Pattern Library
Copyright © 2017 - The University of Melbourne
The contents of this repository have been produced by The University of Melbourne for internal use and must not be distributed without the express permission of The University of Melbourne.
Getting started
The design system requires:
git clone https://github.com/unimelb/pattern-lib.git
cd pattern-lib
cp .env.example .env
cp pre-push.sh .git/hooks/pre-push
yarn
Development
Storybook is the main development environment.
yarn dev
- http://localhost:7002/yarn build
to build the documentation site to /.out/docs
. Environment variable LOAD_EXTERNAL_ASSETS
controls whether the documentation site is to load the library assets locally (false
) or from the CDN (true
).
Generator
This project includes generators to speed up common development tasks. Commands include:
yarn generate component
You will then be asked for the name of the component, this will be used to create a new folder with a minimal component layout and story
Note: Always remember to add the new component to the file index.js
inside of the folders target/lib
and target/vue
, that way the component will be exportable to Matrix CMS
via CDN
and Vue
via NPM
.
yarn generate story
You will need to select the component from the list of folders, then confirm the selection by selecting choose this directory
. You will then be asked to give the story a name.
Note: This requires some special comments are added in the stories/index.js
file. If it doesn't work make sure the comments are the same as in the template directory.
Using a component in CMS
In Storybook: When adding the "how to use a component" documentation, add a description that clearly shows that ( in the CMS environment) a component must be used in the way of closing the tag explicitly, as shown in the folllowing example:
Do not:
(In the CMS, self closing tags won't load the component:)
<my-new-component/>
Do
(To be compatible with CMS, call the component this way:)
<my-new-component></my-new-component>
Note: Matrix CMS can only use the components in that way and must be in the target/lib
folder as well. You can self-close a component when importing it in a parent component in the pattern-lib context. The rule described above applies just when the component is called in the CMS context. ie. footer component, which is used like this in CMS: <page-footer></page-footer>
instead of <page-footer />
.
Targets
UI library - targets/lib
The main UI library for use in the CMS. The target provides a local development environment for testing purposes.
yarn start:lib
- http://localhost:7003/.yarn build:lib
to compile the library to .out/lib/<version>
, including ui.css
, ui.js
, sprite.svg
, and SVG assets in components/shared
. You can then use http-server
or another static file server to serve the output directory.
The following environment variables are available to configure the behaviour of yarn build:lib
:
LOAD_EXTERNAL_ASSETS
controls whether the library is to load its assets locally (false
) or from the CDN (true
).LIB_EMIT_HTML
controls whether to emit the demo HTML file - set it to true
to emit the file.LIB_LOAD_VERSION
controls which version of the library to load in the demo:
- leave it blank to load the local bundles (e.g. to test a new feature),
- set it to
auto
to load the latest version from the CDN (i.e. the version specified in package.json
), - set it to a specific version number to load that version from the CDN - e.g.
0.0.12
(no v
prefix).
Vue library - targets/vue
The library with all the Vue components for use in single-page apps and other Vue-based projects.
yarn build:vue
to compile the library to .out/vue.js
.
Linting
CSS files are linted on the fly with stylelint. The configuration file, .stylelintrc
, extends two shared configuration: stylelint-config-standard
and stylelint-config-property-sort-order-smacss
.
JS files and single-file Vue components are linted on the fly with ESLint. The configuration file, .eslintrc
, extends two shared configurations: eslint-config-airbnb
and plugin:vue/recommended
For your own sanity, make sure to install your code editor's ESLint and stylelint extensions. The following commands are available for on-demand linting and fixing:
yarn lint
yarn lint:fix
yarn lint:css
yarn lint:css --fix
yarn lint:js
yarn lint:js --fix
Release process
At the start of a new release sprint:
- Create a milestone called
next-release
.
Throughout the release sprint:
- Assign the appropriate
pr-
label to every new PR: pr-major
if it contains a breaking change, pr-minor
if it adds a new feature, pr-patch
in all other cases. - Assign issues and PRs to
next-release
as they are resolved/merged. - Assign additional labels to issues when relevant (e.g.
bug
, chore
, feature
, etc.)
At the end of the release sprint:
- Look at all the PRs that were assigned to
next-release
throughout the sprint and identify the highest-level of change (major, minor or patch). Deduce the next release's version number and rename the milestone accordingly. - Create a new release notes draft based on the following template:
.github/RELEASE_NOTES_TEMPLATE.md
. - Write the release notes by going through all the issues and PRs assigned to the milestone.
- Deploy to production (cf. next section).
- Once the library and documentation sites are deployed, publish the release notes and close the milestone.
- Share the ZenHub milestone report with stakeholders.
See more Notes about the release process in the release.md section in docs:
Docs section
Deployment
To deploy to production:
- Bump the
version
number in package.json
(cf. note below). - Commit the version change to the
dev
branch. - Create a pull request to merge the
dev
branch into master
- e.g. "Deploy v1.0.1". - Wait for the mandatory checks to pass then select "Rebase and merge" (cf. note below).
Semaphore then automatically builds the library and syncs the output files to S3. If the version you're deploying had been previously deployed, you'll need to invalidate the files on the CDN (AWS Cloudfront) or wait a day or so for this to happen automatically. Once the library is deployed, follow the release process below.
Note on versioning: the version number follows the semver convention MAJOR.MINOR.PATCH
, where: MAJOR
corresponds to a breaking change (e.g. a change in a component's markup), MINOR
to a new feature (e.g. a new component, a new feature for an existing component, etc.), and PATCH
to a bug fix or under-the-hood change (e.g. code clean-up, performance improvement, etc.)
Note on rebase: rebasing dev
onto master
avoids creating a merge commit that would require merging master
back into dev
.
Semi-automatic deployment to dev
Pre-release builds can be created like this (using the git pre-push hook behind the scenes):
- Check out a clean
dev
branch - in bash
git push
- This will increment the pre-release version number and make a commit to your local repository
- in bash
git push
again
- You will be prompted that this will trigger a build. Answer 'y'
- This will push (only) your version number change commit to the remote
dev
repo
- After the normal checks a build with the new version will be triggered by Semaphore
Note on pre-release versions: These are legitimate semver versions. They have the format MAJOR.MINOR.PATCH-beta.NUMBER. Only these pre-release versions will be published on dev
.
Testing
How could you test before going live?
The dev
branch is set up into Semaphore CI
to deploy into the AWS S3 Bucket in a folder called latest
where the CMS
team can appoint to latest
and test it out before go to production
.
Each pull request
that is opened, also is automatically generated a comment with a preview link to test it.
Note: Always check the Semaphore CI
check into your pull request
and make sure is building properly, before merge into dev
.
Supported browsers:
- last two versions of Chrome, Firefox and Edge
- IE 11
- Safari 8+
- iOS 8.4+
- Android 4.4+
- Firefox ESR (v52.x)
Recommended mobile devices for testing:
- iPhone 4S
- iPhone 6
- iPad 2
- Galaxy s5
Developer documentation
- Documenting stories - how to customise the content of the README panel for each story
- Icons - how to add new icons, and how to use icons in CSS and Vue components
- Contributing - how to get involved and contribute code
Example websites