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asyncapi/website

AsyncAPI Banner and Logo



Overview

This repository contains the sources of AsyncAPI website:

Requirements

Use the following tools to set up the project:

Run locally

  1. Fork the repository by clicking on Fork option on top right of the main repository.

  2. Open Command Prompt on your local computer.

  3. Clone the forked repository by adding your own GitHub username in place of <username>. For multiple contributions it is recommended to have proper configuration of forked repo.

    git clone https://github.com/<username>/website/
  1. Navigate to the website directory.
    cd website
  1. Install all website dependencies.
    npm install
  1. Run the website locally.
    npm run dev
  1. Access the live development server at localhost:3000.

Compose new blog post

To bootstrap a new post, run this command:

    npm run write:blog

Follow the interactive prompt to generate a post with pre-filled front matter.

Spin up Gitpod codespace

In order to prepare and spin up a Gitpod dev environment for our project, we configured our workspace through a .gitpod.yml file.

To spin up a Gitpod codespace, go to http://gitpod.io/#https://github.com/asyncapi/website.

Build

To build a production-ready website, run the following command:

npm run build

Generated files of the website go to the .next folder.

Run locally using Docker

Prerequisites:

After cloning repository to your local, perform the following steps from the root of the repository.

Steps:

  1. Build the Docker image:
    docker build -t asyncapi-website .`
  2. Start the container:
    docker run --rm -it -v "$PWD":/async -p 3000:3000 asyncapi-website

Now you're running AsyncAPI website in a development mode. Container is mapped with your local copy of the website. Whenever you make changes to the code, the website will refresh and changes visible in localhost:3000.

Lint the code

To lint the code, run the following command:

npm run lint

To fix the linting issues, run the following command:

npm run lint:fix

To lint the mdx files, run the following command:

npm run lint:mdx

Start the production server

To build and run a production-ready website, run the following command:

npm run build && npm run start

Generated files of the website go in the .next folder.

Start the netlify production server

Start a local development server for the build tool using the configuration and environment variables set for local development with the Netlify CLI:

netlify dev

To start the server using the configuration and environment variables set for dev or all deploy contexts, run the following command:

netlify dev --context production

Updating information about project finance

AsyncAPI Financial Summary page aims to provide transparency and clarity regarding the organization's financial activities. It serves as a platform to showcase how donations are accepted, different sponsorship options, and how the generated funds are utilized.

How to update information

  • YAML files must be stored in the config/finance directory.

  • Create separate folders for each year under config/finance, such as config/finance/2023. Inside each year's folder, include two YAML files: Expenses.yml and ExpensesLink.yml.

  • In Expenses.yml, record expenses for each month, specifying the Category and Amount.

  • In ExpensesLink.yml, provide discussion links related to expense categories.

  • When a new year begins, create a corresponding folder for that year under config/finance and place the YAML files inside the folder for that specific year. For example, create a folder named config/finance/2024 for the year 2024 and config/finance/2025 for the year 2025. Place the YAML file for each respective year inside its designated folder.

  • Modify the years within the scripts/finance/index.js , lib/getUniqueCategories.js and components/FinancialSummary/BarChartComponent.js to handle data for different years effectively.

Case studies

Overview

A case study is a special document that any end-user company can provide. An end-user company is a company that uses AsyncAPI to solve technical challenges. A case study is not a document where a vendor company can describe how they build their commercial AsyncAPI-based product. On the other hand, it is completely fine if a case study of some end-user mentions some commercial tools that helped them to work with AsyncAPI or event-driven architecture. An example of such a case can be a case study from an end-user where at some point, Confluent Schema Registry is mentioned in an explanation about schemas and runtime message validation.

How to add a case study

A case study is documented in the form of a YAML file. Anyone can open a pull request with a new case study.

  • YAML file must be located in config/casestudies.
  • To make it easier for you to create such a YAML file you can use:
  • All additional files for the case study, like complete AsyncAPI document examples, should be located in the public/resources/casestudies directory.
  • Company logo and other images that will be rendered in the website should be located in public/img/casestudies.

Once you collect all information and create a case study, open a pull request. It must be authored or at least approved by a representative of the given company. Such a representative is probably already a contact person mentioned in the case study.

A case study becomes publicly available right after merging and rebuilding the website.

JSON Schema definitions

All AsyncAPI JSON Schema definition files are being served within the /definitions/<file> path. The content is being served from GH, in particular from https://github.com/asyncapi/spec-json-schemas/tree/master/schemas. This is possible thanks to the following:

  1. A Netlify Rewrite rule located in the netlify.toml file, which acts as proxy for all requests to the /definitions/<file> path, serving the content from GH without having an HTTP redirect.
  2. A Netlify Edge Function that modifies the Content-Type header of the rewrite response to become application/schema+json. This lets tooling, such as Hyperjump, to fetch the schemas directly from their URL.
    Please find a flowchart explaining the flow this edge function should accomplish:
flowchart TD
  Request(Request) -->schema-related{Is it requesting Schemas?}
  schema-related -->|No| req_no_schemas[Let the original request go through]
  req_no_schemas --> Response(Response)
  schema-related -->|Yes| req_schemas[Fetch from GitHub]
  req_schemas-->req_json{Was requesting a .json file?}
  
  req_json -->|No| Response(Response)
  req_json -->|Yes| response_status{Response Status?}
  
  response_status -->|2xx| response_ok[OK]
  response_status -->|304| response_cached[Not Modified]
  response_status -->|Any other| response_ko

  response_ok --> set_headers[Set Response Content-Type header to application/schema+json]
  set_headers --> send_metric_success[Send success metric]
  response_cached -- cached:true --> send_metric_success
  response_ko --> send_metric_error[Send error metric]

  send_metric_success -- file served from raw GH --> Response(Response)
  send_metric_error --the errored response --> Response(Response)

Project structure

This repository has the following structure:

  β”œβ”€β”€ .github                                  # Definitions of GitHub workflows, pull request and issue templates
  β”œβ”€β”€ assets                                   # Various assets
  |    β”œβ”€β”€ docs                                # Documentation assets
  |        | fragments                         # Docuentations for CLI installation and contribution.
  β”œβ”€β”€ components                               # Various generic components such as "Button", "Figure", etc.
  β”œβ”€β”€ config                                   # Transformed static data to display on the pages such as blog posts etc.
  β”œβ”€β”€ context                                  # Various React's contexts used in website
  β”œβ”€β”€ locales                                  # Translations for the website
  β”œβ”€β”€ markdown                                 # Markdown files for the website
       β”œβ”€β”€ about                               # Markdown files for the /about page
       β”œβ”€β”€ blog                                # Markdown files for the blog posts
       β”œβ”€β”€ docs                                # Markdown files for the /docs/* pages
  β”œβ”€β”€ netlify                                  # Contains Netlify serverless functions to run on Netlify
  β”œβ”€β”€ pages                                    # Website's pages source. It includes raw markdown files and React page templates.
  β”‚    β”œβ”€β”€ about                               # Raw blog for /about page
  β”‚    β”œβ”€β”€ blog                                # Blog posts
  β”‚    β”œβ”€β”€ docs                                # Blog for /docs/* pages
  β”‚    └── tools                               # Various pages to describe tools
  β”œβ”€β”€ public                                   # Data for site metadata and static blog such as images
  β”œβ”€β”€ scripts                                  # Scripts used in the build and dev processes
  β”œβ”€β”€ styles                                   # Various CSS files
  β”œβ”€β”€ templates                                # Various template markdown files
  β”œβ”€β”€ types                                    #  Various typeScript types used in the website
  β”œβ”€β”€ utils                                    # Various JS code for preparing static data to render in pages
  β”œβ”€β”€ next.config.mjs                          # Next.js configuration file
  β”œβ”€β”€ README.md                                # Project's README file
  β”œβ”€β”€ tailwind.config.js                       # TailwindCSS configuration file
  └── tsconfig.json                            # TypeScript configuration file

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AsyncAPI Contributors ✨

Thanks goes to these wonderful people (emoji key):

Fran MΓ©ndez
Fran MΓ©ndez

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Lukasz Gornicki
Lukasz Gornicki

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Maciej UrbaΕ„czyk
Maciej UrbaΕ„czyk

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Alejandra Quetzalli

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Aayush Kumar Sahu
Aayush Kumar Sahu

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David Boyne
David Boyne

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Jesse Menning
Jesse Menning

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Dimitrios Dedoussis

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Jonas Lagoni

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Sergio Moya

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Bodo Graumann

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Damilola Randolph

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Barbanio GonzΓ‘lez

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Hargun Kaur
Hargun Kaur

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Chris Eich
Chris Eich

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Simone Fumagalli
Simone Fumagalli

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Missy Turco
Missy Turco

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Ritik Rawal

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Akshat Nema
Akshat Nema

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David Pereira
David Pereira

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Debajyoti Halder
Debajyoti Halder

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Juan A.
Juan A.

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Muhammad Rafly Andrianza

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Harish

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Paul Goldsmith

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Tabah Baridule

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Joseph Mawa

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Viacheslav Turovskyi

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Helen Kosova
Helen Kosova

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V Thulisile Sibanda

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Manav Desai

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Mohd Toukir Khan

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Anisat Akinbani

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sambhavgupta0705
sambhavgupta0705

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Ankit Chaudhary
Ankit Chaudhary

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samz
samz

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Bhaswati Roy
Bhaswati Roy

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AISHAT MUIBUDEEN
AISHAT MUIBUDEEN

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Nawed Ali

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Olaleye Blessing

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niranjan-kurhade
niranjan-kurhade

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Benjamin Rukundo

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tthijm
tthijm

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Cynthia Peter

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Florence Njeri

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Ansh Goyal

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Sumant.xD

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Shriansh Agarwal
Shriansh Agarwal

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Aadrika Bhargava

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Vishvamsinh Vaghela

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Animesh Kumar

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Akshay Sharma
Akshay Sharma

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Yuvraj Singh Sisodiya
Yuvraj Singh Sisodiya

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Neutron
Neutron

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Sagar Kori
Sagar Kori

πŸ“–

This project follows the all-contributors specification. Contributions of any kind welcome!