starter-kit/docs/build-notes.md
2017-07-26 10:23:58 +02:00

2.8 KiB

Building the plugin

These are some basic notes on building the plugin

yarn

The subscription-manager plugin for cockpit is built using webpack 2.x. Although npm can be used to install the various dependencies, it is recommended to install yarn and use it instead:

yarn install

After this command finishes, all the node_modules will be installed.

babel

The .babelrc file contains the settings for the various things babel can do, namely transform es6 to es5 code, and to transform react jsx code to regular javascript. When building, the webpack.config.js setting will output a bundled file in ./build/bundle.js. It will run the babel-loader plugin to transform es6 to es5

TODO: Figure out how to configure babelrc to transform jsx code

index.js

This is the entry point for webpack, and will most likely contain the main parent react component.

Directory layout

The main package files are located in the src directory. These are processed during compilation and packaging.

Building

You can use make to compile to code or make install to compile and install in /usr/share/cockpit/.

The convenience make targets srpm and rpm build the source and binary rpms, respectively. Both of these make use of the dist-gzip target, which is used to generate the distribution tarball. In production mode, source files are automatically minified and compressed. Set NODE_ENV=production if you want to duplicate this behavior.

Optionally, you can use yarn or npm to run the build, both of which in turn call webpack:

yarn run build

or alternatively if you didn't install yarn:

npm run build

This works because the package.json file has a scripts object, and the build key tells us to run the webpack command with the build option.

Why do it this way instead of just doing npm install -g webpack and then webpack build? By doing that, different users trying to build the plugin might have different versions of webpack installed. By installing webpack as a dev dependency, and then using yarn or npm to run a command, it will use the webpack version installed locally.

Hacking with webpack

A fairly simple workflow for development uses webpack directly and doesn't require root privileges.

First, ensure that all dependencies are met and the code compiles:

npm install
make

Then, link the dist directory in a place where cockpit can find it, without installing to the system directory. Call the following script from the git checkout:

ln -s ln -s ./dist subscription-manager

Then use webpack to monitor the filesystem for changes, also from the git checkout:

webpack --watch

After logging into Cockpit, you can refresh the page to load the newly built code after each change to the source files.