d3js for charting.
Shared dependencies
- Lodash to get a whole mess of useful functional programming helpers in typescript/javascript.
- MomentJS to parse, validate, manipulate, and display dates and times.
Tools
Environment setup
Install requirements
Here's what you need to install to run the extension in a chrome based browser:
- Chrome based browser (Chrome, Chromium, Chrome Canary, Opera,...), of course...
- NodeJS here. Version 10.x is required.
That's all :)
Clone the project
Using HTTPS
git clone https://github.com/thomaschampagne/elevate.git
Or using SSH
git clone git@github.com:thomaschampagne/elevate.git
Fetch NPM dependencies
The npm
command should be installed on your system through the NodeJS installation.
Enter in project directory
cd elevate
Then install NPM dependencies with
npm install
Build plugin
Once you have installed the NPM dependencies, you can build the plugin with the following command:
npm run build
Both core and embedded app will be built.
Once the build is completed, the plugin will be located in dist/ directory.
A production build can be also run with
npm run build:prod
This will disable TypeScript debug sources map and enable Ahead-of-Time compilation for embedded app.
Load plugin into your browser
Into your chrome based browser:
- Open new tab and type chrome://extensions, then enter.
- Tick Developer Mode checkbox.
- Click Load Unpacked Extension button, then choose dist/ directory (this is where you have the manifest.json file)
- Make sure to disable other instances of elevate. You can re-enable them back from same tab.
- Open strava.com
Build plugin on files changes
In order to avoid to re-run the painful npm run build
task on each file changes. You could run the following command:
npm start
This task will watch for files changes and automatically rebuild plugin to dist/ directory. It's a way more suitable and faster for a development workflow.
Run unit tests
The below command will run core and embedded app unit tests into a headless chrome.
npm test
Should be run and has to pass before any work submission.
Packaging
You can package the extension with the following command
npm run package
A production build will be executed for this task.
On packaging done, a release archive will be generated in package/ directory.
Clean project
Simply run
npm run clean
This will clean dist/, package/ & *.js *.map generated files
Git-Flow Repository structure
The project repository is fitted for GitFlow branches management workflow.
Learn more @ http://nvie.com/posts/a-successful-git-branching-model/