A debugging dashboard for re-frame. Comes with free x-ray glasses. (Previously known as re-frame-trace)
Go to file
Daniel Compton df1f091f47 Update README.md 2017-07-18 09:51:49 +12:00
.idea Add code style settings 2016-11-06 16:50:03 +13:00
docs/images Add trace window picture 2017-03-28 20:36:45 +13:00
src/day8/re_frame (#11) Automatically inject devtools into the DOM in the preload namespace. 2017-04-13 12:15:23 +12:00
test/day8/re_frame/trace Commit changes 2016-11-15 15:06:10 +13:00
.gitignore Add .gitignore 2016-11-06 16:47:17 +13:00
CHANGELOG.md Change artifact coordinates to day8.re-frame/trace 2017-05-02 12:52:58 +12:00
LICENSE Update license copyright 2016-11-06 16:50:12 +13:00
README.md Update README.md 2017-07-18 09:51:49 +12:00
project.clj Version 0.1.1-SNAPSHOT 2017-05-02 12:53:21 +12:00

README.md

re-frame-trace

A trace window for re-frame

Motivation

re-frame provides a data driven architecture, but we need to be able to inspect it. re-frame-trace takes inspiration from redux-devtools, and provides several ways to visualise the structure and state of your re-frame application.

How does it work?

re-frame has instrumentation to collect traces throughout various important points in the lifecycle of a re-frame app. re-frame-trace is a consumer of these traces, and provides visualisations of the traces. These traces have a well-defined structure, and will eventually be standardised, allowing other developers to create their own tooling to work against the traces. Currently, re-frame's tracing and re-frame-trace are in alpha and are subject to change at any time.

Getting started

Compile your app with :closure-defines: "re_frame.trace.trace_enabled_QMARK_" true and :preloads [day8.re-frame.trace.preload].

So when using leiningen, add the following to project.clj:

  • [day8.re-frame/trace "0.1.0"] in :profiles :dev :dependencies

    {:profiles
       {:dev
          {:dependencies [day8.re-frame/trace "0.1.0"] }}
    
  • :closure-defines: "re_frame.trace.trace_enabled_QMARK_" true and :preloads [day8.re-frame.trace.preload] in :compiler

        {:builds
           [{:id           "dev"
             :source-paths ["src" "dev"]
             :compiler     {...
                            :closure-defines      {"re_frame.trace.trace_enabled_QMARK_" true}
                            :preloads             [day8.re-frame.trace.preload]}}]}
    

By default, re-frame tracing is compiled out, so it won't impose a performance cost in production. The trade-off here is that you need to explicitly enable it in development.

The preloads option (:preloads [day8.re-frame.trace.preload]) has to be set in order to automatically monkeypatch Reagent to add appropriate lifecycle hooks. Yes this is gross, and yes we will try and make a PR to reagent to add proper hooks, once we know exactly what we need. The preload namespace also injects a div containing the devtools panel into the DOM.

Now you can start up your application. Once it is loaded, press Ctrl+H to slide open the trace panel and enable tracing. When the panel is closed, tracing is disabled.