mirror of https://github.com/zulip/zulip.git
71 lines
3.0 KiB
Markdown
71 lines
3.0 KiB
Markdown
# Static asset pipeline
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This page documents additional information that may be useful when
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developing new features for Zulip that require front-end changes. For a
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more general overview, see the new-feature-tutorial. The code-style
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documentation also has relevant information about how Zulip's code is
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structured.
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## Primary build process
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Most of the existing JS in Zulip is written in IIFE-wrapped modules, one
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per file in the static/js directory. When running Zulip in development
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mode, each file is loaded seperately. In production mode (and when
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creating a release tarball using tools/build-release-tarball),
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JavaScript files are concatenated and minified.
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If you add a new JavaScript file, it needs to be specified in the
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JS\_SPECS dictionary defined in zproject/settings.py to be included in
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the concatenated file.
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## Webpack/CommonJS modules
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New JS written for Zulip can be written as CommonJS modules (bundled
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using [webpack](https://webpack.github.io/), though this will taken care
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of automatically whenever `run-dev.py` is running). (CommonJS is the
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same module format that Node uses, so see the [Node
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documentation](https://nodejs.org/docs/latest/api/modules.html) for
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more information on the syntax.)
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Benefits of using CommonJS modules over the
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[IIFE](http://benalman.com/news/2010/11/immediately-invoked-function-expression/)
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module approach:
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- namespacing/module boilerplate will be added automatically in the
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bundling process
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- dependencies between modules are more explicit and easier to trace
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- no separate list of JS files needs to be maintained for
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concatenation and minification
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- third-party libraries can be more easily installed/versioned using
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npm
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- running the same code in the browser and in Node for testing is
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simplified (as both environments use the same module syntax)
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The entry point file for the bundle generated by webpack is
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`static/js/src/main.js`. Any modules you add will need to be required
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from this file (or one of its dependencies) in order to be included in
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the script bundle.
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## Adding static files
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To add a static file to the app (JavaScript, CSS, images, etc), first
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add it to the appropriate place under `static/`.
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- Third-party files should all go in `static/third/`. Tag the commit
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with "[third]" when adding or modifying a third-party package.
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- Our own JS lives under `static/js`; CSS lives under `static/styles`.
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- JavaScript and CSS files are combined and minified in production. In
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this case all you need to do is add the filename to
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PIPELINE['STYLESHEET'] or JS\_SPECS in `zproject/settings.py`. (If
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you plan to only use the JS/CSS within the app proper, and not on
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the login page or other standalone pages, put it in the 'app'
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category.)
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If you want to test minified files in development, look for the
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`PIPELINE_ENABLED =` line in `zproject/settings.py` and set it to `True`
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-- or just set `DEBUG = False`.
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Note that `static/html/{400,5xx}.html` will only render properly if
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minification is enabled, since they hardcode the path
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`static/min/portico.css`.
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