Setup | Running linting/tests | Writing tests | Debugging code | Internals
Before contributing, please read our code of conduct.
Contributions are always welcome, no matter how large or small.
- If you aren't just making a documentation change, you'll probably want to learn a bit about a few topics.
- ASTs (Abstract Syntax Tree): The Babel AST spec is a bit different from ESTree. The differences are listed here.
- Check out
/doc
for information about Babel's internals - Check out the Babel Plugin Handbook - core plugins are written the same way as any other plugin!
- Check out AST Explorer to learn more about ASTs or make your own plugin in the browser
- When you feel ready to jump into the Babel source code, a good place to start is to look for issues tagged with help-wanted and/or beginner-friendly.
Feel free to check out the #discussion
/#development
channels on our Slack. Some of us are always online to chat!
Note: Versions < 5.1.10
can't be built.
Babel is built for Node.js 4 and up but we develop using Node.js 6. Make sure you are on npm 3.
You can check this with node -v
and npm -v
.
In addition, make sure that Yarn is installed. Installation instructions can be found here: https://yarnpkg.com/en/docs/install.
$ git clone https://github.com/babel/babel
$ cd babel
$ make bootstrap
Then you can either run:
$ make build
to build Babel once or:
$ make watch
to have Babel build itself and incrementally build files on change.
You can access the built files for individual packages from packages/<package-name>/lib
.
If you wish to build a copy of Babel for distribution, then run:
$ make build-dist
You can run lint via:
# ~6 sec on a MacBook Pro (Mid 2015)
$ make lint
You can run eslint's autofix via:
$ make fix
You can run tests + lint for all packages (slow) via:
# ~46 sec on a MacBook Pro (Mid 2015)
$ make test
If you just want to run all tests:
# ~40 sec on a MacBook Pro (Mid 2015)
$ make test-only
Most likely you'll want to focus in on a specific issue.
To run tests for a specific package in packages, you can use the TEST_ONLY
environment variable:
$ TEST_ONLY=babel-cli make test
Use the TEST_GREP
variable to run a subset of tests by name:
$ TEST_GREP=transformation make test
To enable the Node.js debugger added in v6.3.0, set the TEST_DEBUG
environment variable:
$ TEST_DEBUG=true make test
You can combine TEST_DEBUG
with TEST_GREP
or TEST_ONLY
to debug a subset of tests. If you plan to stay long in the debugger (which you'll likely do!), you may increase the test timeout by editing test/mocha.opts.
To test the code coverage, use:
$ BABEL_ENV=cov make build
$ ./scripts/test-cov.sh
In case you're not able to reproduce an error on CI locally, it may be due to
- Node Version: Travis CI runs the tests against all major node versions. If your tests use JavaScript features unsupported by lower versions of node, then use minNodeVersion option in options.json.
- Timeout: Check the CI log and if the only errors are timeout errors and you are sure that it's not related to the changes you made, ask someone in the slack channel to trigger rebuild on the CI build and it might be resolved
In case you're locally getting errors which are not on the CI, it may be due to
- Updates in Dependencies: Make sure you run
make bootstrap
before you runmake build
ormake watch
before you run the tests.
Most packages in /packages
have a test
folder, however some tests might be in other packages or in /packages/babel-core
.
All the Babel plugins (and other packages) that have a /test/fixtures
are written in a similar way.
For example, in babel-plugin-transform-exponentiation-operator/test
:
-
There is an
index.js
file. It imports our test helper. (You don't have to worry about this). -
There can be multiple folders under
/fixtures
- There is an
options.json
file whose function is similar to a.babelrc
file, allowing you to pass in the plugins and settings you need for your tests. - For this test, we only need the relevant plugin, so it's just
{ "plugins": ["transform-exponentiation-operator"] }
. - If necessary, you can have an
options.json
with different options in each subfolder.
- There is an
-
In each subfolder, you can organize your directory structure by categories of tests. (Example: these folders can be named after the feature you are testing or can reference the issue number they fix)
-
Generally, there are two kinds of tests for plugins
- The first is a simple test of the input and output produced by running Babel on some code. We do this by creating an
actual.js
file and anexpected.js
file. - If you need to expect an error, you can ignore creating the
expected.js
file and pass a newthrows
key to theoptions.json
that contains the error string that is created. - The second and preferred type is a test that actually evaluates the produced code and asserts that certain properties are true or false. We do this by creating an
exec.js
file.
- The first is a simple test of the input and output produced by running Babel on some code. We do this by creating an
In an actual/expected test, you simply write out the code you want transformed in actual.js
.
// actual.js
2 ** 2;
and the expected output after transforming it with your options.json
in expected.js
.
// expected.js
Math.pow(2, 2);
In an exec.js
test, we run or check that the code actually does what it's supposed to do rather than just check the static output.
// exec.js
assert.equal(8, 2 ** 3);
assert.equal(24, 3 * 2 ** 3);
If you need to check for an error that is thrown you can add to the options.json
// options.json example
{
"plugins": [["transform-object-rest-spread", { "useBuiltIns": "invalidOption" }]],
"throws": "transform-object-rest-spread currently only accepts a boolean option for useBuiltIns (defaults to false)"
}
If the test requires a minimum Node version, you can add minNodeVersion
(must be in semver format).
// options.json example
{
"minNodeVersion": "5.0.0"
}
For both babel-plugin-x
and babylon
, you can easily generate an expected.js
/expected.json
automatically by just providing actual.js
and running the tests as you usually would.
// Example
- babylon
- test
- fixtures
- comments
- basic
- block-trailing-comment
- actual.js
- expected.json (will be generated if not created)
A common approach to debugging JavaScript code is to walk through the code using the Chrome DevTools debugger.
For illustration purposes, we are going to assume that we need to get a better understanding of Generator.generate()
, which is responsible for generating code for a given AST.
To get a better understanding of what is actually going on for this particular piece of code, we are going to make use of breakpoints.
generate() {
+ debugger; // breakpoint
return super.generate(this.ast);
}
To include the changes, we have to make sure to build Babel:
$ make build
Next, we need to execute Generator.generate()
, which can be achieved by running a test case in the babel-generator
package.
For example, we can run the test case that tests the generation of class declarations:
$ TEST_DEBUG=true TEST_GREP=ClassDeclaration make test-only
./scripts/test.sh
Debugger listening on port 9229.
Warning: This is an experimental feature and could change at any time.
To start debugging, open the following URL in Chrome:
chrome-devtools://devtools/remote/serve_file/@60cd6e859b9f557d2312f5bf532f6aec5f284980/inspector.html?experiments=true&v8only=true&ws=127.0.0.1:9229/3cdaebd2-be88-4e7b-a94b-432950ab72d0
To start the debugging in Chrome DevTools, open the given URL. The debugger starts at the first executed line of code, which is Mocha's first line by default. Click Resume script execution to jump to the set breakpoint. Note that the code shown in Chrome DevTools is compiled code and therefore differs.
- AST spec (babylon/ast/spec.md)
- Versioning (doc/design/versioning.md
- Monorepo (doc/design/monorepo.md)
- Compiler environment support (doc/design/compiler-environment-support.md)
- Compiler assumptions (doc/design/compiler-assumptions.md)