favicon | ||
front | ||
guidejs | ||
scripts | ||
src | ||
static | ||
templates | ||
tests | ||
.ghci | ||
.gitignore | ||
.gitlab-ci.yml | ||
.hlint.yaml | ||
.travis.yml | ||
b | ||
CHANGELOG.md | ||
guide.cabal | ||
INSTALL.md | ||
LICENSE | ||
official.sh | ||
README.md | ||
Setup.hs | ||
shell.nix | ||
stack.yaml |
Aelve Guide
The beta version is running at guide.aelve.com. The most complete section yet is the one about lenses.
Installation instructions and the explanation of config variables (in config.json
) are here: INSTALL.md. Don't be afraid to install it locally – it's very easy! You don't need to set up any databases or anything like that, and you can get a full copy of the data from the site by simply cloning it from Github.
Contributing
If you want to contribute but don't know where to start, grep the source for
[very-easy]
and [easy]
, or look at these issues:
- “your first pull request” – really easy things, with detailed “how to fix it” instructions
- “your second pull request” – less easy things, which assume that you already know where stuff happens in the code
- “not-fleshed-out idea” – discussion issues (“should we have users? what better ways are there to present pros and cons?”) which you can help with even if you don't know Haskell
- “design” – issues about design (which I'm not good at, and so help is wanted)
Testing
You need chromedriver
and selenium-server-standalone
installed (those are the package names on Arch Linux). Then you can do
$ java -jar /usr/share/selenium-server/selenium-server-standalone.jar
$ stack test
Overview of the code
Folder structure
lib
– actual code (as a library)src
– just a dumbMain.hs
file to compile an executabletests
– testsstatic
– icons, CSS, Markdown pages, HTML pages, and some JS librariestemplates
– HTML templates for pages and elements of pagesscripts
– some scripts used by automatic testingfavicon
– code used to generate a faviconguidejs
– client side JavaScript
Frontend
To lint Vue.js components, you need to do:
npm install --global eslint eslint-plugin-vue@next
cd static/components
eslint .
Maybe there's a better way than npm install --global
, I don't know. I'm
not a Node.js guy.
Notes
When you see something like
-- See Note [acid-state]
it means that there's an extensive comment somewhere else in the code, which you can find by grepping for Note [acid-state]
. This convention was stolen from GHC. If you know some plugin for Emacs that would help with jumping to comments (even if those comments would have to be formatted differently), let me know.
Main modules
THIS SECTION IS OUTDATED
There are 4 main modules – Guide.hs
, JS.hs
, View.hs
, and Types.hs
.
Guide.hs
contains:
- handlers for GET/POST requests (
renderMethods
,setMethods
, etc) - feed generation (
itemToFeedEntry
) - some utility functions (
undoEdit
,lucidWithConfig
,createCheckpoint'
) - the
main
function, which starts the server
JS.hs
contains all Javascript that is used in pages. The way it works is tricky: each Javascript function is overloaded in such a way that it can generate either a function call or a function definition. allJSFunctions
, exported by JS.hs
, is made by producing definitions from all functions in the module and then concatenating them; later allJSFunction
is served by the server as /js.js
. When you see something like JS.foo (a, b, c)
in Haskell code, a call to foo
is being generated (and foo
can be found in JS.hs
).
View.hs
contains HTML rendering code. (It's much uglier than using templates, and we should switch to templates one day. Actually, maybe we should even switch to Node.js or Elm from Haskell.)
Types.hs
contains almost all types used in code elsewhere – Item
, Category
, and so on. GlobalState
is a type for, well, the whole database used by the site. All content, all edits, and all analytics data (i.e. users' IPs, etc) are stored there. The data is held in memory, and acid-state makes sure that data on hard drive is kept in sync with it. For a more detailed explanation, see Note [acid-state]
.
Currently changing database schema is somewhat painful; to see how exactly painful it is, look at Note [extending types]
. Not painful enough to never touch it again, sure, but still kinda annoying. Making it easier is possible, but for that we'd need a different acid-state
or a real database.
Other modules
Markdown.hs
contains functions for rendering Markdown. There are special types for Markdown as well, coupling rendered Markdown, its text representation, and its parse tree.
Merge.hs
contains an algorithm for merging edits – if you are editing a description of an item and someone else is editing the same description, upon submitting your edit you'll get a popup showing both versions and a merged version.
Cache.hs
provides some helpers for caching pages. (A cache is a global variable holding a map from cache keys to rendered HTML.)
Config.hs
has a config type and functions for reading/writing said config.
Utils.hs
is just that – utility functions.