A set of common gulp tasks for front-end development.


License
GPL-3.0
Install
npm install ecc-gulp-tasks@3.12.0

Documentation

Eccenca common gulp tasks (@eccenca/gulp-tasks)

A set of common gulp tasks for front-end development

Environment

Simply run gulp doctor --env to check whether your environment matches the recommended environment and get installation instructions if not.

Available tasks

  • bad-mdl - finds several bad mdl classes. We want to use the ecc-gui-elements instead of using those bad classes directly.
  • build - compiles optimized (minified, deduped) commonjs version of your component with webpack. Uses config.webpackConfig.production as basic configuration.
  • build-app - compiles optimized (minified, deduped) application with webpack. Uses config.webpackConfig.application as basic configuration.
  • debug - compiles debug version of your component with webpack, watches for changes and re-compiles when needed (until interrupted). Uses config.webpackConfig.debug as basic configuration.
  • test - runs mocha tests starting from file specified at config.testEntryPoint.
  • cover - runs istanbul to generate test coverage from file specified at config.testEntryPoint.
  • lint - runs eslint on files specified at config.lintingFiles.
  • licenses-yaml2json - generates a licenses.json from a licenses.yaml file.
  • doctor - runs several checks in the project. Some of them are fixable by running gulp doctor --heal
  • docs creates a README.md from react code and template file

Usage

  • Include into your project using npm i --save-dev @eccenca/gulp-tasks
  • Create gulpfile.js looks like this:
var gulp = require('@eccenca/gulp-tasks')(require('./buildConfig.js'));

gulp.task('default', ['debug', 'serve']);

As you can see, you need to provide two arguments while requiring the package. First one is an array of string names of available tasks you wish to use. The second one is your build config (described below).

Adding custom gulp task

If you need to use your custom gulp tasks after including common ones, you can do it like so:

var gulp = require('@eccenca/gulp-tasks')(/* ... */);
// define task inline
gulp.task('my-task', function() {
    // ...
});
// load your custom tasks from external file
require('./gulp/my-other-task.js')(gulp);
// ...

How to run things synchronously?

Normally gulp runs everything asynchronously, but sometimes you might want to run tasks in sync. That is useful for example if you want to run tests and then build a component. To do that, you can use gulp-sequence package, like so:

var gulpSequence = require('gulp-sequence');
var gulp = require('@eccenca/gulp-tasks')(/* ... */);
// ....
gulp.task('deploy', gulpSequence('test', 'build-app'));

Build config

Example build config looks like this:

var path = require('path');
module.exports = {
    testEntryPoint: path.join(__dirname, 'test', 'index.jsx'),
    webpackConfig: {
        debug: require('./webpack.config.js'),
        production: require('./webpack.config.prod.js'),
        application: require('./webpack.config.app.js'),
        common: {
            context: path.resolve(__dirname),
        },
    },
    licenseReport: {
        input: path.resolve(__dirname, 'license-report.yaml'),
        outputName: 'licenses.json',
        outputPath: path.resolve(__dirname, 'dist')
    },
};

Exported parameters are as follows:

  • testEntryPoint - should point to your test entry point (to be run by mocha)
  • webpackConfig.debug - should include your webpack config used for debugging
  • webpackConfig.production - should include your webpack config used for compilation for production
  • webpackConfig.application - should include your webpack config used for compilation as production application. It allows for the following special parameters:
  • webpackConfig.common - may webpack config that webpackConfig.debug, webpackConfig.production and webpackConfig.application have in common
  • licenseReport - should point to a license yaml file and contain parameters for the generated license report

Javascript flags

There are the following flags set:

__WEBPACK__ is set to true while using gulp build|build-app|debug. This may be used for doing things only webpack can do, like requiring style sheets, etc:

if(__WEBPACK__){
  require('./style.css')
}

__DEBUG__ is set to true during gulp debug. If you run gulp build-app, __DEBUG__ is set to false, effectively stripping all debug statements. This may be used for doing things only during development:

// The following block will only be run during development
if(__DEBUG__){
  console.info('Dear Developer, have a nice day')
}

__VERSION__ is set to 'VERSION'

If the environment variable GT_BUILD_VERSION is set, __VERSION__ will be set to that value. Otherwise it will be set to the result of git describe --always --dirty, if that does not fail.

Usage:

const version = (<div>{__VERSION__}</div>);

Automated documentation

To use docs following rules must be minded:

  • Only react components and channels will be generated for now
  • Components name must be set explicit with 'displayName'
  • channels are ordered by '@publicSubject' and '@privateSubject' which is mandatory

For examples look at test/fixtures/docs/Store.jsx