Kit noun /kɪt/
A set of articles or equipment needed for a specific purpose.
- a football kit
- ICT4D's favourite kit for data integration and workflow automation
This repo contains runtime, tooling, libraries and components to support the OpenFn's workflow automation and data integration pipeline.
First launched in 2014, OpenFn is the leading Digital Public Good for workflow automation. It has has been tried and tested by NGOs and governments in 40+ countries, and is a Digital Square certified Global Good for Health.
Try the app online at app.openfn.org
Explore in a sandbox on demo.openfn.org
Learn more at docs.openfn.org
This monorepo contains many of the backend JavaScript services that power the app: most notably the core Runtime engine that executes OpenFn job code, the Worker service which pulls and executes Workflows from the app, and @openfn/cli
.
We use asdf to configure our local environments and ensure consistency of versions.
You should install asdf and the NodeJs plugin.
We use pnpm
, a fast, disk space efficient package manager, to handle node dependencies within the repo.
$ pnpm run setup
$ pnpm build
pnpm run test
Thanks for being here! You're contributing to a digital public good that will always be free and open source and aimed at serving innovative NGOs, governments, and social impact organizations the world over! You rock ❤️
We use changesets to manage releases: github.com/changesets
A changeset is a description of batch of changes, coupled with semver information.
When submitting a PR against this repo, include a changeset to describe your work.
pnpm changeset
For example changeset notes, look in the .changesets
folder.
New releases will be published to npm automatically when merging into main.
Before merging to main, check out the release branch locally and run the following steps:
- Run
pnpm changeset version
from root to bump versions - Run
pnpm install
- Commit the new version numbers
- Run
pnpm changeset tag
to generate tags - Push tags
git push --tags
Rememebr tags may need updating if commits come in after the tags are first generated.
This repo uses typesync
to ensure that all packages have an appropriate @types/
package.
This must be run MANUALLY (See #333)
On every add, update and remove. you should do pnpm run typesync
from the repo root.
Note that @types packages only synchronise with the major and minor versions of a package. So for @types/x@major.minor.patch
, major
and minor
refer to the versions of the corresponding package x
, and patch
is the version number of the actual types package.
From the repo root, run pnpm install:global
.
This will build the CLI into ./dist
, set the version to the current branch name, and install it globally as openfnx
.
Run openfnx
to use this dev-version of the CLI without overriding your production install.
This uses a similar technique to the release CLI below.
To remove the dev cli, run npm uninstall -g @openfn/clix
You can test the built CLI package to ensure it works before publishing it.
The build/pack-local
script is an overly complicated solution which:
- Packs all the openfn packages
- Updates the dependencies to use peer packages in dist, rather than module names
- Creates
openfn-cli-<version>-local.tgz
which you can install globally.
To run the test:
$ pnpm build
$ pnpm clean:local
$ pnpm pack:local
Run the install command as printed in your shell - something like npm -g dist/openfn-cli-local.tgz
You can run openfn test
to exercise the runtime and compiler.
Some components are designed to be run from inside Lightning.
To test a local package without publishing it to npm, run:
pnpm export adaptor-docs
This will build adaptor-docs into a tarball and install it directly into Lightning (assuming that Lightning
is a sibling dir of kit
).
Prettier ensures consistent code style throughout the project.
Install the Prettier extension for your code editor to enable automatic formatting on save:
- Visual Studio Code: Install the "Prettier - Code formatter" extension.
You can manually format files using Prettier by running:
pnpm run format