zulip/docs/development/using.md

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# Using the development environment
This page describes the basic edit/refresh workflows for working with
the Zulip development environment. Generally, the development
environment will automatically update as soon as you save changes
using your editor. Details for work on the [server](#server),
[web app](#web), and [mobile apps](#mobile) are below.
If you're working on authentication methods or need to use the [Zulip
REST API][rest-api], which requires an API key, see [authentication in
the development environment][authentication-dev-server].
## Common
- Zulip's `main` branch moves quickly, and you should rebase
constantly with e.g.
`git fetch upstream; git rebase upstream/main` to avoid developing
on an old version of the Zulip codebase (leading to unnecessary
merge conflicts).
- Remember to run `tools/provision` to update your development
environment after switching branches; it will run in under a second
if no changes are required.
- After making changes, you'll often want to run the
[linters](../testing/linters.md) and relevant [test
suites](../testing/testing.md). Consider using our [Git pre-commit
hook](../git/zulip-tools.md#set-up-git-repo-script) to
automatically lint whenever you make a commit.
- All of our test suites are designed to support quickly testing just
a single file or test case, which you should take advantage of to
save time.
- Many useful development tools, including tools for rebuilding the
database with different test data, are documented in-app at
`https://localhost:9991/devtools`.
- If you want to restore your development environment's database to a
pristine state, you can use `./tools/rebuild-dev-database`.
## Server
- For changes that don't affect the database model, the Zulip
development environment will automatically detect changes and
restart:
- The main Django/Tornado server processes are run on top of
Django's [manage.py runserver][django-runserver], which will
automatically restart them when you save changes to Python code
they use. You can watch this happen in the `run-dev` console
to make sure the backend has reloaded.
- The Python queue workers will also automatically restart when you
save changes, as long as they haven't crashed (which can happen if
they reloaded into a version with a syntax error).
- If you change the database schema (`zerver/models.py`), you'll need
to use the [Django migrations
process](../subsystems/schema-migrations.md); see also the [new
feature tutorial][new-feature-tutorial] for an example.
- While testing server changes, it's helpful to watch the `run-dev`
console output, which will show tracebacks for any 500 errors your
Zulip development server encounters (which are probably caused by
bugs in your code).
- To manually query Zulip's database interactively, use
`./manage.py shell` or `manage.py dbshell`.
- The database(s) used for the automated tests are independent from
the one you use for manual testing in the UI, so changes you make to
the database manually will never affect the automated tests.
## Web
- Once the development server (`run-dev`) is running, you can visit
<http://localhost:9991/> in your browser.
- By default, the development server homepage just shows a list of the
users that exist on the server and you can log in as any of them by
just clicking on a user.
- This setup saves time for the common case where you want to test
something other than the login process.
- You can test the login or registration process by clicking the
links for the normal login page.
- Most changes will take effect automatically. Details:
- If you change CSS files, your changes will appear immediately via
webpack hot module replacement.
- If you change JavaScript code (`web/src`) or Handlebars
templates (`web/templates`), the browser window will be
reloaded automatically.
- For Jinja2 backend templates (`templates/*`), you'll need to reload
the browser window to see your changes.
- Any JavaScript exceptions encountered while using the web app in a
development environment will be displayed as a large notice, so you
don't need to watch the JavaScript console for exceptions.
- Both Chrome and Firefox have great debuggers, inspectors, and
profilers in their built-in developer tools.
- `debug.js` has some occasionally useful JavaScript profiling code.
## Mobile
See the mobile project's documentation on [using a development server
for mobile development][mobile-dev-server].
[rest-api]: https://zulip.com/api/rest
[authentication-dev-server]: authentication.md
[django-runserver]: https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/3.2/ref/django-admin/#runserver
[new-feature-tutorial]: ../tutorials/new-feature-tutorial.md
[testing-docs]: ../testing/testing.md
[mobile-dev-server]: https://github.com/zulip/zulip-mobile/blob/main/docs/howto/dev-server.md#using-a-dev-version-of-the-server