A Walmart Labs flavored React Universal App archetype.
This "app archetype" provides for common patterns across all app projects so that each app project can standardize on common development behavior and patterns. Its essentially pre-made patterns for build scripts.
# This runs both the node server and webpack (in hot mode)
$ gulp hot
# Also try `dev` mode when running off battery power and you wish to maximize battery life.
$ gulp dev
Hot mode
enables Hot module reloading(HMR), it is where webpack transpiles your javascript and css code and continues to watch for any changes, and, builds and loads only the code that has changed on disk. It allows you to develop without re-loading your browser page as the changes will be automagically piped in.
# This will run test eslint and your spec tests
$ gulp check
# This will run only your spec tests
$ gulp test-dev
Why can't my test and code changes get automatically run with the tests? Why do the tests take so long to start?
# This will start a webpack-dev-server to hot watch your code and also start a karma test browser that auto-reruns when specs or client code changes.
$ gulp test-watch-all
How do I use and/or view the final build files without minifying/uglifying but also with sourcemaps?
# This will build your code and save to disk, and then start a node server (without using webpack-dev-server).
$ gulp dev-static
# This will start the node server in debug mode so that you can place breakpoints, "debugger" statements, or use `node-inspector`.
$ gulp debug
Run either of the below commands before opening the link.
gulp server-test
gulp dev # (OR) (which includes `server-test`)
gulp hot # (OR) (which includes `server-test`)
This will serve the static assets for test.html
open test.html to view test result.
We use [gulp] as a task invoker. You should install it globally.
$ sudo npm install -g gulp
$ npm install --save-dev gulp electrode-archetype-react-app electrode-archetype-react-app-dev
The gulpfile.js
should contain the following and be located in the root of your project
require("electrode-archetype-react-app")();
The .babelrc
needs to extend
the archetype's babel configuration in order to apply the presents (ES2015, React) and the plugins like i18n. If your project needs additional Babel settings (like using stage 0 features) you can add them to this file. See the Babel docs for more information.
{
"extends": "./node_modules/electrode-archetype-react-app/config/babel/.babelrc"
}
If you don't have a build step for your server code, then you must transpile
on the fly using babel-register
. For performance reasons, we recommend
whitelisting the react
module to be transpiled as well, so that the
transform-node-env-inline
plugin gets applied to the React codebase:
require("babel-core/register")({
ignore: /node_modules\/(?!react\/)/
});
By default, the archetype uses client/app.js
or client/app.jsx
as a client entry point. Alternatively,
you can define multiple entry points for your application, so the Webpack will create bundles for each app
entry point. To do that, place entry.config.js
module into your app's client
directory:
Here is an example of entry.config.js
:
module.exports = {
"web": "./app-web.js",
"ios": "./app-ios.js",
"android": "./app-android.js"
};
Run gulp
to see list of tasks.
Built with ❤️ by Team Electrode @WalmartLabs.