@mojaloop/als-consent-oracle v1.1.1
ALS Consent Oracle (Work in Progress)
Overview
Setup
Clone repo
git clone git@github.com:mojaloop/als-consent-oracle.gitImprove local DNS resolver
Add the 127.0.0.1 als-consent-oracle.local entry in your /etc/hosts so the als-consent-oracle is reachable on http://als-consent-oracle.local:3000. Elsewhere use http://localhost:3000
Install service dependencies
cd als-consent-oracle
npm ciRun local dockerized als-consent-oracle
npm run docker:build
npm run docker:runTo check the als-consent-oracle health visit http://als-consent-oracle.local:3000/health
File structure of docker image
dist
│
└───config (Mount your default.json config file here)
└───migrations
└───seeds
└───src
└───package.json
logs
node_modules
package-lock.json
package.json (Run package commands with root package.json)Run locally with database in docker-compose
docker-compose up -d mysql
npm run migrate
npm run startUpdating the OpenApi (Swagger) Spec
We use multi-file-swagger to make our swagger files more manageable.
After making changes to the .yaml files in ./src/interface/, update the swagger.json file like so:
npm run build:openapiNote: We will likely want to move to swagger 3.0 at some point, and once we do, we will be able to use the common api snippets library to factor out common Mojaloop snippets. Keep track of #352 - Update to OpenAPI v3
Auditing Dependencies
We use audit-ci along with npm audit to check dependencies for node vulnerabilities, and keep track of resolved dependencies with an audit-ci.jsonc file.
To start a new resolution process, run:
npm run audit:fixYou can then check to see if the CI will pass based on the current dependencies with:
npm run audit:checkThe audit-ci.jsonc contains any audit-exceptions that cannot be fixed to ensure that CircleCI will build correctly.