A declarative state and side effects management solution for popular JavaScript frameworks
The entire Cerebral codebase has been rewritten to encourage contributions. The code is cleaned up, commented and all code is in a "monorepo". That means you can run tests across projects and general management of the code is simplified a lot.
- Clone the monorepo:
git clone https://github.com/cerebral/cerebral.git
- In root:
npm install
The packages are located under packages
folder and there is no need to run npm install
for each package.
If you want to use Cerebral 2 directly from your cloned repo, you can create a symlinks for following
directories into the node_modules
directory of your app:
packages/node_modules/cerebral
packages/node_modules/function-tree
packages/node_modules/@cerebral
If your app and the cerebral monorepo are in the same folder you can do from inside your app directory:
$ ln -s ../../cerebral/packages/node_modules/cerebral/ node_modules/
# ...
Just remember to unlink the package before installing it from npm:
$ unlink node_modules/cerebral
# ...
Go to the respective packages/demos/some-demo-folder
and run npm start
You can run all tests in all packages from root:
npm test
Or you can run tests for specific packages by going to package root and do the same:
npm test
When you make a code change you should create a branch first. When the code is changed and backed up by a test you can commit it from the root using:
npm run commit
This will give you a guide to creating a commit message. Then you just push and create a pull request as normal on Github.
- Review and merge PRs into
next
branch. It is safe to use "Update branch", the commit created by Github will not be part ofnext
history - If changes to
repo-cooker
, clean Travis NPM cache - From command line:
$ git checkout next
$ git pull
$ npm install # make sure any new dependencies are installed
$ npm install --no-save repo-cooker # needed to test release, make sure you have latest
$ npm run release # and check release notes
$ git checkout master
$ git pull
$ git merge next
$ git push