Uses Gatsby to build static site.
Starting in September 2021, we use Artifactory (MongoDB's internal package repository) as our primary source of dependencies. With this comes the requirement to login to Artifactory using some credentials. At the time of updating this guide, we are working out our service account on artifactory and getting our API key, but for now you will need to set the following ENV variables in ~/.bash_profile
(which can be 0bined from a team member) NPM_AUTH
and NPM_EMAIL
.
npm ci
You'll need to set some environment variables in two separate files at the root of this directory for separate production/development environments.
Snooty's build
and serve
stages use the production
environment. Your .env.production
file should be as follows:
GATSBY_SITE=<SITE>
GATSBY_PARSER_USER=<USER>
GATSBY_PARSER_CI_USER=jordanstapinski
GATSBY_PARSER_BRANCH=<BRANCH>
GATSBY_SNOOTY_DEV=true
Snooty's develop
stage uses the development
environment. Your .env.development
file should be as follows:
GATSBY_SITE=<SITE>
GATSBY_PARSER_USER=<USER>
GATSBY_PARSER_CI_USER=jordanstapinski
GATSBY_PARSER_BRANCH=<BRANCH>
GATSBY_SNOOTY_DEV=true
The GATSBY_SNOOTY_DEV
variable is what allows Gatsby to know that when the application is built it should use the snooty branch name as part of the file paths. When not set, the file paths will use the value of GATSBY_PARSER_BRANCH
.
It should be set to true
when working on snooty locally.
To serve a "hot-reloadable" development build of the site at localhost:8000
, run:
npm run develop
To build and serve a production build of the site, run the following commands:
$ npm run build
$ npm run serve
To production build and serve without using Gatsby prefix-paths:
$ npm run buildTest
$ npm run serveTest
This will then serve the site at localhost:9000
Install mut and ensure that you have properly configured your Giza/AWS keys. Then, from root, run:
make stage
Unit tests are located in the tests/unit/
directory. To run only unit tests, use:
npm run test:unit
Integration tests are located in the cypress
directory and are run on the Cypress framework. First, build a production build of the site without prefix-paths using the following command:
$ npm run buildTest
$ npm run serveTest
and then load the Cypress UI using:
$ npm run test:e2e:start
or run headless with:
$ npm run test:e2e:headless
Jest includes configurations for running individual test suites:
npm test -- my-test # or
npm test -- path/to/my-test.js
For more information, see the Jest CLI Options documentation, or run npm test -- --help
.
We use ESLint and Prettier to help with linting and style.
To format code using Prettier, run the following command:
npm run format:fix
We have set up a precommit hook that will format staged files. Prettier also offers a variety of editor integrations to automatically format your code.
Check out the internal wiki for more information.