graphql-engine/server/CONTRIBUTING.md
Samir Talwar 0256e1da7d nix: Switch to nixpkgs-unstable.
I am making this change for two reasons:

  * We expect to upgrade to GHC 9.2.7 imminently, which is not available on the nixos-22.11 branch.
  * We need to upgrade unixODBC, which has stagnated on nixos-22.11.

While we expect a new NixOS release in a month or two, we can't really afford to wait that long. In addition, we might need to upgrade GHC again soon after that.

I removed `hpack` because we don't actually use it any more.

PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/8483
GitOrigin-RevId: 9a7ef1a97599a218e34dfde1ad4f6a7279d2ba0e
2023-03-24 20:36:48 +00:00

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# Contributing
This guide explains how to set up the graphql-engine server for development on your own machine and how to contribute.
## Pre-requisites
- [GHC](https://www.haskell.org/ghc/) 9.2.5 and [cabal-install](https://cabal.readthedocs.io/en/latest/)
- There are various ways these can be installed, but [ghcup](https://www.haskell.org/ghcup/) is a good choice if youre not sure.
- There are few system packages required like `libpq-dev`, `libssl-dev`, etc. The best place to get the entire list is from the [Dockerfile](../packaging/graphql-engine-base/ubuntu.dockerfile)
- Additional Haskell tools (expected versions can be found in _VERSIONS.json_):
- [HLint](https://github.com/ndmitchell/hlint), for linting Haskell code
- [Ormolu](https://github.com/tweag/ormolu), for formatting Haskell code
- [Docker](https://www.docker.com/get-started/)
- [Docker Compose](https://docs.docker.com/compose/install/)
For running the test suite:
- [node.js](https://nodejs.org/en/) (see [.nvmrc](../.nvmrc) for the version), and the bundled NPM version
- Python >= 3.9 with pip3 and virtualenv
For building the Console:
- node.js, as above
Additionally, you will need a way to run a PostgreSQL database server. The `dev.sh` script (described below) can set up a PostgreSQL instance for you via [Docker](https://www.docker.com), but if you want to run it yourself, youll need:
- [PostgreSQL](https://www.postgresql.org) >= 10
- [postgis](https://postgis.net)
### Installing tooling with Nix
Simply [install Nix](https://nixos.org/download.html) and type `nix develop`.
If you don't want to start a new shell each time, you can also use [direnv](https://direnv.net/) and [nix-direnv](https://github.com/nix-community/nix-direnv), then create a _.envrc.local_ file with the contents:
```bash
#!/usr/bin/env bash
use flake
```
### Installing tooling with direnv
This project contains scripts for installing project dependencies automatically with [direnv](https://direnv.net/). For more information, see the `.envrc` file in the root.
## Development workflow
You should fork the repo on github and then `git clone https://github.com/<your-username>/graphql-engine`.
After making your changes
### Compile
...console assets:
$ cd frontend
$ nvm use
$ npm ci
$ npm run server-build:ce
$ cd ..
...and the server:
$ ln -s cabal/dev.project cabal.project.local
$ cabal new-update
$ cabal new-build graphql-engine
To set up the project configuration to coincide with the testing scripts below, thus avoiding recompilation when testing locally, rather use `cabal/dev-sh.project.local` instead of `cabal/dev.project`:
$ ln -s cabal/dev-sh.project.local cabal.project.local
#### Compiling on MacOS
If you are on MacOS, or experiencing any errors related to missing dependencies on MacOS, please try [this alternative setup guide](COMPILING-ON-MACOS.md), or try Nix (as above).
### IDE Support
You may want to use [hls](https://github.com/haskell/haskell-language-server)/[ghcide](https://github.com/haskell/ghcide) if your editor has LSP support. A sample configuration has been provided which can be used as follows:
```
ln -s sample.hie.yaml hie.yaml
```
If you have to customise any of the options for ghcide/hls, you should instead copy the sample file and make necessary changes in `hie.yaml` file. Note that `hie.yaml` is gitignored so the changes will be specific to your machine.
```
cp sample.hie.yaml hie.yaml
```
### Run and test via `run-new.sh`
The `run-new.sh` scripts are an active work in progress, and will eventually replace the `dev.sh` option below.
Run the Python integration tests with `./server/tests-py/run-new.sh`.
Filter on specific test files with `./server/tests-py/run-new.sh -- create_async_action_with_nested_output_and_relation.py`
If you have any issues with `run-new.sh`, please create a [GitHub issue](https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine/issues/new/choose) and run and test via `dev.sh` instead.
### Run and test via `dev.sh`
The `dev.sh` script in the top-level `scripts/` directory is a turnkey solution to build, run, and
test `graphql-engine` using a Docker container to run a Postgres database. **Docker is necessary to
use `dev.sh`.**
To use `dev.sh`, first launch a new postgres container with:
$ scripts/dev.sh postgres
Then in a new terminal launch `graphql-engine` in dev mode with:
$ scripts/dev.sh graphql-engine
This command also starts the GraphQL Engine console, which you can access at http://localhost:8181/console.
The `dev.sh` will print some helpful information and logs from both services
will be printed to screen.
You can run the test suite with:
$ scripts/dev.sh test
This should run in isolation. The output format is described in the [pytest documentation](https://docs.pytest.org/en/latest/usage.html#detailed-summary-report). Errors and failures are indicated by `F`s and `E`s.
Optionally, launch a new container for alternative (MSSQL) backend with:
$ scripts/dev.sh mssql
Tests can be run against a specific backend (defaulting to Postgres) with the `backend` flag, for example:
$ scripts/dev.sh test --integration -k TestGraphQLQueryBasicCommon --backend (bigquery|citus|mssql|postgres)
### Run and test manually
If you want, you can also run the server and test suite manually against an instance of your choosing.
#### Run
The following command can be used to build and launch a local `graphql-engine` instance:
```
$ cabal new-run -- exe:graphql-engine \
--database-url='postgres://<user>:<password>@<host>:<port>/<dbname>' \
serve --enable-console --console-assets-dir=frontend/dist/apps/server-assets-console-ce
```
This will launch a server on port 8080, and it will serve the console assets if they were built with `npm run server-build:ce` as mentioned above.
#### Test
`graphql-engine` has several test suites, among them:
1. A small set of unit tests and integration tests written in Haskell, in `server/src-test`.
2. A new integration test suite written in Haskell, in `server/lib/api-tests`.
3. An extensive set of end-to-end tests written in Python, in `server/tests-py`.
All sets of tests require running databases:
- some unit tests hit the database, and running the unit test suite requires passing in a postgres connection string,
- the Haskell integration test suite requires databases to run (they can be started via the docker command listed below),
- the Python integration test suite also requires databases AND the engine to be running, which can be started via either the `dev.sh` script, or manually.
##### Running py tests
The easiest way to run the Python integration test suite is by running:
```sh
$ scripts/dev.sh test --integration
```
For more details please check out the [README](./tests-py/README.md).
##### Running the Haskell test suite
There are three categories of unit tests:
- unit tests
- PostgreSQL integration tests (requires a PostgreSQL instance)
- MS SQL Server integration tests (requires a MS SQL Server instance)
The easiest way to run these tests is through `make`, which will automatically spin up and shut down Docker containers for the databases:
```
$ make test-unit
$ make test-integration-postgres
$ make test-integration-mssql
```
If you want to limit to a specific set of tests, use `HSPEC_MATCH`:
```
$ make test-unit HSPEC_MATCH='Memoize'
```
Alternatively, you can use Cabal directly (though you'll have to start the databases yourself):
```
$ cabal run -- graphql-engine:test:graphql-engine-tests
$ HASURA_GRAPHQL_DATABASE_URL='postgres://<user>:<password>@<host>:<port>/<dbname>' \
cabal run -- graphql-engine:test:graphql-engine-test-postgres
```
##### Running the Haskell integration test suite
Run `make test-backends`. This effectively runs the following two commands:
```
$ docker compose up --detach --wait
$ cabal run api-tests:exe:api-tests
```
For more details please check out the [README](./lib/api-tests/README.md).
##### Running unit tests and recompiling
While working on features, you might want to add unit tests and work through
getting them to pass. This is generally a slow process, but there is a
workaround to allow loading both the `graphql-engine` library and the unit
testing library in `ghcid` at the same time:
```sh
$ ghcid -a -c "cabal repl graphql-engine-tests -f -O0 -fghci-load-test-with-lib" --test Main.main
```
This assumes you already have `HASURA_GRAPHQL_DATABASE_URL` and `HASURA_MSSQL_CONN_STR`
exported as environment variables.
If you just want to run all unit tests, you can add ` --setup ":set args unit"`
to the command line above. If you want to run specific test(s), you can instead
do `--setup ":set args unit --match name_of_test(s)"`.
#### Building with profiling
To build with profiling support, you need to both enable profiling via `cabal`
and set the `profiling` flag. E.g.
```
$ cabal build exe:graphql-engine -f profiling --enable-profiling
```
### Create Pull Request
- Make sure your commit messages meet the [guidelines](../CONTRIBUTING.md).
- If you changed the versions of any dependencies, run
`scripts/cabal-freeze-update.sh --all` to update the freeze file.
- Create a pull request from your forked repo to the main repo.
- Every pull request will automatically build and run the tests.
## Code conventions
The following conventions help us maintain a uniform style for all committers:
make sure your contributions are in line with them.
We enforce these by means of CI hooks which will fail the build if any of these
are not met.
- No compiler warnings: Make sure your code builds with no warnings (adding
`-Werror` to `ghc-options` in your `cabal.project` is a good way of checking
this.)
- No lint failures: Use [hlint](https://github.com/ndmitchell/hlint) with our
custom config to validate your code, using `hlint --hint=../.hlint.yaml`.
- Consistent formatting: Use [ormolu](https://github.com/tweag/ormolu) to
format your code. `ormolu -ei '*.hs'` will format all files with a `.hs`
extension in the current directory.
- Consistent style: Consider the [style guide](./STYLE.md) when writing new code.
## Testing
Please see [testing-guidelines](./testing-guidelines.md) for details on how to add tests.
## Local hoogle instance
[Hoogle](https://github.com/ndmitchell/hoogle) is a Haskell API search engine. The server at
[hoogle.haskell.org](https://hoogle.haskell.org/) provides a version of Hoogle that enables
searching through all packanges available in [Stackage](https://www.stackage.org/). Following
instructions help in setting up a local hoogle server that enables searching through `graphql-engine` server code.
### Step 1: Installing hoogle
Installing `hoogle` is fairly simple with `cabal`.
```bash
$ cabal install hoogle
```
### Step 2: Generating hoogle database
A Hoogle database is a prebuilt index of a set of packages. The `hoogle.sh` script in the
top-level `scripts/` directory helps in generating the hoogle database for GraphQL Engine server
code and store it in `dist-newstyle/` directory.
$ scripts/hoogle.sh generate
### Step 3: Running hoogle instance
Running the following `hoogle.sh` script command starts a local hoogle server with the database
generated in `Step 2`.
$ scripts/hoogle.sh serve
Use `--port` option to specify custom port to start hoogle server.
$ scripts/hoogle.sh serve --port 8181