urbit/pkg/interface/CONTRIBUTING.md
2019-08-28 14:05:07 -04:00

2.6 KiB

Introduction

Thanks for your interest in contributing to the Urbit interface. This section specifically focuses on Landscape development. Landscape lets you integrate your ship with front-end web applications accessed through the browser. It has a core set of applications that accept contributions.

Related to Landscape is Gall, the Arvo vane that controls userspace applications. Landscape applications will usually make good use of Gall, but it's not strictly required if a Landscape application is not interacting with ships directly.

Create a development ship, then once your ship is running, mount to Unix with |mount %. This will create a folder named 'home' in your pier in Unix. The 'home' desk contains the working state of your ship -- like a Git repository, when you want to make a change to it, |commit %home.

Contributing to Landscape applications

If you'd like to contribute to the core set of Landscape applications in this repository, clone this repository and start by creating an urbitrc file in this folder, pkg/interface. You can find an urbitrc-sample here for reference. Then cd into the application's folder and npm install the dependencies, then gulp watch to watch for changes.

On your development ship, ensure you |commit %home to apply your changes. Once you're done and ready to make a pull request, running gulp bundle-prod will make the production files and deposit them in pkg/arvo. Create a pull request with both the production files, and the source code you were working on in the interface directory.

Please also ensure your pull request fits our standards for Git hygiene.

Gall

Presently, Gall documentation is still in progress, but a good reference. For examples of Landscape apps that use Gall, see the code for Chat and Publish.

Creating your own applications

If you'd like to create your own application for Landscape, the easiest way to get started is using the create-landscape-app repository template. It provides a brief wizard when you run it with npm start, and has good documentation for its everyday use -- just create a repo using its template, install and then start it, and you'll soon be up and running.