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datahub-web-react |
This module contains a React version of the DataHub UI. This is now the production version of the DataHub client experience. Notice that this is a completely separate frontend experience from the legacy Ember app and will remain so as it evolves.
Feel free to take a look around, deploy, and contribute.
For details about the motivation please see this RFC.
The initial milestone for the app was to achieve functional parity with the existing Ember app. This meant supporting
- Dataset Profiles, Search, Browse Experience
- User Profiles, Search
- LDAP Authentication Flow
This has since been achieved. The new set of functional goals are reflected in the latest version of the DataHub Roadmap.
In building out the client experience, we intend to leverage learnings from the Ember app and incorporate feedback gathered from organizations operating DataHub. Two themes have emerged to serve as guideposts:
-
Configurability: The client experience should be configurable, such that deploying organizations can tailor certain aspects to their needs. This includes theme / styling configurability, showing and hiding specific functionality, customizing copy & logos, etc.
-
Extensibility: Extending the functionality of DataHub should be as simple as possible. Making changes like extending an existing entity & adding a new entity should require minimal effort and should be well covered in detailed documentation.
Navigate to the docker
directory and run the following to spin up the react app:
./quickstart.sh
at http://localhost:9002
.
If you want to make changes to the UI see them live without having to rebuild the datahub-frontend-react
docker image, you
can run the following in this directory:
yarn install && yarn run start
which will start a forwarding server at localhost:3000
. Note that to fetch real data, datahub-frontend
server will also
need to be deployed, still at http://localhost:9002
, to service GraphQL API requests.
Optionally you could also start the app with the mock server without running the docker containers by executing yarn start:mock
. See here for available login users.
Automated functional testing is powered by Cypress and MirageJS. When running the web server with Cypress the port is set to 3010 so that the usual web server running on port 3000 used for development can be started without interruptions.
yarn test:e2e
yarn test:e2e:ci
Error: error:0308010C:digital envelope routines::unsupported
: This error message shows up when using Node 17, due to an OpenSSL update related to md5.
The best workaround is to revert to the Active LTS version of Node, 16.13.0 with the command nvm install 16.13.0
and if necessary reinstall yarn npm install --global yarn
.
To see the results of any change to a theme, you will need to rebuild your datahub-frontend-react container. While this may work for some users, if you don't want to rebuild your container you can still customize the homepage's logo without rebuilding. You can do this by setting the REACT_APP_LOGO_URL env variable when deploying GMS.
Theme configurations are stored in ./src/conf/theme
. To select a theme, choose one and update the REACT_APP_THEME_CONFIG
env variable stored in .env
.
To change the selected theme, update the .env
file and re-run yarn start
from datahub/datahub-web-react
.
To edit an existing theme, the recommendation is to clone one of the existing themes into a new file with the name <your_themes_name>.config.json
,
and then update the env variable as descibed above. The theme files have three sections, styles
, assets
and content
. The type of the theme configs is specified
in ./src/conf/theme/types.ts
.
styles
configure overrides for the apps theming variables.
assets
configures the logo url.
content
specifies customizable text fields.
While developing on your theme, all changes to assets and content are seen immediately in your local app. However, changes to styles require
you to terminate and re-run yarn start
to see updated styles.
The src
dir of the app is broken down into the following modules
conf - Stores global configuration flags that can be referenced across the app. For example, the number of search results shown per page, or the placeholder text in the search bar box. It serves as a location where levels for functional configurability should reside.
app - Contains all important components of the app. It has a few sub-modules:
auth
: Components used to render the user authentication experience.browse
: Shared components used to render the 'browse-by-path' experience. The experience is akin to navigating a filesystem hierarchy.preview
: Shared components used to render Entity 'preview' views. These can appear in search results, browse results, and within entity profile pages.search
: Shared components used to render the full-text search experience.shared
: Misc. shared componentsentity
: Contains Entity definitions, where entity-specific functionality resides. Configuration is provided by implementing the 'Entity' interface. (See DatasetEntity.tsx for example) There are 2 visual components each entity should supply:-
profiles
: display relevant details about an individual entity. This serves as the entity's 'profile'. -
previews
: provide a 'preview', or a smaller details card, containing the most important information about an entity instance.When rendering a preview, the entity's data and the type of preview (SEARCH, BROWSE, PREVIEW) are provided. This allows you to optionally customize the way an entities preview is rendered in different views.
-
entity registry
: There's another very important piece of code living within this module: the EntityRegistry. This is a layer of abstraction over the intimate details of rendering a particular entity. It is used to render a view associated with a particular entity type (user, dataset, etc.).
-
graphql - The React App talks to the dathub-frontend
server using GraphQL. This module is where the queries issued
against the server are defined. Once defined, running yarn run generate
will code-gen TypeScript objects to make invoking
these queries extremely easy. An example can be found at the top of SearchPage.tsx.
images - Images to be displayed within the app. This is where one would place a custom logo image.
The following outlines a series of steps required to introduce a new entity into the React app:
-
Declare the GraphQL Queries required to display the new entity
- If search functionality should be supported, extend the "search" query within
search.graphql
to fetch the new entity data. - If browse functionality should be supported, extend the "browse" query within
browse.graphql
to fetch the new entity data. - If display a 'profile' should be supported (most often), introduce a new
<entity-name>.graphql
file that contains aget
query to fetch the entity by primary key (urn).
Note that your new entity must implement the
Entity
GraphQL type interface, and thus must have a correspondingEntityType
. - If search functionality should be supported, extend the "search" query within
-
Implement the
Entity
interface- Create a new folder under
src/components/entity
corresponding to your entity - Create a class that implements the
Entity
interface (example:DatasetEntity.tsx
) - Provide an implementation each method defined on the interface.
- This class specifies whether your new entity should be searchable & browsable, defines the names used to identify your entity when instances are rendered in collection / when entity appears in the URL path, and provides the ability to render your entity given data returned by the GQL API.
- Create a new folder under
-
Register the new entity in the
EntityRegistry
- Update
App.tsx
to register an instance of your new entity. Now your entity will be accessible via the registry and appear in the UI. To manually retrieve the info about your entity or others, simply use an instance of theEntityRegistry
, which is provided viaReactContext
to all components in the hierarchy. For exampleentityRegistry.getCollectionName(EntityType.YOUR_NEW_ENTITY)
- Update
That's it! For any questions, do not hesitate to reach out on the DataHub Slack community in #datahub-react.