kopia lustrzana https://dev.funkwhale.audio/funkwhale/funkwhale
784 wiersze
26 KiB
ReStructuredText
784 wiersze
26 KiB
ReStructuredText
Contribute to Funkwhale development
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===================================
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First of all, thank you for your interest in the project! We really
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appreciate the fact that you're about to take some time to read this
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and hack on the project.
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This document will guide you through common operations such as:
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- Setup your development environment
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- Working on your first issue
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- Writing unit tests to validate your work
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- Submit your work
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A quick path to contribute on the front-end
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-------------------------------------------
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The next sections of this document include a full installation guide to help
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you setup a local, development version of Funkwhale. If you only want to fix small things
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on the front-end, and don't want to manage a full development environment, there is another way.
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As the front-end can work with any Funkwhale server, you can work with the front-end only,
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and make it talk with an existing instance (like the demo one, or you own instance, if you have one).
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If even that is too much for you, you can also make your changes without any development environment,
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and open a merge request. We will be able to review your work easily by spawning automatically a
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live version of your changes, thanks to Gitlab Review apps.
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Setup front-end only development environment
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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1. Clone the repository::
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git clone ssh://git@dev.funkwhale.audio/funkwhale/funkwhale.git
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cd funkwhale
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cd front
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2. Install `nodejs <https://nodejs.org/en/download/package-manager/>`_ and `yarn <https://yarnpkg.com/lang/en/docs/install/#debian-stable>`_
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3. Install the dependencies::
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yarn install
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4. Compile the translations::
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yarn i18n-compile
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5. Launch the development server::
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# this will serve the front-end on http://localhost:8000/front/
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VUE_PORT=8000 yarn serve
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6. Make the front-end talk with an existing server (like https://demo.funkwhale.audio or https://open.audio),
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by clicking on the corresponding link in the footer
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7. Start hacking!
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Setup your development environment
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----------------------------------
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If you want to fix a bug or implement a feature, you'll need
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to run a local, development copy of funkwhale.
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We provide a docker based development environment, which should
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be both easy to setup and work similarly regardless of your
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development machine setup.
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Instructions for bare-metal setup will come in the future (Merge requests
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are welcome).
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Installing docker and docker-compose
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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This is already cover in the relevant documentations:
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- https://docs.docker.com/install/
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- https://docs.docker.com/compose/install/
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Cloning the project
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Visit https://dev.funkwhale.audio/funkwhale/funkwhale and clone the repository using SSH or HTTPS. Example using SSH::
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git clone ssh://git@dev.funkwhale.audio/funkwhale/funkwhale.git
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cd funkwhale
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.. note::
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As of January 2020, the SSH fingerprints of our Gitlab server are the following::
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$ ssh-keyscan dev.funkwhale.audio | ssh-keygen -lf -
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# dev.funkwhale.audio:22 SSH-2.0-OpenSSH_7.4p1 Debian-10+deb9u6
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# dev.funkwhale.audio:22 SSH-2.0-OpenSSH_7.4p1 Debian-10+deb9u6
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# dev.funkwhale.audio:22 SSH-2.0-OpenSSH_7.4p1 Debian-10+deb9u6
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2048 SHA256:WEZ546nkMhB9yV9lyDZZcEeN/IfriyhU8+mj7Cz/+sU dev.funkwhale.audio (RSA)
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256 SHA256:dEhAo+1ImjC98hSqVdnkwVleheCulV8xIsV1eKUcig0 dev.funkwhale.audio (ECDSA)
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256 SHA256:/AxZwOSP74hlNKCHzmu9Trlp9zVGTrsJOV+zet1hYyQ dev.funkwhale.audio (ED25519)
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A note about branches
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Next release development occurs on the "develop" branch, and releases are made on the "master" branch. Therefore, when submitting Merge Requests, ensure you are merging on the develop branch.
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Working with docker
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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In development, we use the docker-compose file named ``dev.yml``, and this is why all our docker-compose commands will look like this::
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docker-compose -f dev.yml logs
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If you do not want to add the ``-f dev.yml`` snippet every time, you can run this command before starting your work::
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export COMPOSE_FILE=dev.yml
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Creating your env file
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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We provide a working .env.dev configuration file that is suitable for
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development. However, to enable customization on your machine, you should
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also create a .env file that will hold your personal environment
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variables (those will not be commited to the project).
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Create it like this::
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touch .env
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Create docker network
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Create the federation network::
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docker network create federation
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Building the containers
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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On your initial clone, or if there have been some changes in the
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app dependencies, you will have to rebuild your containers. This is done
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via the following command::
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docker-compose -f dev.yml build
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Database management
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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To setup funkwhale's database schema, run this::
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docker-compose -f dev.yml run --rm api python manage.py migrate
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This will create all the tables needed for the API to run properly.
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You will also need to run this whenever changes are made on the database
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schema.
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It is safe to run this command multiple times, so you can run it whenever
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you fetch develop.
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Development data
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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You'll need at least an admin user and some artists/tracks/albums to work
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locally.
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Create an admin user with the following command::
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docker-compose -f dev.yml run --rm api python manage.py createsuperuser
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Injecting fake data is done by running the following script::
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artists=25
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command="from funkwhale_api.music import fake_data; fake_data.create_data($artists)"
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echo $command | docker-compose -f dev.yml run --rm api python manage.py shell -i python
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The previous command will create 25 artists with random albums, tracks
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and metadata.
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Launch all services
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Before the first Funkwhale launch, it is required to run this::
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docker-compose -f dev.yml run --rm front yarn run i18n-compile
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Then you can run everything with::
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docker-compose -f dev.yml up front api nginx celeryworker
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This will launch all services, and output the logs in your current terminal window.
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If you prefer to launch them in the background instead, use the ``-d`` flag, and access the logs when you need it via ``docker-compose -f dev.yml logs --tail=50 --follow``.
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Once everything is up, you can access the various funkwhale's components:
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- The Vue webapp, on http://localhost:8000
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- The API, on http://localhost:8000/api/v1/
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- The django admin, on http://localhost:800/api/admin/
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Stopping everything
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Once you're down with your work, you can stop running containers, if any, with::
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docker-compose -f dev.yml stop
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Removing everything
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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If you want to wipe your development environment completely (e.g. if you want to start over from scratch), just run::
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docker-compose -f dev.yml down -v
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This will wipe your containers and data, so please be careful before running it.
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You can keep your data by removing the ``-v`` flag.
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Working with federation locally
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-------------------------------
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This is not needed unless you need to work on federation-related features.
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To achieve that, you'll need:
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1. to update your dns resolver to resolve all your .dev hostnames locally
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2. a reverse proxy (such as traefik) to catch those .dev requests and
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and with https certificate
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3. two instances (or more) running locally, following the regular dev setup
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Resolve .dev names locally
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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If you use dnsmasq, this is as simple as doing::
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echo "address=/test/172.17.0.1" | sudo tee /etc/dnsmasq.d/test.conf
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sudo systemctl restart dnsmasq
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If you use NetworkManager with dnsmasq integration, use this instead::
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echo "address=/test/172.17.0.1" | sudo tee /etc/NetworkManager/dnsmasq.d/test.conf
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sudo systemctl restart NetworkManager
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Add wildcard certificate to the trusted certificates
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Simply copy bundled certificates::
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sudo cp docker/ssl/test.crt /usr/local/share/ca-certificates/
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sudo update-ca-certificates
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This certificate is a wildcard for ``*.funkwhale.test``
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Run a reverse proxy for your instances
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Launch everything
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Launch the traefik proxy::
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docker-compose -f docker/traefik.yml up -d
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Then, in separate terminals, you can setup as many different instances as you
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need::
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export COMPOSE_PROJECT_NAME=node2
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export VUE_PORT=1234 # this has to be unique for each instance
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docker-compose -f dev.yml run --rm api python manage.py migrate
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docker-compose -f dev.yml run --rm api python manage.py createsuperuser
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docker-compose -f dev.yml up nginx api front nginx api celeryworker
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Note that by default, if you don't export the COMPOSE_PROJECT_NAME,
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we will default to node1 as the name of your instance.
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Assuming your project name is ``node1``, your server will be reachable
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at ``https://node1.funkwhale.test/``. Not that you'll have to trust
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the SSL Certificate as it's self signed.
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When working on federation with traefik, ensure you have this in your ``env``::
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# This will ensure we don't bind any port on the host, and thus enable
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# multiple instances of funkwhale to be spawned concurrently.
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VUE_PORT_BINDING=
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# This disable certificate verification
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EXTERNAL_REQUESTS_VERIFY_SSL=false
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# this ensure you don't have incorrect urls pointing to http resources
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FUNKWHALE_PROTOCOL=https
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# Disable host ports binding for the nginx container, as traefik is serving everything
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NGINX_PORTS_MAPPING=80
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Typical workflow for a contribution
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-----------------------------------
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0. Fork the project if you did not already or if you do not have access to the main repository
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1. Checkout the development branch and pull most recent changes: ``git checkout develop && git pull``
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2. If working on an issue, assign yourself to the issue. Otherwise, consider open an issue before starting to work on something, especially for new features.
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3. Create a dedicated branch for your work ``42-awesome-fix``. It is good practice to prefix your branch name with the ID of the issue you are solving.
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4. Work on your stuff
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5. Commit small, atomic changes to make it easier to review your contribution
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6. Add a changelog fragment to summarize your changes: ``echo "Implemented awesome stuff (#42)" > changes/changelog.d/42.feature``
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7. Push your branch
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8. Create your merge request
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9. Take a step back and enjoy, we're really grateful you did all of this and took the time to contribute!
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Changelog management
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--------------------
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To ensure we have extensive and well-structured changelog, any significant
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work such as closing an issue must include a changelog fragment. Small changes
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may include a changelog fragment as well but this is not mandatory. If you're not
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sure about what to do, do not panic, open your merge request normally and we'll
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figure everything during the review ;)
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Changelog fragments are text files that can contain one or multiple lines
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that describe the changes occurring in a bunch of commits. Those files reside
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in ``changes/changelog.d``.
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Content
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^^^^^^^
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A typical fragment looks like that:
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Fixed broken audio player on Chrome 42 for ogg files (#567)
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If the work fixes one or more issues, the issue number should be included at the
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end of the fragment (``(#567)`` is the issue number in the previous example).
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If your work is not related to a specific issue, use the merge request
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identifier instead, like this:
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Fixed a typo in landing page copy (!342)
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Naming
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^^^^^^
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Fragment files should respect the following naming pattern: ``changes/changelog.d/<name>.<category>``.
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Name can be anything describing your work, or simply the identifier of the issue number you are fixing.
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Category can be one of:
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- ``feature``: for new features
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- ``enhancement``: for enhancements on existing features
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- ``bugfix``: for bugfixes
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- ``doc``: for documentation
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- ``i18n``: for internationalization-related work
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- ``misc``: for anything else
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Shortcuts
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^^^^^^^^^
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Here is a shortcut you can use/adapt to easily create new fragments from command-line:
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.. code-block:: bash
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issue="42"
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content="Fixed an overflowing issue on small resolutions (#$issue)"
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category="bugfix"
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echo $content > changes/changelog.d/$issue.$category
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You can of course create fragments by hand in your text editor, or from Gitlab's
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interface as well.
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Internationalization
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--------------------
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We're using https://github.com/Polyconseil/vue-gettext to manage i18n in the project.
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When working on the front-end, any end-user string should be marked as a translatable string,
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with the proper context, as described below.
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Translations in HTML
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Translations in HTML use the ``<translate>`` tag::
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<template>
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<div>
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<h1><translate translate-context="Content/Profile/Header">User profile</translate></h1>
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<p>
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<translate
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translate-context="Content/Profile/Paragraph"
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:translate-params="{username: 'alice'}">
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You are logged in as %{ username }
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</translate>
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</p>
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<p>
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<translate
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translate-context="Content/Profile/Paragraph"
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translate-plural="You have %{ count } new messages, that's a lot!"
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:translate-n="unreadMessagesCount"
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:translate-params="{count: unreadMessagesCount}">
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You have 1 new message
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</translate>
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</p>
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</div>
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</template>
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Anything between the `<translate>` and `</translate>` delimiters will be considered as a translatable string.
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You can use variables in the translated string via the ``:translate-params="{var: 'value'}"`` directive, and reference them like this:
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``val value is %{ value }``.
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For pluralization, you need to use ``translate-params`` in conjunction with ``translate-plural`` and ``translate-n``:
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- ``translate-params`` should contain the variable you're using for pluralization (which is usually shown to the user)
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- ``translate-n`` should match the same variable
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- The ``<translate>`` delimiters contain the non-pluralized version of your string
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- The ``translate-plural`` directive contains the pluralized version of your string
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Translations in javascript
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Translations in javascript work by calling the ``this.$*gettext`` functions::
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export default {
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computed: {
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strings () {
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let tracksCount = 42
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let playButton = this.$pgettext('Sidebar/Player/Button/Verb, Short', 'Play')
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let loginMessage = this.$pgettext('*/Login/Message', 'Welcome back %{ username }')
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let addedMessage = this.$npgettext('*/Player/Message', 'One track was queued', '%{ count } tracks were queued', tracksCount)
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console.log(this.$gettextInterpolate(addedMessage, {count: tracksCount}))
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console.log(this.$gettextInterpolate(loginMessage, {username: 'alice'}))
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}
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}
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}
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The first argument of the ``$pgettext`` and ``$npgettext`` functions is the string context.
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Contextualization
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Translation contexts provided via the ``translate-context`` directive and the ``$pgettext`` and ``$npgettext`` are never shown to end users
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but visible by Funkwhale translators. They help translators where and how the strings are used,
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especially with short or ambiguous strings, like ``May``, which can refer a month or a verb.
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While we could in theory use free form context, like ``This string is inside a button, in the main page, and is a call to action``,
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Funkwhale use a hierarchical structure to write contexts and keep them short and consistents accross the app. The previous context,
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rewritten correctly would be: ``Content/Home/Button/Call to action``.
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This hierarchical structure is made of several parts:
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- The location part, which is required and refers to the big blocks found in Funkwhale UI where the translated string is displayed:
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- ``Content``
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- ``Footer``
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- ``Head``
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- ``Menu``
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- ``Popup``
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- ``Sidebar``
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- ``*`` for strings that are not tied to a specific location
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- The feature part, which is required, and refers to the feature associated with the translated string:
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- ``About``
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- ``Admin``
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- ``Album``
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- ``Artist``
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- ``Embed``
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- ``Home``
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- ``Login``
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- ``Library``
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- ``Moderation``
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- ``Player``
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- ``Playlist``
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- ``Profile``
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- ``Favorites``
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- ``Notifications``
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- ``Radio``
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- ``Search``
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- ``Settings``
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- ``Signup``
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- ``Track``
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- ``Queue``
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- ``*`` for strings that are not tied to a specific feature
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- The component part, which is required and refers to the type of element that contain the string:
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- ``Button``
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- ``Card``
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- ``Checkbox``
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- ``Dropdown``
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- ``Error message``
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- ``Form``
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- ``Header``
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- ``Help text``
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- ``Hidden text``
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- ``Icon``
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- ``Input``
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- ``Image``
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- ``Label``
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- ``Link``
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- ``List item``
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- ``Menu``
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- ``Message``
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- ``Paragraph``
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- ``Placeholder``
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- ``Tab``
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- ``Table``
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- ``Title``
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- ``Tooltip``
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- ``*`` for strings that are not tied to a specific component
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The detail part, which is optional and refers to the contents of the string itself, such as:
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- ``Adjective``
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- ``Call to action``
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- ``Noun``
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- ``Short``
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- ``Unit``
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- ``Verb``
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Here are a few examples of valid context hierarchies:
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- ``Sidebar/Player/Button``
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- ``Content/Home/Button/Call to action``
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- ``Footer/*/Help text``
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- ``*/*/*/Verb, Short``
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- ``Popup/Playlist/Button``
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- ``Content/Admin/Table.Label/Short, Noun (Value is a date)``
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It's possible to nest multiple component parts to reach a higher level of detail. The component parts are then separated by a dot:
|
|
|
|
- ``Sidebar/Queue/Tab.Title``
|
|
- ``Content/*/Button.Title``
|
|
- ``Content/*/Table.Header``
|
|
- ``Footer/*/List item.Link``
|
|
- ``Content/*/Form.Help text``
|
|
|
|
Collecting translatable strings
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
If you want to ensure your translatable strings are correctly marked for translation,
|
|
you can try to extract them.
|
|
|
|
Extraction is done by calling ``yarn run i18n-extract``, which
|
|
will pull all the strings from source files and put them in a PO files.
|
|
|
|
You can then inspect the PO files to ensure everything is fine (but don't commit them, it's not needed).
|
|
|
|
Contributing to the API
|
|
-----------------------
|
|
|
|
Project structure
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
.. code-block:: shell
|
|
|
|
tree api -L 2 -d
|
|
api
|
|
├── config # configuration directory (settings, urls, wsgi server)
|
|
│ └── settings # Django settings files
|
|
├── funkwhale_api # project directory, all funkwhale logic is here
|
|
├── requirements # python requirements files
|
|
└── tests # test files, matches the structure of the funkwhale_api directory
|
|
|
|
.. note::
|
|
|
|
Unless trivial, API contributions must include unittests to ensure
|
|
your fix or feature is working as expected and won't break in the future
|
|
|
|
Running tests
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
To run the pytest test suite, use the following command::
|
|
|
|
docker-compose -f dev.yml run --rm api pytest
|
|
|
|
This is regular pytest, so you can use any arguments/options that pytest usually accept::
|
|
|
|
# get some help
|
|
docker-compose -f dev.yml run --rm api pytest -h
|
|
# Stop on first failure
|
|
docker-compose -f dev.yml run --rm api pytest -x
|
|
# Run a specific test file
|
|
docker-compose -f dev.yml run --rm api pytest tests/music/test_models.py
|
|
|
|
Writing tests
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
Although teaching you how to write unit tests is outside of the scope of this
|
|
document, you'll find below a collection of tips, snippets and resources
|
|
you can use if you want to learn on that subject.
|
|
|
|
Useful links:
|
|
|
|
- `A quick introduction to unit test writing with pytest <https://semaphoreci.com/community/tutorials/testing-python-applications-with-pytest>`_
|
|
- `A complete guide to Test-Driven Development (although not using Pytest) <https://www.obeythetestinggoat.com/>`_
|
|
- `pytest <https://docs.pytest.org/en/latest/>`_: documentation of our testing engine and runner
|
|
- `pytest-mock <https://pypi.org/project/pytest-mock/>`_: project page of our mocking engine
|
|
- `factory-boy <http://factoryboy.readthedocs.io/>`_: documentation of factory-boy, which we use to easily generate fake objects and data
|
|
|
|
Recommendations:
|
|
|
|
- Test files must target a module and mimic ``funkwhale_api`` directory structure: if you're writing tests for ``funkwhale_api/myapp/views.py``, you should put thoses tests in ``tests/myapp/test_views.py``
|
|
- Tests should be small and test one thing. If you need to test multiple things, write multiple tests.
|
|
|
|
We provide a lot of utils and fixtures to make the process of writing tests as
|
|
painless as possible. You'll find some usage examples below.
|
|
|
|
Use factories to create arbitrary objects:
|
|
|
|
.. code-block:: python
|
|
|
|
# funkwhale_api/myapp/users.py
|
|
|
|
def downgrade_user(user):
|
|
"""
|
|
A simple function that remove superuser status from users
|
|
and return True if user was actually downgraded
|
|
"""
|
|
downgraded = user.is_superuser
|
|
user.is_superuser = False
|
|
user.save()
|
|
return downgraded
|
|
|
|
# tests/myapp/test_users.py
|
|
from funkwhale_api.myapp import users
|
|
|
|
def test_downgrade_superuser(factories):
|
|
user = factories['users.User'](is_superuser=True)
|
|
downgraded = users.downgrade_user(user)
|
|
|
|
assert downgraded is True
|
|
assert user.is_superuser is False
|
|
|
|
def test_downgrade_normal_user_does_nothing(factories):
|
|
user = factories['users.User'](is_superuser=False)
|
|
downgraded = something.downgrade_user(user)
|
|
|
|
assert downgraded is False
|
|
assert user.is_superuser is False
|
|
|
|
.. note::
|
|
|
|
We offer factories for almost if not all models. Factories are located
|
|
in a ``factories.py`` file inside each app.
|
|
|
|
Mocking: mocking is the process of faking some logic in our code. This is
|
|
useful when testing components that depend on each other:
|
|
|
|
.. code-block:: python
|
|
|
|
# funkwhale_api/myapp/notifications.py
|
|
|
|
def notify(email, message):
|
|
"""
|
|
A function that sends an email to the given recipient
|
|
with the given message
|
|
"""
|
|
|
|
# our email sending logic here
|
|
# ...
|
|
|
|
# funkwhale_api/myapp/users.py
|
|
from . import notifications
|
|
|
|
def downgrade_user(user):
|
|
"""
|
|
A simple function that remove superuser status from users
|
|
and return True if user was actually downgraded
|
|
"""
|
|
downgraded = user.is_superuser
|
|
user.is_superuser = False
|
|
user.save()
|
|
if downgraded:
|
|
notifications.notify(user.email, 'You have been downgraded!')
|
|
return downgraded
|
|
|
|
# tests/myapp/test_users.py
|
|
def test_downgrade_superuser_sends_email(factories, mocker):
|
|
"""
|
|
Your downgrade logic is already tested, however, we want to ensure
|
|
an email is sent when user is downgraded, but we don't have any email
|
|
server available in our testing environment. Thus, we need to mock
|
|
the email sending process.
|
|
"""
|
|
mocked_notify = mocker.patch('funkwhale_api.myapp.notifications.notify')
|
|
user = factories['users.User'](is_superuser=True)
|
|
users.downgrade_user(user)
|
|
|
|
# here, we ensure our notify function was called with proper arguments
|
|
mocked_notify.assert_called_once_with(user.email, 'You have been downgraded')
|
|
|
|
|
|
def test_downgrade_not_superuser_skips_email(factories, mocker):
|
|
mocked_notify = mocker.patch('funkwhale_api.myapp.notifications.notify')
|
|
user = factories['users.User'](is_superuser=True)
|
|
users.downgrade_user(user)
|
|
|
|
# here, we ensure no email was sent
|
|
mocked_notify.assert_not_called()
|
|
|
|
Views: you can find some readable views tests in file: ``api/tests/users/test_views.py``
|
|
|
|
.. note::
|
|
|
|
A complete list of available-fixtures is available by running
|
|
``docker-compose -f dev.yml run --rm api pytest --fixtures``
|
|
|
|
|
|
Contributing to the front-end
|
|
-----------------------------
|
|
|
|
Styles and themes
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
Our UI framework is Fomantic UI (https://fomantic-ui.com/), and Funkwhale's custom styles are written in SCSS. All the styles are configured in ``front/src/styles/_main.scss``,
|
|
including imporing of Fomantic UI styles and components.
|
|
|
|
We're applying several changes on top of the Fomantic CSS files, before they are imported:
|
|
|
|
1. Many hardcoded color values are replaced by CSS vars: e.g ``color: orange`` is replaced by ``color: var(--vibrant-color)``. This makes theming way easier.
|
|
2. Unused components variations and icons are stripped from the source files, in order to reduce the final size of our CSS files
|
|
|
|
This changes are applied automatically when running ``yarn install``, through a ``postinstall`` hook. Internally, ``front/scripts/fix-fomantic-css.py`` is called
|
|
and handle both kind of modifications. Please refer to this script if you need to use new icons to the project, or restore some components variations that
|
|
were stripped in order to use them.
|
|
|
|
Running tests
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
To run the front-end test suite, use the following command::
|
|
|
|
docker-compose -f dev.yml run --rm front yarn test:unit
|
|
|
|
We also support a "watch and test" mode were we continually relaunch
|
|
tests when changes are recorded on the file system::
|
|
|
|
docker-compose -f dev.yml run --rm front yarn test:unit -w
|
|
|
|
The latter is especially useful when you are debugging failing tests.
|
|
|
|
.. note::
|
|
|
|
The front-end test suite coverage is still pretty low
|
|
|
|
|
|
Making a release
|
|
----------------
|
|
|
|
To make a new 3.4 release::
|
|
|
|
# setup
|
|
export NEXT_RELEASE=3.4 # replace with the next release number
|
|
export PREVIOUS_RELEASE=3.3 # replace with the previous release number
|
|
|
|
# ensure you have an up-to-date repo
|
|
git checkout develop # use master if you're doing a hotfix release
|
|
git pull
|
|
|
|
# compile changelog
|
|
towncrier --version $NEXT_RELEASE --yes
|
|
|
|
# polish changelog
|
|
# - update the date
|
|
# - look for typos
|
|
# - add list of contributors via `python3 scripts/get-contributions-stats.py develop $PREVIOUS_RELEASE`
|
|
nano CHANGELOG
|
|
|
|
# Set the `__version__` variable to $NEXT_RELEASE
|
|
nano api/funkwhale_api/__init__.py
|
|
|
|
# commit
|
|
git add .
|
|
git commit -m "Version bump and changelog for $NEXT_RELEASE"
|
|
|
|
# tag
|
|
git tag $NEXT_RELEASE
|
|
|
|
# publish
|
|
git push --tags && git push
|
|
|
|
# if you're doing a hotfix release from master
|
|
git checkout develop && git merge master && git push
|
|
|
|
# if you're doing a non-hotfix release, and a real release (not a real release) from develop
|
|
git checkout master && git merge develop && git push
|
|
|
|
Then, visit https://dev.funkwhale.audio/funkwhale/funkwhale/-/tags, copy-paste the changelog on the corresponding
|
|
tag, and announce the good news ;)
|