mirror of
https://github.com/graphql-hive/console
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135 lines
6.3 KiB
Markdown
135 lines
6.3 KiB
Markdown
# Development
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## Prerequisites
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Developing Hive locally requires you to have the following software installed locally:
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- Node.js 16 LTS (or `nvm` or `fnm`)
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- yarn v1
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- docker
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- docker-compose
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## Setup Instructions
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- Clone the repository locally
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- Make sure to install the recommended VSCode extensions (defined in `.vscode/extensions.json`)
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- In the root of the repo, run `nvm use` to use the same version of node as mentioned
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- Run `yarn` at the root to install all the dependencies and run the hooks
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- Run `yarn setup` to create and apply migrations on the PostgreSQL database
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- Run `yarn generate` to generate the typings from the graphql files (use `yarn graphql:generate` if you only need to run GraphQL Codegen)
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- Run `yarn build` to build all services
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- Click on `Start Hive` in the bottom bar of VSCode
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- If you are not added to the list of guest users, request access from The Guild maintainers
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- Alternatively, [configure hive to use your own Auth0 Application](#setting-up-auth0-app-for-developing)
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- Open the UI (`http://localhost:3000` by default) and Sign in with any of the identity provider
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- Once this is done, you should be able to login and use the project
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- Once you generate the token against your organization/personal account in hive, the same can be added locally to `hive.json` within `packages/libraries/cli` which can be used to interact via the hive cli with the registry
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## Development Seed
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We have a script to feed your local instance of Hive.
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1. Use `Start Hive` to run your local Hive instance
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2. Make sure `usage` and `usage-ingestor` are running as well (with `yarn dev`)
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3. Open Hive app, create a project and a target, then create a token
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4. Run the seed script: `TOKEN="MY_TOKEN_HERE" yarn seed`
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5. This should report a dummy schema and some dummy usage data to your local instance of Hive, allowing you to test features e2e
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> Note: You can set `STAGING=1` in order to target staging env and seed a target there.
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> To send more operations and test heavy load on Hive instance, you can also set `OPERATIONS` (amount of operations in each interval round, default is `1`) and `INTERVAL` (frequency of sending operations, default: `1000`ms). For example, using `INTERVAL=1000 OPERATIONS=1000` will send 1000 requests per second.
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## Publish your first schema (manually)
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1. Start Hive locally
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2. Create a project and a target
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3. Create a token from that target
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4. Go to `packages/libraries/cli` and run `yarn build`
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5. Inside `packages/libraries/cli`, run: `yarn start schema:publish --token "YOUR_TOKEN_HERE" --registry "http://localhost:4000/graphql" examples/single.graphql`
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### Setting up Slack App for developing
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1. [Download](https://loophole.cloud/download) Loophole CLI (same as ngrok but supports non-random urls)
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2. Log in to Loophole `$ loophole account login`
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3. Start the proxy by running `$ loophole http 3000 --hostname hive-<your-name>` (@kamilkisiela I use `hive-kamil`). It creates `https://hive-<your-name>.loophole.site` endpoint.
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4. Message @kamilkisiela and send him the url (He will update the list of accepted redirect urls in both Auth0 and Slack App).
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5. Update `APP_BASE_URL` and `AUTH0_BASE_URL` in [`packages/web/app/.env`](./packages/web/app/.env)
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6. Run `packages/web/app` and open `https://hive-<your-name>.loophole.site`.
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> We have a special Slack channel called `#hive-tests` to not spam people :)
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### Setting up GitHub App for developing
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1. Follow the steps above for Slack App
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2. Update `Setup URL` in [GraphQL Hive Development](https://github.com/organizations/the-guild-org/settings/apps/graphql-hive-development) app and set it to `https://hive-<your-name>.loophole.site/api/github/setup-callback`
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### Setting up Auth0 App for developing
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> **Note**: GraphQL Hive will soon be migrating its User Auth management to
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> [Super Tokens](https://supertokens.com/), which should also significantly
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> simplify the local development experience.
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You may want to use your own Auth0 app when running hive locally.
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1. Create your own Auth0 application
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1. If you haven't already, create an account on [manage.auth0.com](https://manage.auth0.com)
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2. Create a new application with the following settings:
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1. Type: `Regular Web Application`
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2. Allowed Callback URLs: `http://localhost:3000/api/callback`
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3. Allowed Logout URLs: `http://localhost:3000/`
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3. Create two Auth0 users
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1. This can be done from the "User Management" page
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- [`https://manage.auth0.com/dashboard/<REGION>/<DOMAIN>/users`](https://manage.auth0.com/dashboard/us/dev-azj17nyp/users)
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4. Create a new "Rule" in your Auth0 Account
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1. This can be done from the "Auth Pipeline -> Rules" section on the left navigation bar.
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- [`https://manage.auth0.com/dashboard/<REGION>/<DOMAIN>/rules`](https://manage.auth0.com/dashboard/us/dev-azj17nyp/rules)
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2. Enter the following code:
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```javascript
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function (user, context, callback) {
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var namespace = 'https://graphql-hive.com';
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context.accessToken[namespace + '/metadata'] = user.user_metadata;
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context.idToken[namespace + '/metadata'] = user.user_metadata;
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context.accessToken[namespace + '/userinfo'] = {
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user_id: user.user_id,
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email: user.email,
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username: user.username,
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nickname: user.nickname
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};
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return callback(null, user, context);
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}
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```
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2. Update the `.env` secrets used by your local hive instance:
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- The `AUTH0_DOMAIN`, `AUTH0_CLIENT_ID`, and `AUTH0_CLIENT_SECRET` values
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are found when viewing your new application on Auth0.
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```bash
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# packages/services/server/.env
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# Can be any value
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AUTH0_SECRET=super-secret-value
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AUTH0_DOMAIN=
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AUTH0_CLIENT_ID=
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AUTH0_CLIENT_SECRET=
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AUTH0_SCOPE="openid profile offline_access"
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AUTH0_AUDIENCE=https://${AUTH0_DOMAIN}/api/v2/
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AUTH0_CONNECTION=Username-Password-Authentication
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```
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```bash
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# packages/web/app/.env
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# Must be the same value as in 'packages/services/server/.env'
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AUTH0_SECRET=super-secret-value
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AUTH0_DOMAIN=
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AUTH0_CLIENT_ID=
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AUTH0_CLIENT_SECRET=
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AUTH0_SCOPE="openid profile offline_access"
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AUTH0_AUDIENCE=https://${AUTH0_DOMAIN}/api/v2/
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AUTH0_BASE_URL=http://localhost:3000
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AUTH0_ISSUER_BASE_URL=https://${AUTH0_DOMAIN}
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```
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3. Click on Start Hive in the bottom bar of VSCode
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4. Open the UI (`http://localhost:3000` by default) and Sign in with one of the users you created on the Auth0 management console
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