Skip to content

tdilauro/circulation-admin

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Circulation Manager Administrative Interface

Test Client & Deploy Documentation

This is a LYRASIS-maintained fork of the NYPL Library Simplified Circulation Manager administrative interface.

Library Simplified Documentation

To see screenshots, read in-depth documentation, and find out more about the project, check out the Confluence site hosted by The New York Public Library.

Set Up

This package may be used in a local build of the Palace Project Circulation Manager, or it may be run against a remote Circulation Manager.

This project uses Node.js 18. We recommend the latest version of Node.js 18.

You have a number of options for installing Node.js. One convenient way on macOS is to use Homebrew and nvm to manage Node.js versions.

Install Homebrew if you have not already:

/bin/bash -c "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/HEAD/install.sh)"

Install nvm using Homebrew:

brew install nvm

Install and use the latest version of Node.js 18, e.g. 18.14.2 with nvm:

nvm install 18.14.2
nvm use 18.14.2

Alternatively, you can use nodenv on macOS:

brew install nodenv
nodenv install 18.14.2
nodenv global 18.14.2

If you have different projects requiring different Node.js versions, you can use nodenv to set a local version for the project by navigating to the root directory of circulation-admin and executing nodenv local 18.14.2.

You can also use the n npm package to manage Node.js versions, or simply install the Node.js binary directly.

This project uses the latest version of npm. You can update npm with npm update -g npm. You can confirm the versions of Node.js and npm you are using with node --version and npm --version.

Once you have installed the correct versions of Node.js and npm, run npm i to install all dependencies.

Use npm-Published Version in a Local Circulation Manager

Suggested local folder setup:

  • /[path to project folder]/circulation

To use the published version with your circulation manager, run npm install from api/admin in the circulation local installed repository.

Use Local Development Version in a Local Circulation Manager

Follow the Circulation Manager README instructions before setting up this repository.

Suggested local folder setup:

  • /[path to project folder]/circulation
  • /[path to project folder]/circulation-admin

If you're working on the administrative interface and want to test local changes, you can link your local clone of this repository to your local circulation manager. These steps will allow you to work on the front-end administrative interface and see updates while developing.

  1. Run npm link in this circulation-admin repository,
  2. run npm link @thepalaceproject/circulation-admin from api/admin in the circulation repository (which is where package.json is located),
  3. run the circulation manager using python app.py at the root in the circulation repository,
  4. run the web interface using npm run dev at the root of this circulation-admin repository,
  5. run the Elasticsearch server using ./bin/elasticsearch in the elasticsearch-[version] directory,
  6. visit localhost:6500/admin/.

Webpack will take care of compiling and updating any new changes made locally for development. Just hard refresh the page (command + shift + R) to see updates without having to restart either the circulation or circulation-admin servers.

Use Local Development Version with a Remote Circulation Manager

This front-end may be run locally in development against a remote Circulation Manager back-end. This removes the need to build a local Circulation Manager from source in order to work on the front-end.

  1. Run npm run dev-server -- --env=backend=[url] in this circulation-admin repository.

    Example: npm run dev-server -- --env=backend=https://gorgon.tpp-qa.lyrasistechnology.org

    Note: The tortured syntax here results from going through npm and webpack. The first -- separates arguments intended for npm from arguments intended for the script that npm runs. In this case the script executes webpack, which allows an environment object to be supplied on the command line using --env. Properties of the environment object are specified using the --env=[property]=[value] syntax.

  2. Visit http://localhost:8080/admin/.

  3. Log in using credentials for the CM back-end. Content from that Circulation Manager should appear.

This works by running a local proxy server. HTML pages received from the Circulaton Manager that load assets from the circulation-admin package on jsdelivr are rewritten to load them from the local webpack build instead.

Webpack will take care of compiling and updating any new changes made locally for development. Hot module replacement and live reloading are enabled, so the browser will automatically update as changes are made.

Web Catalog

The Circulation Manager administrative interface relies on the OPDS Web Catalog as its base React component and application. For more information, please check out that repository.

Publishing a New Release

Before publishing a new release, update the version number in package.json and add the new version number + comments about what the new version includes to CHANGELOG.md. For new version numbers, you can refer to Semantic Versioning (major.minor.patch). Then, run npm install to update the package-lock.json file to include the new version.

Commit your changes, push them to Github, make a PR, and request your reviewer. Once approved, you may go back to your local repository, checkout the main branch, and git pull.

This package is published to npm. To publish a new version, you need to create an npm account and be a collaborator on the package.

If you're not already logged in to npm from your terminal, you'll have to do so at this point. Run npm login and enter your credentials when prompted.

Then, you can run npm publish from your local copy of the repository (ensure you are on the main branch before doing so).

Afterwards, you should tag the release and add comments to Github. On the main branch, run git tag -a v[version number] -m '[commit message]'. Then run git push origin v[version number].

Go to the Github repository, click on "tags," find the tag you pushed, click on it and hit "edit." Add a release title, and a description. Then save by clicking, "Update Release."

Accessibility

In order to develop user interfaces that are accessible to everyone, there are tools added to the workflow. Besides the Typescript tslint-react-a11y plugin, react-axe is also installed for local development. Using that module while running the app uses a lot of resources so it should be only when specifically testing for accessibility and not while actively developing new features or fixing bugs.

In order to run the app with react-axe, run npm run dev-test-axe. This will add a local global variable process.env.TEST_AXE (through webpack) that will trigger react-axe in /src/index.tsx. The output will be seen in the browser's console terminal.

Tests

Unit Tests

Like the codebase, all the unit tests are written in Typescript. Tests are written for all React components as well as redux and utility functions. Older tests are run using mocha and these tests can be found in the __tests__ folders littered throughout the src tree. All new tests should be written using jest and placed in the tests/jest directory. The directory structure in tests/jest should mirror the structure in src.

To run the tests, perform npm test.

We use GitHub Actions for continuous integration. Any pull requests submitted must have tests and those tests must pass on GitHub Actions.

Nightwatch

There are end-to-end tests that run on Nightwatch. This selenium-based test runner allows us to include integration tests for logging into the admin and clicking through different pages.

To set up credentials and run the tests, check out the README in `/tests/.

Debugging

The Redux DevTools browser extension may be used to easily inspect app states and state transitions.

License

Copyright © 2021 The New York Public Library, Astor, Lenox, and Tilden Foundations

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at

   http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.

About

No description, website, or topics provided.

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • TypeScript 95.1%
  • SCSS 3.2%
  • JavaScript 1.7%