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mindmap

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Mindmap (Work In Progress)

Gem Version

Mindmap is a tiny framework to render and browser a graph like structure, assuming you have set of simple classes that are related to each other.

The following is the example project to browse file system, generated when issuing "mindmap new" command, and contains 2 nodes (File, Directory)

file system browser

Rationale

It started with another project I'm working on called rubrowser it statically analyze your ruby code and visualize it in a graph, I thought that this kind of data (tree/graph like) is everywhere, like my servers, that I can see files, processes and other open sockets on it, through it I can open another server in my network, browse through it, open a process there...and so on.

Or Imagine how many times you went to Wikipedia and you found yourself on a page and you can't remember what made you land here after couple hours of reading.

so I wanted a setup that does the following:

  • A shared library that visualize a data structure of nodes linked to each other
  • every node could be rendered in any form
  • I need to see where I was and the trail that led me to that point and I can get back and take another path
  • it should be as simple as possible to generate new graph project and put my files in it.
  • I wanted to have ready made layouts, and the ability to override them and define my own layouts.

At first I thought of D3 and visualizing these nodes and make it interactive, but I had to discard this idea as visualizing nodes in different forms will be extremely hard for users, not to mention the graph will be very crowded.

So I settled on a page that renders the root node children first, then when you try to open a node, I append children to the page and the path goes on endlessly, you can scroll back at any time and open another node it'll clear every thing under it's level then showing you the node children...and so on.

Installation

Install it with

$ gem install mindmap

Usage

First create a new project, like you do with rails

$ mindmap new hello

That will create a new directory hello with some skeleton in it.

example/
├── config.ru
├── Gemfile
├── nodes
│   ├── directory_node.rb
│   ├── file_node.rb
│   └── root_node.rb
└── public

3 directories, 5 files

it's a rack application you can start it by rackup or

$ mindmap server

the project contains an example nodes to browse the file system content, you can start the server and open http://localhost:9292 in your browser to see it in action.

a tutorial could be found in the wiki here

Project structure

  • config.ru : a rack config file that starts mindmap application and serves files from the public directory in both the gem and your project, with your project public directory having precedence, so any file you put there will override the library file.
  • Gemfile : the project has only one direct dependency mindmap
  • nodes : a directory that has your classes that needs to be visualized, by default it contains classes that visualize the file system, it also holds the views for these classes in class_name.html.erb format or other formats wanted like class_name.json.erb or similar
  • public : the public directory, you can serve any files from there css framework in your views as they're loaded by default.

How to write your Nodes

the nodes directory holds your nodes, they're all loaded by default when starting the mindmap server, the following is a commented example for a node class

# a node class name MUST end with "Node"
class DirectoryNode
  # node class MUST include the Node module
  # it include methods to render the node and
  # an initializer for the class
  include Mindmap::Node

  # you can define attributes/member variables as you wish
  # if you're using one of the library views you'll need to defind
  # a specific methods to make it works
  attr_accessor :path

  def name
    File.basename(path)
  end

  # it must return an array of other nodes that this node is related to
  def children
    Dir
      .entries(path)
      .sort
      .reject! { |file| ['.', '..'].include?(file) }
      .map { |file| child(File.expand_path(file, path)) }
  end

  private

  def child(file_path)
    return DirectoryNode.new(path: file_path) if File.directory?(file_path)

    FileNode.new(path: file_path)
  end
end

How it works?

when you start the mindmap server, it loads all library code then loads the project nodes, it serves files from library public and project public directories.

when browsing to localhost:9292 it'll serve the public/index.html which is an empty page that load jquery and bulma css framework and public/assets/index.js

index.js is what does the interaction part of the page, it request the root node, so your nodes directory must contain that class, mindmap will handle the request, creating RootNode object giving it all parameters sent with the request as a hash, Mindmap::Node#initializer will assign any key value to the object if the key= method is public, then mindmap will call the node children.

for every child we'll render it and return the result to the page, the page will append the response, then wait until you click on any link that refer to a local page, when you do it'll handle the request, will request the link content with Ajax sending the data-params of the link as parameters to the Ajax POST request.

mindmap will know the node from the page, for example requesting /file will signal mindmap to create a FileNode object with the passed arguments, /directory/specific_dir will create a Directory::SpecificDir object...etc

How rendering nodes works

the renderer will get the view name by calling view method, then search for a file in the project nodes directory, when found it'll be rendered as an ERB template with the node as a bounding context, so any method called in the view will be executed from the node.

any link that points to a URL that starts with '/' is considered an AJAX link and mindmap JavaScript will call the URL with a post request passing the data-params attribute as parameters in the request, so it's a good idea that you set some hash there that when gets assigned to the object it'll tell him what to do, an ID in most cases, or for our example nodes the file path, for others maybe UUID, by default the views will serialize the object as JSON and put it in the attribute, you can be selective with your views implementation if you wish, also data-children-title attribute is used by the mindmap JavaScript to use it as a title for the response when appended to the page, it's a good idea to print the node children_title in it.

Root Node

every graph must have an entry point, RootNode is our entry point, this nodes doesn't have to have any views, an object is created from that class when the page loads, and the children will be called an rendered, so the node itself doesn't have to do anything but implementing children method returning an array of nodes to start with.

Hot code reload

Mindmap doesn't have a hot reload feature, so if you want to change your code then see the changes without restarting your server manually you can use reflex or any other tool that executes a command on files change, with reflex you can use this command

$ reflex -s rackup

or

$ reflex -s mindmap server

Contributing

Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/emad-elsaid/mindmap.

License

The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.

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Package last updated on 01 Apr 2021

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