This document describes how to set up your development environment to build and test ng-bootstrap.
It also explains the basic mechanics of using git, node and yarn.
- Prerequisite Software
- Getting the Sources
- Installing Dependencies
- Project Structure
- Useful commands
- Formatting
See the contribution guidelines if you'd like to contribute to ng-bootstrap.
Before you can build and test ng-bootstrap, you must install and configure the following products on your development machine:
-
Git and/or the GitHub app (for Mac or Windows); GitHub's Guide to Installing Git is a good source of information.
-
Node.js, (version
>=8.9.0) which is used to run tests, and generate distributable files. Depending on your system, you can install Node either from source or as a pre-packaged bundle. -
We use Yarn (version
>=1.3.0) to manage dependencies. Please, see installation instructions on their site. -
We use Chrome to run our tests.
Fork and clone the ng-bootstrap repository:
- Login to your GitHub account or create one by following the instructions given here.
- Fork the main ng-bootstrap repository.
- Clone your fork of the ng-bootstrap's ng-bootstrap repository and define an
upstreamremote pointing back to the ng-bootstrap's ng-bootstrap repository that you forked in the first place.
# Clone your GitHub repository:
git clone git@github.com:<github username>/ng-bootstrap.git ng-bootstrap
# Go to the ng-bootstrap directory:
cd ng-bootstrap
# Add the main ng-bootstrap repository as an upstream remote to your repository:
git remote add upstream https://github.com/ng-bootstrap/ng-bootstrap.gitNext, install the JavaScript modules needed to build and test ng-bootstrap:
# Install ng-bootstrap project dependencies (package.json)
yarnWe use @angular/cli to build both ng-bootstrap library and demo site. There are two main projects:
ng-bootstrap- the ng-bootstrap library itself; sources are located insrcfolderdemo- the demo site deployed at https://ng-bootstrap.github.io; sources are located indemo/srcfolder
The most useful commands are:
Serves the demo site locally in dev mode at http://localhost:9090/. You can optionally add --prod argument to serve demo in production mode or --aot to serve demo in dev mode, but with AOT
Builds both library and demo site in production mode. The library will be built in Angular Package format in dist folder. The demo site will be built in demo/dist folder.
Runs unit tests for the library in watch mode without any additional checks
Note: If you want to only run a single test you can alter the test you wish to run by changing
it to fit or describe to fdescribe. This will only run that individual test and make it
much easier to debug. xit and xdescribe can also be useful to exclude a test and a group of
tests respectively.
Checks formatting, linting and runs all unit tests for the library with coverage
Runs all protractor tests for the library in production mode. We use them to check focus handling, browser styles, layout, etc.
(For debugging/development it is also possible to separately serve the e2e test application with yarn e2e-app:serve and run protractor with yarn ngb:e2e-noserve)
Runs exactly the same suite of actions as the CI server, so you might want to do it before opening a PR
Checks that your source code is properly formatted without running anything else (see next section)
You can inspect package.json scripts section for a full list of commands available.
Formatting with clang-format
We use clang-format to automatically enforce code
style for our TypeScript code. This allows us to focus our code reviews more on the content, and
less on style nit-picking. It also lets us encode our style guide in the .clang-format file in the
repository, allowing many tools and editors to share our settings.
To check the formatting of your code, run
yarn check-formatYour life will be easier if you include the formatter in your standard workflow. Otherwise, you'll likely forget to check the formatting, and waste time waiting for a build on Travis that fails due to some whitespace difference.
- Install clang-format with
npm install -g clang-format. - Use
clang-format -i [file name]to format a file (or multiple). Note thatclang-formattries to load aclang-formatnode module close to the sources being formatted, or from the$CWD, and only then uses the globally installed one - so the version used should automatically match the one required by the project. Useclang-format -versionin case you get confused. - Use
yarn check-formatto check if your code isclang-formatclean. This also gives you a command line to format your code. clang-formatalso includes a git hook, rungit clang-formatto format all files you touched.- You can run this as a git pre-commit hook to automatically format your delta regions when you commit a change. In the ng-bootstrap repo, run
$ echo -e '#!/bin/sh\nexec git clang-format' > .git/hooks/pre-commit
$ chmod u+x !$- WebStorm can run clang-format on the current file.
- Under Preferences, open Tools > External Tools.
- Plus icon to Create Tool
- Fill in the form:
- Name: clang-format
- Description: Format
- Synchronize files after execution: checked
- Open console: not checked
- Show in: Editor menu
- Program: [path to clang-format, try
$ echo $(npm config get prefix)/bin/clang-format] - Parameters:
-i -style=file $FilePath$ - Working directory:
$ProjectFileDir$
clang-formatintegrations are also available for many popular editors (vim,emacs,Sublime Text, etc.).