2.4.4 • Published 4 years ago

@aaa-backend-stack/serverdate v2.4.4

Weekly downloads
5
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
4 years ago

aaa-backend-stack

Base packages to build a Node.js backend at all about apps

This monorepo is managed by lerna + yarn.

Quickstart

# 1. Install lerna in the correct version on your local system, yarn v1.1+
local$ npm install -g lerna@v2.6.0

# Optional: In case you have installed before, wipe modules to start fresh
local$ yarn clean-modules

# 2. Start the dev dm (we use 10.0.0.10 by default, make sure this is available)
local$ vagrant up && vagrant ssh

# 3. Install lerna on the VM in the same version (yarn is already installed)
vagrant$ cd /vagrant && sudo npm install -g lerna@v2.6.0

# 4. install all dependencies inside ./packages
# (will copy ./defaults into @aaa-backend-stack/* scoped libs and bootstrap dependencies through lerna)
vagrant$ yarn bootstrap

# Have you never run this project before: you need to run...
yarn tsc && yarn tsc-sync
# ... once to compile the custom tslint ruleset

# 5. Compile all packages (faster on local host)
local$ yarn build

# 6. Run all tests
vagrant$ yarn test # execute test in all packages --> lerna run test --stream

# 7. LOCALLY: build + watch for changes in all packages (tsc compiler) - most performant (you may also trigger this from vscode)
local$ yarn watch

# Now start changing things...

Publishing

#
# 0.1 Update CHANGELOG.md!
#

# 0.2 Your git is clean and pushed to the origin
local$ git status

# 1. Consistance check!
# * ensure no single yarn.lock exists directly in the packages
# * add yarn resolutions,
# * properly reformat package.jsons in all packages
# * check if you properly pinned all dependencies, so an exact version is loaded
# * and reshow git status
local$ yarn check-package-validity && git status

#
# Coffee-Break!
# Is your git still clean? Else go back to step 0.
#

# 2. clean all node_modules in root and at the packages level
local$ yarn clean-modules

# 3. VM: reinstall all dependencies from your current yarn.lock file
vagrant$ yarn bootstrap

# 4. Rebuild all packages
# (we are currently going to directly publish the compiled versions of our packages!)
local$ yarn build

# 5. VM: And run all integration tests...
# (also ensure no ownership warnings are raised!)
vagrant$ yarn test

#
# Coffee-Break!
# Is your git still clean? Else go back to step 0.
#

# 7. All fine? Let publish!

# 7.1. Check if we are going to publish to our own private npm registry
local$ npmrc

# 7.2. Check which packages will be updated
local$ lerna updated

# 7.3. Decide on major, minor or patch version in the interactive publish...
# (make sure git is clean before running this + ensure you comply to semver!)
local$ lerna publish

# 8. Finally: Test if create-aaa-backend scaffolding still works
local$ yarn global add create-aaa-backend && create-aaa-backend scaffold -y --debug

Pushing to public github

# 1. Merge into master-github branch
local$ git checkout master-github
local$ git merge --strategy-option theirs --allow-unrelated-histories --squash master
local$ git commit -m "merge latest"

# 2. Tag the version using same version number as on master without the v (e.g. v1.16.1 -> 1.16.1)
local$ git tag 1.16.1

# 3. Push to github
local$ git push origin-github
local$ git push origin-github 1.16.1

I want to add a dependency

  1. Add it to the respective package.json of the package and run yarn bootstrap. The dependency is now available in our package.
  2. Don't forget to properly pin the version and potenially add it to the __OWNS__ array every package exposes.
  3. Allow others to use it. export it from the package (eventually through side-loading / dynamic import) in UPPER_CASE.

I want to create a new @aaa-backend-stack/package

  1. Copy packages/aaa-example-lib as a starting point and update the package.json and README.md file.
  2. Write some logic...
  3. Import the new dependency in another package by adding it to the package.json
  4. Finally run yarn bootstrap.

Thoughts on hoisting

Pay close attention to the "hoist": true and "useWorkspaces": true parameter inside lerna.json, it is absolutely mandadory! We require a flattened node_modules structure as we operate in the global scope within our polyfills.

Testing create-aaa-backend scaffold

Typically the create-aaa-backend CLI tool clones the latest tagged release from the master branch, and loads the template from there. If you like you can specify to load it from another branch's HEAD by using the -b BRANCH_NAME flag.

However, typically you want to test and operate locally while playing within the monorepo, therefore use the following:

# Useful for testing *.cabgen execution (without docker setup):
local$ yarn create-aaa-backend scaffold -xly --debug # skip docker, use local files, yes to all

# Useful for CI:
ci$ yarn create-aaa-backend scaffold -y --debug # (attention: this still uses the remote published packages from @aaa/npm)

Other useful commands

# open all managed packages in visual studio code
local$ lerna exec code .