Skip to content

Default template for server-base modules

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

server-state/template-module

Repository files navigation

template-module

Default template for server-base modules

This output generates a straight base to provide other applications useful information like Server State example Web Client.

Checklist for using this template

  • Change name and description in this README
  • Change the package name in the package.json
  • Change the repository, issue and other urls as well as the author field in the package.json, as needed
  • Familiarize yourself with the specifications for modules, which can be found in https://specs.server-state.tech/.

Afterwards

  • Write source code for your module in the src module
  • Adjust the existing test in tests/001-basic.test.js so that your SMF gets passed the necessery parameters and has the necessary mocks to pass. Do not delete this test! It is vital that the data you return is JSON-serializable and therefore, this test is required.
  • Write tests for your code (until you reach 100 % coverage, this has to get trusted to get deployed to production servers) in the tests folder

Afterwards

  • Add all dependencies you have added as externals in the webpack.config.js
  • Run npm run lint (fix any errors that get shown)
  • Run npm run test (fix any errors that might occur)
  • Run npm run build (fix any errors that might occur)
  • Test by running node in the repo directory and requiring the module with require('.'). You can then test it interactively.
  • Publish as v0.0.9 to npm to ensure CI can publish in the future (use --access=public for scoped packages
  • Bump version number in package.json to 0.1.0, commit and push to GitHub
  • Add gh_token and npm_token to the GitHub repo secrets to allow CI publishing
  • Add a tag called v0.1.0 and push it to GitHub
  • Watch GitHub actions publish the new version for you 😉

For every new version

  • Add all dependencies you have added as externals in the webpack.config.js
  • Run npm run lint (fix any errors that get shown)
  • Run npm run test (fix any errors that might occur)
  • Run npm run build (fix any errors that might occur)
  • Test by running node in the repo directory and requiring the module with require('.'). You can then test it interactively.
  • Bump version number in package.json
  • Add a tag called v[package.json version number] and push it to GitHub
  • Watch GitHub actions publish the new version for you 😉

This official module belongs to the organization Server State.

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published