Commit Graph

32 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
William Chargin 13acbe1efd
Trim Flow’s server startup build output (#311)
Test Plan:
Run `yarn flow stop; yarn travis | cat` and note the absence of the
really long line that has ~2500 bytes of “Server is initializing”.

wchargin-branch: quiet-flow-server
2018-05-28 17:06:56 -07:00
William Chargin f0fcf02791
Check for STOPSHIPs in CI (#301)
Summary:
Placing `STOPSHIP` or `stopship` (or any case variant) in any file
tracked by Git will now cause a `yarn travis` failure. If you need to
use this string, you can concatenate it as `"stop" + "ship"` or
equivalent.

Test Plan:
In `travis.js`, change `"check-stop" + "ships"` to `"check-stopships"`,
and note that this causes the build to fail with a nice message. Note
that this also causes `check-stopships.sh` to fail even when invoked
from an unrelated directory, like `src`.

wchargin-branch: check-stopships
2018-05-25 19:27:31 -07:00
William Chargin f31d2c517d
Upgrade Flow to v0.72.0 (#285)
Summary:
A few changes were made to code that is correct (as far as I can tell),
but for which Flow can no longer infer a type parameter. The change is a
bit more annoying than it otherwise would be, because this particular
file is run directly via node and so must use Flow’s comment syntax for
type annotations, but Prettier breaks such comments in the cases that we
need. We work around this by rewriting the original code to avoid the
need for comments.

Test Plan:
In addition to standard CI, run `yarn build` and then run a server from
`build/`, to see that the production build produces a working bundle.
(That the app loads and renders is sufficient.)

wchargin-branch: upgrade-flow-v0.72.0
2018-05-15 17:09:29 -07:00
William Chargin 9ea1f981aa
Proxy Webpack dev server through to an API server (#245)
Summary:
This way, our frontend can talk to a backend that can read from the
filesystem (among other things).

Paired with @decentralion.

Test Plan:
```
$ yarn backend
$ SOURCECRED_DIRECTORY=/tmp/srccrd yarn start
$ # verify that the browser looks good
$ mkdir /tmp/srccrd
$ echo hello >/tmp/srccrd/world
$ curl localhost:3000/api/v1/data/world
hello
$ curl localhost:4000/api/v1/data/world
hello
```

wchargin-branch: webpack-proxy
2018-05-08 16:09:37 -07:00
Dandelion Mané 3166c2a56c
Turn on flow for config/env.js (#243)
It was doing some clever array construction that added possible booleans
to the array, then filtered them out. To make the typing simpler for
Flow's inspection, we now only put string elements in the array.

Test plan: `yarn travis --full` passed, and the CLI still works.
2018-05-08 14:56:06 -07:00
Dandelion Mané 824df7e916
Turn on flow for scripts/{backend,build,test}.js (#241)
- scripts/backend.js: We incorrectly set an environment variable to
a boolean, when in fact it must be a string. Fixed it to set a string
value "true", and updated usage in config/babel.js
- scripts/test.js: No changes
- scripts/build.js: Removed a call to printHostingInstructions, so that
we don't need to require the package.json.

Test plan:
`yarn travis --full` passes, and the SourceCred cli still works.
2018-05-08 14:35:56 -07:00
Dandelion Mané d221a933d8
Fix flow errors in paths.js (#238)
- Fix accidental string-to-NaN coercion in ensureSlash
- Don't dynamically require package.json; to determine public url, just
use the environment variable or "/"

Test plan: `yarn start` and travis still work
2018-05-08 14:21:19 -07:00
Dandelion Mané 63351e6149 Move app scaffolding to src/app
This commit executes a micro-refactor to move all top-level app setup
code out of src/plugins/artifact/editor and into src/app. The observed
behavior from `yarn start`, which is to show the artifact editor, is
unchanged.
2018-05-08 12:55:38 -07:00
William Chargin 57682065fd
Add `sourcecred start` (#234)
Summary:
We need a way for our web applications to interact with data on the
filesystem. In this commit, we introduce a webserver that serves
statically from two directory trees: first, the result of a live-updated
Webpack build; second, the SourceCred data directory.

Test Plan:
Run `yarn backend` and `node ./bin/sourcecred.js start`. When ready,
navigate to the server’s root route in a web browser. Note that a nice
React app is displayed. Then, change something in that React app source.
Note that the server console displays Webpack’s update messages, and
that refreshing the page in the browser renders the new version of the
app. Finally, visit

    /__data__/graphs/sourcecred/example-github/graph.json

in the browser to see the graph for the example repository, assuming
that you had generated its graph previously.

wchargin-branch: start
2018-05-07 20:10:49 -07:00
Dandelion Mané 93e2798f37
Ensure that flow is used in all js files (#232)
This script ensures that either //@flow or //@no-flow is present in
every js file. Every existing js file that would fail this check has
been given //@no-flow, we should work to remove all of these in the
future.

Test plan:
I verified that `yarn travis` fails before fixing the other js files,
and passes afterwards.
2018-05-07 20:02:19 -07:00
Dandelion Mané 61635a14a7
Remove redundant scripts (#225)
Our SourceCred CLI tool now ipmlements printCombinedGraph and
cloneAndPrintGitGraph, but with more principled implementations and
interfaces :)

Test plan:
`yarn travis --full` passes, so I didn't delete any needed test infra.
2018-05-07 16:15:00 -07:00
William Chargin 2aeeca9a13
Implement a command-line interface (#217)
Summary:
This commit implements the `sourcecred` command-line utility, which has
three subcommands:
  - `plugin-graph` creates one plugin’s graph;
  - `combine` combines multiple on-disk graphs; and
  - `graph` creates all plugins’ graphs and combines them.

As an implementation detail, the `into.sh` script is very convenient,
avoiding needing to do any pipe management in Node (which is Not Fun).
When we build for release, we may want to factor that differently.

Test Plan:
To see it all in action, run `yarn backend`, and then try:
```
$ export SOURCECRED_GITHUB_TOKEN="your_token_here"
$ node ./bin/sourcecred.js graph sourcecred sourcecred
Using output directory: /tmp/sourcecred/sourcecred

Starting tasks
  GO   create-git
  GO   create-github
 PASS  create-github
 PASS  create-git
  GO   combine
 PASS  combine

Full results
 PASS  create-git
 PASS  create-github
 PASS  combine

Overview
Final result:  SUCCESS

$ ls /tmp/sourcecred/sourcecred/
graph-github.json  graph-git.json  graph.json

$ jq '.nodes | length' /tmp/sourcecred/sourcecred/*.json
1000
7302
8302
```
The `node sourcecred.js graph` command takes 9.8s for me.

(The salient point of the last command is that the two small graphs have
node count adding up to the node count of the big graph. Incidentally,
we are [almost][1] at a nice round number of nodes in the GitHub graph.)

[1]: https://xkcd.com/1000/

wchargin-branch: cli
2018-05-07 12:23:09 -07:00
William Chargin d7bfa02a54
Change `execDependencyGraph` export format (#216)
Summary:
To be honest, I have no idea what exactly this does or why it’s
necessary, but if we don’t do this then it is not possible to `import`
the exported member from a Webpack-bundled script. I’ve seen this
pattern before; one day I’ll actually figure out what it does. :-)

Test Plan:
Note that `yarn travis` (success) and `yarn travis --full` (failure; no
GitHub token) both have the expected behaviors.

wchargin-branch: execdependencygraph-export
2018-05-07 10:30:56 -07:00
Dandelion Mané fa4082c95b
Minimal toy oclif integration (#214)
This commit adds [oclif] as a command-line framework. It is successfully
integrated with webpack.

[oclif]: https://github.com/oclif/oclif

Usage:
`yarn backend` to build the cli.
`node bin/sourcecred.js` to launch the CLI and see usage
`node bin/sourcecred.js example` for one example command
`node bin/sourcecred.js goodbye` for another example command
2018-05-04 19:28:37 -07:00
William Chargin e9dbdeca96
Target latest Node for backend applications (#213)
Summary:
Consequently, Babel won’t transform classes to their roughly equivalent
ES5 counterparts, etc.

Test Plan:
Create `src/classy.js` with `class X {}; console.log(X);`. Then, add a
build target for `classy: resolveApp("src/classy.js"),` in `paths.js`.
Use `yarn backend` and inspect the contents of `bin/classy.js`; in
particular, look at the definition of `X` (whatever the argument to
`console.log` is). Before this commit, the result will be a big
complicated mess. After this commit, it will be `class X {}`.

Note also that `yarn travis --full` passes, indicating that the two
manual tests, which call out to the utilities in `bin/`, still work.

wchargin-branch: target-node
2018-05-04 19:22:39 -07:00
William Chargin b5e894bbb4
Fork `babel-preset-react-app` into config/ (#212)
Summary:
We want to change this configuration so that our compilation of backend
applications can target latest Node. This commit forks the current
configuration so that we can modify it easily.

Test Plan:
Both `yarn start` and `yarn travis` work. The generated backend
applications work, too.

wchargin-branch: fork-babel-config
2018-05-04 19:19:45 -07:00
Dandelion Mané de5542de6a
Exclude node modules from backend build (#211)
Setup following directions from [webpack-node-externals]

[webpack-node-externals]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/webpack-node-externals

This unblocks #210.

Test plan: `yarn backend` still succeeds, and the binary scripts still
work. The resultant binaries are much smaller, as seen below (note build
time is the same).

before:
```
❯ yarn backend
yarn run v1.5.1
$ node scripts/backend.js
Building backend applications...
Compiled successfully.

File sizes after gzip:

  231.37 KB  bin/printCombinedGraph.js
  199.5 KB   bin/fetchAndPrintGithubRepo.js
  46.41 KB   bin/cloneAndPrintGitGraph.js
  21.48 KB   bin/createExampleRepo.js
  17.71 KB   bin/loadAndPrintGitRepository.js

Build completed; results in 'bin'.
Done in 4.46s.
```

after:
```
❯ yarn backend
yarn run v1.5.1
$ node scripts/backend.js
Building backend applications...
Compiled successfully.

File sizes after gzip:

  27.78 KB  bin/printCombinedGraph.js
  12.73 KB  bin/cloneAndPrintGitGraph.js
  12.41 KB  bin/fetchAndPrintGithubRepo.js
  6.03 KB   bin/loadAndPrintGitRepository.js
  5.52 KB   bin/createExampleRepo.js

Build completed; results in 'bin'.
Done in 4.28s.
```
2018-05-04 16:31:39 -07:00
William Chargin d3443a3d4c
Extract `execDependencyGraph` core from CI script (#208)
Summary:
We’d like to use the same abstraction for creating multiple cred graphs
and then combining them together. This will enable us to do that.

Test Plan:
Run `yarn travis` to test the success case, and `yarn travis --full`
(without setting a `GITHUB_TOKEN`) to test the failure case.

wchargin-branch: execdepgraph
2018-05-04 15:47:26 -07:00
Dandelion Mané e3469f157d
Add `src/tools/bin/printCombinedGraph.js` (#207)
`printCombinedGraph` loads and prints a cross-plugin combined
contribution graph for a given GitHub repository.

It is a simple executable wrapper around `src/tools/loadCombinedGraph`.

Example usage:
`node bin/printCombinedGraph.js sourcecred example-git $GITHUB_TOKEN`
2018-05-04 12:10:20 -07:00
Dandelion Mané e66ed45cba
Add CLI for printing a fresh Git graph (#206)
`cloneAndPrintGitGraph` clones a git repository, and generates a Git
object graph for that repository.

This can be run as follows:
```
yarn backend;
node bin/cloneAndPrintGitGraph sourcecred example-git
```

This commit also adds two utility modules:
* `cloneAndLoadRepository` , which clones a Git repository to a tmpdir,
parses the `Repository` data out, and then cleans up.
* `cloneGitGraph`, which calls `cloneAndLoadRepository` and `createGraph`

Test plan: These don't fit well into our CI, because they require
network access to clone repositories from GitHub. I verified that the
functions work via the demo script above.
2018-05-04 11:35:14 -07:00
William Chargin eba1872495
Build backend applications in CI (#193)
Summary:
This could catch failures in build configuration or with Webpack. It’s
unlikely to catch any logic errors, because no production code is run.
In any case, it’s fast enough; it finishes at about the same time as
`ci-test` and `check-pretty`.

Test Plan:
From the repository root, run `rm -r bin; yarn travis`, and note that
the `bin/` directory is regenerated.

wchargin-branch: ci-backend
2018-05-02 22:16:48 -07:00
William Chargin 25d0106a33
Run npm scripts with `--silent` in CI (#191)
Summary:
This prevents the boilerplate output of the form
```

> sourcecred-explorer@0.1.0 check-pretty /home/wchargin/git/sourcecred
> prettier --list-different '**/*.js'

```
(superfluous linebreaks included). In the case that a script fails, it
also omits the giant “this is most likely not a problem with npm” block.

The downside to this is that it suppresses any errors in npm-run-script
itself. For instance, `npm run wat` produces “missing script: wat”,
while `npm run --silent wat` just silently exits with 1. This does not
silence the actual scripts themselves, so things like lint errors or
test failures will still appear.

Test Plan:
Run `yarn travis` before and after this commit, and note that the
resulting build log is prettier after.

wchargin-branch: ci-silent
2018-05-02 19:10:37 -07:00
William Chargin 38f4121ce9
Implement a custom CI script (#189)
Summary:
This CI script accomplishes two tasks:
 1. It speeds up our build by parallelizing where possible.
 2. It opens the possibility for running Travis cron jobs.

Currently, this script by default does the same amount of work as our
current CI script. However, I’d like to move `yarn backend` into the
list of basic actions: a backend build failure should fail CI.

Note: this script is written to be executable directly by Node, so we
can’t use Flow types with the standard syntax. Instead, we use the
comment syntax: https://flow.org/en/docs/types/comments/

Test Plan:
The following should pass with useful output:
  - `npm run travis`
  - `GITHUB_TOKEN="your_github_token" npm run travis -- --full`

The following should fail with useful output:
  - `npm run travis -- --full` (fail)

To test different failure modes, it can be helpful to add
```js
    {id: "doomed", cmd: ["false"], deps: []},
    {id: "orphan", cmd: ["whoami"], deps: ["who", "are", "you"]},
```
to the list of `basicTasks` in `travis.js`.

To test performance:
```shell
$ time node ./config/travis.js >/dev/null 2>/dev/null

real    0m8.306s
user    0m20.336s
sys     0m1.364s

$ time bash -c \
>     'npm run check-pretty && npm run lint && npm run flow && CI=1 npm run test' \
>     >/dev/null 2>/dev/null

real    0m12.427s
user    0m13.752s
sys     0m0.804s
```
A 50% savings is not bad at all—and the raw time saved should only
improve from here on, as the individual steps start taking more time.

wchargin-branch: custom-ci
2018-05-02 16:10:03 -07:00
William Chargin f3a440244e
Fix all lint errors, adding a lint CI step (#175)
Test Plan:
Run `yarn lint` and `yarn travis` and observe success. Add something
that triggers a lint warning, like `const zzz = 3;`; re-run and observe
failures.

wchargin-branch: lint
2018-04-30 14:52:28 -07:00
William Chargin 1c28c75e39
Check in example repo’s in-memory representation (#166)
Summary:
Two reasons for this. First, we want tests to be able to operate on this
data without having to generate repositories via `git(1)`. (Doing that
is slow, and requires a Git installation, and makes it less clear that
the tests are correctly isolated/provides more surface area for
something to go wrong.) Second, in general plugins will need a canonical
source of test data, so setting/continuing this precedent is a good
thing.

Test Plan:
Observe that the old Jest snapshot must be equivalent to the new JSON
one, because the test criterion in `loadRepository.test.js` changed and
the test still passes. Then, run `loadRepositoryTest.sh` and note that
it passes; change the `example-git.json` file and note that the test
fails when re-run; then, run the test with `--updateSnapshot` and watch
it magically revert your changes.

wchargin-branch: check-in-git-repo
2018-04-27 20:51:54 -07:00
William Chargin d6e9b0a72b
Add a command-line script to create example repos (#155)
Summary:
We’ll use this to create the repositories on disk and then push them to
GitHub.

Test Plan:
Generate both kinds of repository, and check out the SHAs:
```shell
$ yarn backend
$ node bin/createExampleRepo.js /tmp/repo
$ node bin/createExampleRepo.js --submodule /tmp/repo-submodule
$ node bin/createExampleRepo.js --no-submodule /tmp/repo-no-submodule
$ # (first and third lines do the same thing)
$ git -C /tmp/repo rev-parse HEAD
677b340674bde17fdaac3b5f5eef929139ef2a52
$ git -C /tmp/repo-submodule rev-parse HEAD
29ef158bc982733e2ba429fcf73e2f7562244188
$ git -C /tmp/repo-no-submodule rev-parse HEAD
677b340674bde17fdaac3b5f5eef929139ef2a52
```
Then, note that these SHAs are expected per the snapshot file in
`exampleRepo.test.js.snap`.

wchargin-branch: create-example-repo-command
2018-04-26 19:53:46 -07:00
Dandelion Mané 39fd3fa354
Make GitHub capitalization consistent within code (#100)
* Make GitHub capitalization consistent within code

We now never capitalize the H in GitHub within variable or function
names. We still capitalize it in comments or user facing strings.

Test plan:
Unit tests, the fetchGithubRepoTest.sh, and
`git grep itHub` only shows comment lines and print statements.

* Fix William's klaxon
2018-03-20 18:32:05 -07:00
William Chargin 5d042c0008 Use isomorphic-fetch instead of node-fetch
Summary:
Paired with @dandelionmane.

Test Plan:
```
$ CI=true yarn test
$ yarn backend
$ GITHUB_TOKEN="<your_token>" src/plugins/github/fetchGitHubRepoTest.sh
```

wchargin-branch: isomorphic-fetch
2018-03-19 20:06:52 -07:00
William Chargin bbecf00615
Repurpose React app as artifact editor (#89)
Summary:
We’ll now start creating the artifact plugin. A large part of this will
be the user interface, including a GUI. For now, our build system just
builds a single React app, so we’re cannibalizing the main explorer to
serve this purpose.

Paired with @dandelionmane.

Test Plan:
The following still work:
  - `yarn test`
  - `yarn start`
  - `yarn build; (cd build; python -m SimpleHTTPServer)`

wchargin-branch: repurpose-react-app-as-artifact-editor
2018-03-19 15:25:23 -07:00
William Chargin ca85fdf234 Reorganize `src/` directory (#87)
Test Plan:
Note that tests still pass, and all changes to snapshot files are
verbatim moves.

wchargin-branch: reorg
2018-03-19 14:31:50 -07:00
William Chargin 274007c90d
Configure Webpack for backend applications (#84)
Summary:
Running `yarn backend` will now bundle backend applications. They’ll be
placed into the new `bin/` directory. This enables us to use ES6 modules
with the standard syntax, Flow types, and all the other goodies that
we’ve come to expect. A backend build takes about 2.5s on my laptop.

Created by forking the prod configuration to a backend configuration and
trimming it down appropriately.

To test out the new changes, this commit changes `fetchGitHubRepo` and
its driver to use the ES6 module system and Flow types, both of which
are properly resolved.

Test Plan:
Run `yarn backend`. Then, you can directly run an entry point via
```
$ node bin/fetchAndPrintGitHubRepo.js sourcecred example-repo "${TOKEN}"
```
or invoke the standard test driver via
```shell
$ GITHUB_TOKEN="${TOKEN}" src/backend/fetchGitHubRepoTest.sh
```
where `${TOKEN}` is your GitHub authentication token.

wchargin-branch: webpack-backend
2018-03-18 22:43:23 -07:00
Dandelion Mané bc2377448f
Move package json to root (#37)
Reorganize the code so that we have a single package.json file, which is at the root.
All source code now lives under `src`, separated into `src/backend` and `src/explorer`.

Test plan:

- run `yarn start` - it works
- run `yarn test` - it finds the tests (all in src/explorer) and they pass
- run `yarn flow` - it works. (tested with an error, that works too)
- run `yarn prettify` - it finds all the js files and writes to them
2018-02-26 22:32:23 -08:00