Developer guidelines
====================
If you want to work with the non-minified JavaScript and CSS files you'll soon
notice that there are references to a missing *node_modules* directory.
Please follow the instructions below to create these directories and fetch Converse's
3rd-party dependencies.
.. note::
Windows environment: We recommend installing the required tools using `Chocolatey `_
You will need Node.js (nodejs.install), Git (git.install) and optionally to build using Makefile, GNU Make (make)
If you have trouble setting up a development environment on Windows,
please read `this post `_
in the mailing list.:
Installing the development and front-end dependencies
-----------------------------------------------------
We use development tools which depend on Node.js and npm (the Node package manager).
If you don't have Node.js installed, you can download and install the latest
version `here `_.
Also make sure you have ``Git`` installed. `Details `_.
.. note::
Windows users should use Chocolatey as recommended above.
.. note::
Debian & Ubuntu users : apt-get install git npm nodejs-legacy
Once you have *Node.js* and *git* installed, run the following command inside the Converse.js
directory:
::
make dev
On Windows you need to specify Makefile.win to be used by running: ::
make -f Makefile.win dev
Or alternatively, if you don't have GNU Make:
::
npm install
This will install the Node.js development tools and Converse.js's front-end dependencies.
The front-end dependencies are those javascript files on which
Converse.js directly depends and which will be loaded in the browser.
To see the dependencies, take a look at whats under the *devDependencies* key in
`package.json `_.
.. note::
After running ```make dev```, you should now have a new *node_modules* directory
which contains all the external dependencies of Converse.js.
If these directory does NOT exist, something must have gone wrong.
Double-check the output of ```make dev``` to see if there are any errors
listed. For support, you can write to the mailing list: conversejs@librelist.com
Loading converse.js and its dependencies
----------------------------------------
With AMD and require.js (recommended)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Converse.js uses `require.js `_ to asynchronously load dependencies.
If you want to develop or customize converse.js, you'll want to load the
non-minified javascript files.
Add the following two lines to the ** section of your webpage:
.. code-block:: html
require.js will then let the main.js file be parsed (because of the *data-main*
attribute on the *script* tag), which will in turn cause converse.js to be
parsed.
Without AMD and require.js
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Converse.js can also be used without require.js. If you for some reason prefer
to use it this way, please refer to
`non_amd.html `_
for an example of how and in what order all the JavaScript files that converse.js
depends on need to be loaded.
Brief description of converse.js's dependencies
-----------------------------------------------
Converse.js relies on the following dependencies:
* `moment.js `_ provides a better API for handling dates and times.
* `Strophe.js `_ maintains the XMPP session, is used to
build XMPP stanzas, to send them, and to register handlers for received stanzas.
* `lodash `_ provides very useful utility functions.
* `Backbone `_ is used to model the data as Models and
Collections and to create Views that render the UI.
* `backbone.overview `_ provides
Overviews, which are to Views as Backbone Collections are to Models.
* `pluggable.js `_ is the plugin
architecture for Converse.js. It registers and initializes plugins and
allows existing attributes, functions and objects on converse.js to be
overridden inside plugins.
When submitting a pull request
------------------------------
Please follow the usual github workflow. Create your own local fork of this repository,
make your changes and then submit a pull request.
Follow the programming style guide
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Please read the `style guide `_ and make sure that your code follows it.
Add tests for your bugfix or feature
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Add a test for any bug fixed or feature added. We use Jasmine
for testing.
Take a look at `tests.html `_
and the `spec files `_
to see how tests are implemented.
Check that the tests pass
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Check that all tests complete sucessfully.
Run ``make check`` in your terminal or open `tests.html `_
in your browser.