Before you can begin with Yari, you need Content. See its README which basically, says something like this:
git clone https://github.com/mdn/content.git mdn/content
Now, you just need to note where that folder is before you can start Yari.
To run Yari locally, you'll first need to install git, Node.js (>= 12.0.0) and Yarn 1. After that, run these commands in your bash:
git clone https://github.com/mdn/yari.git
cd yari
yarn
export CONTENT_ROOT=/path/to/mdn/content/files
yarn dev
open http://localhost:3000
Instead of having to type export CONTENT_ROOT=/path/to/mdn/content/files
for yarn dev
every time, you can put into .env
file:
CONTENT_ROOT=/path/to/mdn/content/files
If you prefer, you can fork the repo first and do the git clone
with
your fork instead of the mdn
one.
The yarn dev
command will compile and prepare certain files. This always
takes a little extra time. If you prefer you can use yarn start
which
will re-use any previously compiled files which is "riskier" but faster.
The yarn start
command will also start a server which doesn't automatically
reload when its source code files change, so use with caution.
Periodically, the code and the content changes. Make sure you're staying up-to-date with these commands:
git pull origin master
yarn
yarn dev
These are also good steps to always take when you embark on making a change.
Then, the only extra command needed is git checkout -b my-new-branch
(or however you prefer to create new git
branches)
All source code is MPL-2.0.
For content, see its license in the mdn/content repository.
Yari is multiple things but at its core is the MDN content as index.html
files, in git
, that contain the metadata (as front-matter) and
the bulk of the document.
The builder converts these "source files" into "build files" using a CLI tool that iterates over the files, builds the HTML, and lastly packages it up with the front-end code, ready to be served as static files.
First of all, development on yari
can mean the source code (e.g. the
styling of the header) or it can mean the content, since it's all one
repo. This document doesn't distinguish between the two. In the future we
might expand with more documentation specifically for contributing to the
content exclusively.
The yarn start
command encapsulates the front-end dev server
(on localhost:3000
) and the server
(on localhost:5000
).
All the sub-commands of yarn start
can be broken down and run individually
if you want to work more rapidly.
If you configure an environment variable called EDITOR
, either on your
system as a whole or in the root .env
file, it can be used in the development
server to link to sources which, when clicked, opens in
your preferred editor/IDE. For example, in the root:
echo 'EDITOR=code' >> .env
Now clicking certain links will open files directly in the currently open
VSCode IDE. To test it, view any document on http://localhost:3000
and
click the "Edit in your editor" button.
The server
has two main jobs:
- Simulate serving the site (e.g. from a server, S3 or a CDN).
- Trigger builds of documents that haven't been built, by URL.
All JavaScript and TypeScript code needs to be formatted with prettier
and it's easy to test this with:
yarn prettier-check
And conveniently, if you're not even interested in what the flaws were, run:
yarn prettier-format
But automatically when you ran yarn
the first time (yarn
is an alias for
yarn install
) it set up a git
pre-commit hook that uses pretty-quick
which is a wrapper on prettier
that checks only the files in the git
commit.
If in doubt about formatting, you can create a pull request and if you have formatting flaws, the pull request checks should catch it.
We maintain the dependencies using Dependabot
in GitHub but if you want
to manually upgrade some you can use:
yarn outdated
If it mentions outdated packages, run and select the packages you want to upgrade:
yarn upgrade-interactive
ngrok
is a great tool for starting a HTTP proxy
server from the Internet into your Yari server. This can be useful for testing
your current build on external tools like BrowserStack, WebPageTest,
Google Translate, or to simply show a friend what you're up to. Obiviously
it'll never be faster than your uplink Internet connection but it should
be fairly feature complete.
- Create in account on Ngrok.com
- Download the executable
- Start your Yari server with
yarn start
in one terminal - Start the
ngrok
executable with:/path/to/your/ngrok http 5000
This will display something like this:
Session Status online
Account (Plan: Free)
Version 2.3.35
Region United States (us)
Web Interface http://127.0.0.1:4040
Forwarding http://920ba2108da8.ngrok.io -> http://localhost:5000
Forwarding https://920ba2108da8.ngrok.io -> http://localhost:5000
Connections ttl opn rt1 rt5 p50 p90
0 0 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00
Now, take that "Forwarding" URL https://920ba2108da8.ngrok.io
(in this
example) and share it.
The server
builds content automatically (on-the-fly) when you're viewing
pages. But if you want to you can pre-emptively build all the content
in advance. One potential advantage is that you can get a more complete
list of all possible "flaws" across all documents before you even visit them.
The most fundamental CLI command is:
yarn build
Every index.html
becomes two files:
index.html
fully formed and complete HTML fileindex.json
the React needed state to build the page in the client
When building you can enable specific "flaw checks" and their level of handling. Some flaws are "cosmetic" and some are more severe but they should never block a full build.
More information about how to set flaws can be found in docs/envvars.md
.
Essentially, the default is to warn about any flaw and you can see
those flaws when using http://localhost:3000
. But for completed builds,
all flaws are ignored. This makes the build faster and there's also
no good place to display the flaws in a production-grade build.
In the future, we might make the default flaw level error
instead.
That means that any new edits to (or creation of) any document will break
in continuous integration if there's a single flaw and the onus will
be on you to fix it.
The various formats and sizes of the favicon is generated
from the file mdn-web-docs.svg
in the repository root. This file is then
converted to favicons using realfavicongenerator.net.
To generate new favicons, edit or replace the mdn-web-docs.svg
file
and then re-upload that to realfavicongenerator.net.