Aberlaas
Start a new npm package with all the right tooling in place.
This package exposes the aberlaas
script that can be used to perform the most
common tasks on a package: lint
, test
and release
. It also
exposes the inner configuration of the tools it uses.
Installing aberlaas
- Run
yarn add --dev aberlaas
to install it - Run
yarn run aberlaas init
to bootstrap your project with all the scripts
and configuration - Commit and push
- Run
yarn run aberlaas setup
to enable the external services (CircleCI and
Renovate)
aberlaas init
will add custom scripts (in ./scripts
and in your
package.json
), scaffold a ./lib
folder and create default config files for
the tools used internally/
aberlaas setup
will enable CircleCI and Renovate, but requires the repository
to have been pushed to GitHub first. If you have a CIRCLECI_TOKEN
and
GITHUB_TOKEN
defined, everything will be automatically enabled for you.
Otherwise, the relevant URLs will be displayed so you can enable them manually.
The following table lists all the scripts added:
Script | Description |
---|
yarn run husky:precommit | Run before any commit (through Husky) |
yarn run test | Run tests using Jest |
yarn run test:watch | Run tests using Jest in watch mode |
yarn run ci | Run testing and linting in CI |
yarn run lint | Lint all supported file types |
yarn run lint:fix | Attempt to fix linting issues on all supported file types |
yarn run release | Release the module on npm |
Linting
aberlaas lint
will lint all supported files. Each file type can be linted
independently with the corresponding argument (aberlaas lint --json
will lint
JSON files for example).
You can have Aberlaas trying to autofix linting issues by adding the --fix
argument to your command.
The following table show the file types supported and the corresponding command
and linter used.
Command | File type | Linter used | Fixer used | Config files |
---|
aberlaas lint | All supported | N/A | N/A | See individual file type |
aberlaas lint --js | JavaScript | ESLint | Prettier (through ESLint) | .eslintrc.js or --config.js |
aberlaas lint --css | CSS | Stylelint | Prettier | .stylelintrc.js or --config.css |
aberlaas lint --json | JSON | jsonlint | Prettier | |
aberlaas lint --yml (or --yaml ) | YAML | yaml-lint | Prettier | |
aberlaas lint --circleci | .circleci/config.yml | yaml-lint, circleci (if available in $PATH ) | Prettier | |
Testing (with Jest)
aberlaas test
to run all the Jest tests in ./lib
. You can alter the behavior
with the following options:
CLI Argument | Default value | Description |
---|
[...] | ./lib | Files and directories to test. |
--config | jest.config.js | Jest config file to use |
--watch | false | If enabled, will listen for changes on files and rerun tests |
--failFast | false | If enabled, will stop as soon as one test fails |
Note that you can also pass any other command-line flag and they will be passed
directly to Jest under the hood.
Jest is loaded with jest-extended allowing you to use new matchers like
.toBeString()
, .toStartWith()
, etc. It also includes jest-expect-message
to add custom error messages when test fails, as expect(actual, "Custom error message").toBe(true)
.
New global variables
testName
is available in all tests and contains the name of the current
it
/test
block.
captureOutput
allows to swallow any stdout
/stderr
output for later
inspection. Output is stripped of any trailing newlines and ANSI characters.
const actual = await captureOutput(async () => {
console.log('foo');
});
dedent is included in all tests, so you can
write multiline strings without having to break your indentation.
describe('moduleName', () => {
describe('methodName', () => {
it('should test a multiline string', () => {
const input = dedent`
Leading and trailing lines will be trimmed, so you can write something like
this and have it work as you expect:
* how convenient it is
* that I can use an indented list
- and still have it do the right thing`;
});
});
Precommit hooks
aberlaas
uses husky
and lint-staged
to make sure all committed code
follows your coding standard.
All css
, js
, json
and yml
files will be checked for parsing errors
(using aberlaas lint
internally), and if errors are found it will attempt to
automatically fix them. If errors persist, it will prevent the commit and let
you know which file contains errors so you can fix them before committing again.
Whenever you commit a .js
file that has a test attached (or a test file
directly), aberlaas test
will be run on those files. If the tests don't pass,
your commit will be rejected.
Those two measures ensure that you'll never "break the build", by committing
invalid files or code that does not pass the test. If you want to ignore this
behavior, you can always add the -n
option to your git commit
command to
skip the hooks.
Releasing
aberlaas release
will release the package to npm. It will update
the version in package.json
as well as creating the related git tag.
When called without arguments, it will prompt you for the next version to
package. If called with an argument, this will be used as the next version
number (for example, yarn run release 1.1.3
). You can also use SemVer
increments (for example, yarn run release minor
).
Use --dry-run
to start a dry-run. It will simulate a release but won't
actually push anything to GitHub or npm.
Continuous Integration
aberlaas ci
is triggered by CI Servers (currently only CircleCI is supported),
and won't do anything when run locally.
When on a CI server it will first display the current node and yarn version, and
then test
and lint
scripts in that order. It will fail whenever one of them
fails, or succeed if they all succeed.
The node and yarn version used both locally and on the CI server will be the
same. A .nvmrc
file is created when running yarn run aberlaas init
that will
force local users to use the specified version. The same version is also
specified in the Docker image pulled by CircleCI. As for Yarn, a local copy of
the whole yarn program is added to the repository when first initializing it, so
both locals and CI servers will use it.
Auto-Releasing
As an optional feature, you can have aberlaas automatically release a new
version of your module from the CI environment when relevant.
The CI will then check all the commits since the last release. If any commit is
a feat()
it will release a new minor version; it any commit is a fix()
it
will release a new patch version. For major release, you'll have to do it
manually.
This option is not enabled by default. If you need it, you need to follow those
steps:
- Run
aberlaas setup --auto-release
. It will setup the required ENV
variables
and ssh keys - Update your
aberlaas ci
script to aberlaas ci --auto-release
- Uncomment the
add_ssh_keys
in your .circleci.yml
file
File structure
./lib/configs
contain the default configuration for all the tools. They are
exported by the package and thus can be require
d in userland.
./templates
contains default configurations files copied to userland. Each
extends the configuration exported in the previous files. Copying files to
userland allows user to change the files if they want to change the behavior.
.eslintrc.js
, .stylelintrc.js
, jest.config.js
and .huskyrc.js
are local
configuration files for aberlaas
itself. They eat their own dog food by
referencing the same configs as above.
Related packages
Check renovate-config-aberlaas for the Renovate bot config used.
Where does the name Aberlaas come from?
Aberlaas is the base camp from which all great expedition start in the La Horde
du Contrevent book. I felt it's a great name for a bootstrapping kit for
modules.
For your convenience, aberlass
and aberlas
are added as aliases by default.