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Deathwish

This app allows users to create and manage their "Deathwishes".

A "Deathwish" is a request somebody can create that gets carried out after they pass away.

In theory a Deathwish could be anything:

  • A video messages for family members
  • Life insurance
  • A Digital Will
  • Holiday for family a loved one
  • Mortgage payment for the family home

The app allows the following use cases:

  • A user can view a list of available Deathwish templates (minimum of 2).
  • A user can add a Deathwish to their account.
  • A user can view their Deathwishes.
  • A user can edit the Deathwish.
  • A user can delete the Deathwish.

A Deathwish has the following attributes:

  • id
  • type
  • title
  • description
  • cost
  • recipients
  • createdAt (? do we need this? Sorting/filtering?)
  • updatedAt (? do we need this? Sorting/filtering?)

First Phase

The first phase will persist DeathWishes on the client, using Apollo. This will allow an easy migration to a GraphQL service

Second Phase

We will implement a GraphQL service that will persist the DeathWishes to some data store.

Hosting

A serverless environment could work well.

Front end

The front end could be a deployed a bundled static files.

Some concerns to note are:

  • CloudFront distribution rules, time to build and invalidate
  • CORS headers for the GraphQL service

Back end

The back end could be a deployed with serverless or docker as a standard Node.js application.

Some concerns to note are:

  • GraphQL query execution times should be low

Engineering

We use TypeScript for all of the source code. The app is unit tested with Jest and React Testing Library. We use Cypress for End to End testing.

Running and developing the app locally

If you wish to just see the app in action, run yarn start.

To get started with development, run yarn dev.

Both commands may take a little while when you run them first as they fetch and build their dependencies.

We're using a monorepo implemented with yarn workspaces to keep our client and server code together. This makes it easier to manage feature development and share dependencies.

There are two folders within packages:

  • deathwish-client for the React application
  • deathwish-server for the GraphQL server application.

We use docker to bring up the application with all of its dependencies.

Here are the available scripts at the root of the project:

Name Description
dev Starts the app in Cypress, ready for outside-in TDD. Starts the services first.
dev:up Installs dependencies and brings up the services
dev:down Stops the services
dev:uninstall Cleans up and removes the docker containers
start Stops any running services and brings up the services
test:all Runs the unit and End to End tests for the server and client. Starts the services first.
test Runs the unit and End to End tests for the server and client
cypress Launches the Cypress app
client Starts the client
server Starts the server

We have added common tasks to the root scripts, but we can still access the scripts within the client or server workspaces by using the yarn workspace command. For example, to generate new types for the client, we could run yarn workspace deathwish-client generate.

Here are the scripts available inside deathwish-server:

Name Description
dev Starts the dev server with live reloading
test Runs the unit tests
validate Checks the types, lints and runs the tests
build Builds the app for production to the dist folder.
lint Runs ESLint
start Starts the production app
prod Builds and starts the production app
type-check Checks the types
format Formats the code with prettier

Here are the scripts available inside deathwish-client:

Name Description
dev Starts the app in Cypress, ready for outside-in TDD
test Launches the unit test runner in interactive watch mode
validate Checks the types, lints and runs the tests
test:all Runs the unit and End to End tests
build Builds the app for production to the build folder.
cypress Launches the Cypress app
cypress:run Runs the End to End tests headlessly
lint Runs ESLint
start Starts the app in development mode
test:e2e Runs the End to End tests headlessly. It starts the app first.
test:unit Runs the unit tests.
test:once Runs all the tests once. It does not start the app first.