Contributions are welcome and are greatly appreciated! Every little bit helps, and credit will always be given.
After forking enzyme to your own github org, do the following steps to get started:
# clone your fork to your local machine
git clone https://github.com/airbnb/enzyme.git
# step into local repo
cd enzyme
# install dependencies (use react:13 if you want to use React 0.13)
npm install && npm run react:14
# switch to React 0.13
npm run react:13
# switch to React 0.14
npm run react:14
# switch to React 15
npm run react:15
# switch to React 16
npm run react:16
# run tests on whatever version of React is currently installed
npm test
# run tests on all supported versions of React
npm run test:all
# faster feedback for TDD
npm run test:watch
This codebase adheres to the Airbnb Styleguide and is enforced using ESLint.
It is recommended that you install an eslint plugin for your editor of choice when working on this codebase, however you can always check to see if the source code is compliant by running:
npm run lint
Enzyme uses lerna to structure its repo, and has multiple packages to publish out of this one repo. We use lerna's "independent" mode, which means that the versioning of each package in the repo is versioned independently.
We are waiting on this issue to be fixed, so that
peerDependencies
do not get updated with patch updates.
Until this issue is fixed, we will publish each package manually instead of with lerna publish
. In
order to do this, we will:
For enzyme:
# ... update version in enzyme/package.json, make changes to CHANGELOG, etc.
cd packages/enzyme
git commit -m v{version}
git tag -a -m v{version}
git push --follow-tags
npm publish
For other packages
# ... update version in {package}/package.json, make changes to CHANGELOG, etc.
cd packages/{package}
git commit -m "{package}: v{version}"
git tag -a -m "{package}: v{version}"
git push --follow-tags
npm publish
Once we are able to use lerna publish
, the process will be as follows:
Lerna by default will only publish packages that have changed since the last release. It will also create a tagged commit for each release.
To publish, run:
lerna publish -m "{tag name}"
The tag name is determined by the -m
CLI option. If enzyme
is one of the packages that has
updates, we default to just using that version as the tag name. For instance, when publishing
[email protected]
and [email protected]
we would run:
lerna publish -m "v3.1.1"
If enzyme
is not one of the packages being updated, use the other package's name and the version:
lerna publish -m "enzyme-adapter-react-16: v1.2.3"
The lerna publish
command will present interactive prompts asking which version to use for each
package independently. Just choose whichever
Building the docs locally is extremely simple. First execute the following command:
npm run docs:watch
After this, you can open up your browser to the specified port (usually http://localhost:4000 )
The browser will automatically refresh when there are changes to any of the source files.
Before you submit a pull request from your forked repo, check that it meets these guidelines:
- If the pull request fixes a bug, it should include tests that fail without the changes, and pass with them.
- If the pull request adds functionality, the docs should be updated as part of the same PR.
- The pull request should work for React 15, React 0.14 and React 0.13. The CI server should run the tests in all versions automatically when you push the PR, but if you'd like to check locally, you can do so (see above).
- Please rebase and resolve all conflicts before submitting.