02b69cbff9 | ||
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charles | ||
node_modules | ||
public | ||
styleguide | ||
tasks | ||
tests | ||
.bowerrc | ||
.csslintrc | ||
.eslintrc | ||
.gitignore | ||
.travis.yml | ||
Dockerfile | ||
Gruntfile.js | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md | ||
bower.json | ||
karma.conf.js | ||
karma.conf.sauce.js | ||
karma.shared.js | ||
package.json | ||
webpack.config.js |
README.md
Note Sauce Labs tests are only run on PRs from the main repo or commits to master.
Payments UI
This project comprises all styles, behaviour and interfaces for mozilla/payments.
Developers
Email Styles
To get the right paths for the email CSS and rebuild files as they change run:
DEV=1 grunt start-email
Dependency installation and updates
Install grunt-cli
globally with npm install -g grunt-cli
Then run npm install
to install the local deps needed for development.
npm deps only
We're aiming to only use npm packaged deps rather than bower. This is to be able to track dep versions in one place.
Libraries + external deps
Normally built artifacts aren't committed. However, to manage dep changes more tightly, production libs (JS, CSS + fonts) are committed to the tree.
JS libs are committed from node_modules
as webpack knows how to find deps in
node_modules
.
Whilst this creates noise it does help ensure deps in the browser are identical and can't get mangled by a broken deps installation.
dealing with bower
Unfortunately some deps only work with bower. For these cases, make sure
bower.json
has the package name and version, run bower install
, and
commit the distributed files to public/bower_components
. Hopefully these
cases will be rare.
Watching for file changes in development.
If you're using payments-env
to run the complete payments system then you'll want to use
grunt start
on your host to watch for file changes.
In other words, start docker to run all the things but keep a shell open
on the host machine just to compile static assets for the docker VM to serve.
Hot module reloading
If you run the webpack-dev-server you can get hot module reloading. This turns on a feature where the code automatically updates in the browser as you change the code in your editor.
For example run grunt serve
to run the webpack-dev-server.
And then visit:
http://localhost:8080/webpack-dev-server/management.html
You should find that changes to the react modules are reflected immediately without refresh.
Developing with webpack-dev-server + docker for hot reloading.
To be able to use hot module reloading in conjunction with our docker environment you can use Charles Proxy to rewrite API requests to pay.dev. This allows webpack-dev-server to be used to serve the front-end whilst continuing to allow API requests to be serviced via docker.
There are two steps to getting this working:
- Create an /etc/hosts entry
pay.webpack 127.0.0.1
- Install Charles Proxy and import the rewrite files from the charles directory.
To see the payment interface with hot module loading enabled visit:
To see the management interface:
http://pay.webpack:8080/webpack-dev-server/management.html
JavaScript Linting
We're using eslint for JavaScript linting. Most editors will have instructions for
enabling eslint (see below for how to configure vim + syntastic). Alternatively
just run the grunt eslint
command which is self-contained.
Eslint Vim settings (Syntastic)
You'll need the packages listed below installed globally:
npm install -g eslint babel-eslint eslint-plugin-react
Using syntastic, the following snippet turns on eslint selectively for projects with a .eslintrc.
autocmd FileType javascript let b:syntastic_checkers = findfile('.eslintrc', '.;') != '' ? ['eslint'] : ['jshint']
Tests
To run the tests locally run: grunt test
. This will run the unit tests
against Firefox.
Cross-browser testing
The tests are run only on Firefox when a PR is submitted. When that code is landed on master, Travis will run the tests on Sauce Labs.
Running Sauce Labs on a PR [Team Only]
If you're a member of the payments team and you want to get Sauce Labs coverage
for a PR - push the branch to the main mozilla/payments-ui
repo and make a PR
from that.
Running the tests on SauceLabs locally
First Sign-up for a Sauce Labs 'Open Sauce' account to get your keys.
Then you'll need to export the SauceLabs username and access key as env vars:
export SAUCE_USERNAME=<YOUR_OPEN_SAUCE_USERNAME>
export SAUCE_ACCESS_KEY=<YOUR_ACCESS_KEY>
Then you should find you can run: grunt karma:sauce
and run all the tests on SauceLabs.
Styleguide
The styleguide is based on the styles and templates that live in the tree.
It can be build statically with the grunt build-styleguide
command.
The styleguide is published here.
Updating the styleguide
Run grunt publish-styleguide
Running the styleguide locally
Run grunt styleguide
(defaults to running on localhost:4001).
Localization (l10n)
We're using grunt-i18n-abide to run the extraction commands.
Because we're using React we need to operate on the compiled JS file. This also means we aren't running extraction on un-used code.
To run an extraction, checkout out the payments-l10n repository so that it has the same parent directory as payments-ui (../payments-l10n
from the current location). Then do the following:
npm install
grunt webpack abideExtract