bf6894d55d
Bumps [axios](https://github.com/axios/axios) from 0.20.0 to 0.21.1. - [Release notes](https://github.com/axios/axios/releases) - [Changelog](https://github.com/axios/axios/blob/master/CHANGELOG.md) - [Commits](https://github.com/axios/axios/compare/v0.20.0...v0.21.1) Signed-off-by: dependabot[bot] <support@github.com> |
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README.md | ||
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yarn.lock |
Working with the React UI
This file explains how to work with Asynqmon UI.
Introduction
The Asynqmon UI was bootstrapped using Create React App, a popular toolkit for generating React application setups. You can find general information about Create React App on their documentation site.
Instead of plain JavaScript, we use TypeScript to ensure typed code.
Development environment
To work with the React UI code, you will need to have the following tools installed:
- The Node.js JavaScript runtime.
- The Yarn package manager.
- Recommended: An editor with TypeScript, React, and ESLint linting support. See e.g. Create React App's editor setup instructions. If you are not sure which editor to use, we recommend using Visual Studio Code. Make sure that the editor uses the project's TypeScript version rather than its own.
NOTE: When using Visual Studio Code, be sure to open the ui/
directory in the editor instead of the root of the repository. This way, the right ESLint and TypeScript configuration will be picked up from the React workspace.
Installing npm dependencies
The React UI depends on a large number of npm packages. These are not checked in, so you will need to download and install them locally via the Yarn package manager:
yarn
Yarn consults the package.json
and yarn.lock
files for dependencies to install. It creates a node_modules
directory with all installed dependencies.
NOTE: Remember to change directory to ui/
before running this command and the following commands.
Running a local development server
You can start a development server for the React UI outside of a running Asynqmon server by running:
yarn start
This will open a browser window with the React app running on http://localhost:3000/. The page will reload if you make edits to the source code. You will also see any lint errors in the console.
Building the app for production
To build a production-optimized version of the React app to a build
subdirectory, run:
yarn build
NOTE: You will likely not need to do this directly. Instead, this is taken care of by the build
target in the main Asynqmon Makefile
when building the full binary.
Integration into Asynqmon
To build a Asynqmon binary that includes a compiled-in version of the production build of the React app, change to the root of the repository and run:
make build
This installs npm dependencies via Yarn, builds a production build of the React app, and then finally compiles in all web assets into the Asynqmon binary.