prometheus/web/ui/react-app/README.md
Augustin Husson 7291563d4d
replace yarn by npm (#9198)
Signed-off-by: Augustin Husson <husson.augustin@gmail.com>
2021-08-12 20:25:26 +02:00

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# Working with the React UI
This file explains how to work with the React-based Prometheus UI.
## Introduction
The [React-based](https://reactjs.org/) Prometheus UI was bootstrapped using [Create React App](https://github.com/facebook/create-react-app), a popular toolkit for generating React application setups. You can find general information about Create React App on [their documentation site](https://create-react-app.dev/).
Instead of plain JavaScript, we use [TypeScript](https://www.typescriptlang.org/) to ensure typed code.
## Development environment
To work with the React UI code, you will need to have the following tools installed:
* The [Node.js](https://nodejs.org/) JavaScript runtime.
* The [npm](https://www.npmjs.com/) package manager. Once you installed Node, npm should already be available.
* *Recommended:* An editor with TypeScript, React, and [ESLint](https://eslint.org/) linting support. See e.g. [Create React App's editor setup instructions](https://create-react-app.dev/docs/setting-up-your-editor/). If you are not sure which editor to use, we recommend using [Visual Studio Code](https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/languages/typescript). Make sure that [the editor uses the project's TypeScript version rather than its own](https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/typescript/typescript-compiling#_using-the-workspace-version-of-typescript).
**NOTE**: When using Visual Studio Code, be sure to open the `web/ui/react-app` directory in the editor instead of the root of the repository. This way, the right ESLint and TypeScript configuration will be picked up from the React workspace.
## Installing npm dependencies
The React UI depends on a large number of [npm](https://www.npmjs.com/) packages. These are not checked in, so you will need to download and install them locally via the npm package manager:
npm install
npm consults the `package.json` and `package-lock.json` files for dependencies to install. It creates a `node_modules` directory with all installed dependencies.
**NOTE**: Remember to change directory to `web/ui/react-app` before running this command and the following commands.
## Running a local development server
You can start a development server for the React UI outside of a running Prometheus server by running:
npm start
This will open a browser window with the React app running on http://localhost:3000/. The page will reload if you make edits to the source code. You will also see any lint errors in the console.
Due to a `"proxy": "http://localhost:9090"` setting in the `package.json` file, any API requests from the React UI are proxied to `localhost` on port `9090` by the development server. This allows you to run a normal Prometheus server to handle API requests, while iterating separately on the UI.
[browser] ----> [localhost:3000 (dev server)] --(proxy API requests)--> [localhost:9090 (Prometheus)]
## Running tests
Create React App uses the [Jest](https://jestjs.io/) framework for running tests. To run tests in interactive watch mode:
npm test
To generate an HTML-based test coverage report, run:
CI=true npm test --coverage
This creates a `coverage` subdirectory with the generated report. Open `coverage/lcov-report/index.html` in the browser to view it.
The `CI=true` environment variable prevents the tests from being run in interactive / watching mode.
See the [Create React App documentation](https://create-react-app.dev/docs/running-tests/) for more information about running tests.
## Linting
We define linting rules for the [ESLint](https://eslint.org/) linter. We recommend integrating automated linting and fixing into your editor (e.g. upon save), but you can also run the linter separately from the command-line.
To detect and automatically fix lint errors, run:
npm run lint
This is also available via the `react-app-lint-fix` target in the main Prometheus `Makefile`.
## Building the app for production
To build a production-optimized version of the React app to a `build` subdirectory, run:
npm run build
**NOTE:** You will likely not need to do this directly. Instead, this is taken care of by the `build` target in the main Prometheus `Makefile` when building the full binary.
## Integration into Prometheus
To build a Prometheus binary that includes a compiled-in version of the production build of the React app, change to the root of the repository and run:
make build
This installs dependencies via npm, builds a production build of the React app, and then finally compiles in all web assets into the Prometheus binary.