This repository is the code and content for https://developer.nexmo.com, which includes the Nexmo documentation, API reference, SDKs, Tools & Community content. To get a Nexmo account, sign up for free at nexmo.com.
We use rspec to test Nexmo Developer.
To run all tests:
bundle exec rspec
To generate code coverage, set the COVERAGE
environment variable when running the tests.
COVERAGE=1 bundle exec rspec
This will create a folder named coverage
. Open index.html
in this folder to view coverage statistics.
We write the docs in US English and enforce this at build time with a CI check. You can run the check locally using the following command:
./node_modules/.bin/mdspell -r -n -a --en-us '_documentation/**/*.md' '_partials/*.md' '_partials/**/*.md' '_modals/**/*.md' '_tutorials/**.md'
If there is a word that isn't in the dictionary but is correct to use, add it to the .spelling
file (there's a lot of exceptions in there, including Nexmo
!)
The project can be run on your laptop, either directly or using Docker. These instructions have been tested for Mac.
Before you start, you need to make sure that you have:
Install Homebrew
/usr/bin/ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)"
Install required packages, create database and configure git
brew install postgres rbenv git yarn nvm
brew services start postgresql
createdb nexmo_developer_development
createuser nexmo_developer
git config --global user.name "NAME"
git config --global user.email "[email protected]"
Generate an SSH key for authentication
ssh-keygen -t rsa
cat .ssh/id_rsa.pub # Add to Github
Clone NDP to your local machine
git clone [email protected]:Nexmo/nexmo-developer.git
cd nexmo-developer
cp .env.example .env
Add to ~/.bash_profile
(or equivalent file on your system):
eval "$(rbenv init -)"
export NVM_DIR="$HOME/.nvm"
. "/usr/local/opt/nvm/nvm.sh"
Install the correct versions of ruby and node
rbenv install 2.5.5
rbenv global 2.5.5
gem install bundle
bundle install
nvm install 9
nvm use 9
yarn install
Edit the .env
file as appropriate for your platform. Then, run the following:
Install project dependencies, run database migrations and start the server
bundle install
bin/rails db:setup
bin/yarn install
bin/rails s
You should now be able to see the site on http://localhost:3000/
If you don't want to install Ruby & PostgreSQL then you can use docker to sandbox Nexmo Developer into its own containers. After you Install Docker run the following:
$ git clone [email protected]:Nexmo/nexmo-developer.git
$ cd nexmo-developer
$ cp .env.example .env
Edit the .env
file as appropriate for your platform. Then, start the web server with this command:
$ docker-compose up
At this point, open your browser to http://localhost:3000/ ... and wait (it takes about 30 seconds for the first load).
To stop the server cleanly run:
$ docker-compose down
You can access the admin dashboard by visiting /admin
. If you've populated data via rake db:seed
you will have an admin user with the username of [email protected]
and password of development
.
The following is an example if you are running Nexmo Developer within a Docker container:
docker exec -it <container_id> rake db:seed
New admin users can be created by visiting /admin/users
or by accessing the rails console and creating a new User like so:
User.create!(email: '[email protected]', password: 'password', admin: true)
Some of the contents of NDP are brought in via git submodules, such as the Open API Specification (OAS) documents. A submodule is a separate repository used within the main repository (in this case NDP) as a dependency. The main repository holds information about the location of the remote repository and which commit to reference. So to make a change within a submodule, you need to commit to the submodule and the main repository and crucially remember to push both sets of changes to GitHub.
Here are some tips for working with submodules:
git submodule init
git submodule update
git pull
git submodule update
Make sure you are inside the directory that is a submodule.
- make your changes
- commit your changes
- push your changes from here (this is the bit that normally trips us up)
- open a pull request on the submodule's repository - we can't open the PR on the main repo until this is merged
You are not done, keep reading! A second pull request is needed to update the main repo, including any other changes to that repo and an update to the submodule pointing to the new (merged) commit to use.
- open your PR for this change including any changes to the main project (so we don't lose it) but label it "don't merge" and add the URL of the submodule PR we're waiting for
- once the submodule has the change you need on its master branch, change into the subdirectory and
git pull
- change directory back up to the root of the project
- commit the submodules changes
- push these changes too
- Now we can review your PR
If you made changes on the repo outside of NDP, then you will need to come and make a commit on NDP to update which commit in the submodule the NDP repository is pointing to.
Make a branch, change into the submodule directory and git pull
or do whatever you need to do to get HEAD
pointing to the correct commit. In the top level of the project, add the change to the submodules file and commit and push. Then open the pull request as you would with any other changes.
Never git add .
this is lazy practice anyway but will make bad things happen with submodules. Try git add -p
instead. You're welcome.
If you're not sure what to do, ask for help. It's easier to lend a hand along the way than to rescue it later!
Git docs for submodules: https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Tools-Submodules
A flow chart on surviving submodules from @lornajane: https://lornajane.net/posts/2016/surviving-git-submodules
The image may have changed, try rebuilding it with the following command:
$ docker-compose up --build
I get an exception PG::ConnectionBad - could not connect to server: Connection refused
when I try to run the app.
This error indicates that PostgreSQL is not running. If you installed PostgreSQL using brew
you can get information about how to start it by running:
$ brew info postgresql
Once PostgreSQL is running you'll need to create and migrate the database. See Setup for instructions.
Volta is the Vonage design system, and is used to style Nexmo Developer. To upgrade the version of Volta used:
- Clone Volta on to your local machine
- Remove the
app/assets/volta/scss
folder in Nexmo Developer - Copy the
scss
folder from the Volta repo in toapp/assets/volta
- Commit and push. Rails will take care of compilation etc
We ❤️ contributions from everyone! It is a good idea to talk to us first if you plan to add any new functionality. Otherwise, bug reports, bug fixes and feedback on the library is always appreciated. Look at the Contributor Guidelines for more information and please follow the GitHub Flow.
This library is released under the MIT License