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44 lines
3.6 KiB
Markdown
44 lines
3.6 KiB
Markdown
# Landscape
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Landscape provides the primary launching interface for Tlon's suite of userspace applications. This directory contains the front-end web application to power said interface.
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Landscape is built primarily using [React], [Typescript], and [Tailwind CSS]. [Vite] ensures that all code and assets are loaded appropriately, bundles the application for distribution and provides a functional dev environment.
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## Getting Started
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To get started using Landscape first you need to run, `npm i && npm run bootstrap` at the top level of the greater urbit repo. This will install your npm dependencies and correctly link the current implementation of the packages at `pkg/npm/*` to your dependencies.
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If you intend to edit those packages will developing on Landscape, you should also have `npm run watch-libs` running to build and re-link them after every change.
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Once that's done, you can then run `npm run mock` if you'd like to get started immediately. This will use hard-coded mock data to power the interface so you can work on the interface without being connected to a ship.
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To develop against a working ship, you first need to add a `.env.local` file to the root of this directory. This file will not be committed. Adding `VITE_SHIP_URL={URL}` where **{URL}** is the URL of the ship you would like to point to, will allow you to run `npm run dev`. This will proxy all requests to the ship except for those powering the interface, allowing you to see live data.
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Regardless of what you run to develop, Vite will hot-reload code changes as you work so you don't have to constantly refresh.
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## Deploying
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To deploy, run `npm run build` which will bundle all the code and assets into the `dist/` folder. This can then be made into a glob by doing the following:
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1. Create or launch an urbit using the -F flag
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2. On that urbit, if you don't already have a desk to run from, run `|merge %work our %base` to create a new desk and mount it with `|mount %work`.
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3. Now the `%work` desk is accessible through the host OS's filesystem as a directory of that urbit's pier ie `~/zod/work`.
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4. From the directory of grid you can run `rsync -avL --delete dist/ ~/zod/work/grid` where `~/zod` is your fake urbit's pier.
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5. Once completed you can then run `|commit %work` on your urbit and you should see your files logged back out from the dojo.
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6. Now run `=dir /=garden` to switch to the garden desk directory
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7. You can now run `-make-glob %work /grid` which will take the grid folder where you just added files and create a glob which can be thought of as a sort of bundle. It will be output to `~/zod/.urb/put`.
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8. If you navigate to `~/zod/.urb/put` you should see a file that looks like this `glob-0v5.fdf99.nph65.qecq3.ncpjn.q13mb.glob`. The characters between `glob-` and `.glob` are a hash of the glob's contents.
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9. If you're working at Tlon, you can upload this to our Google storage using `gsutil cp glob-*.* gs://bootstrap.urbit.org`. Otherwise any publicly available HTTP endpoint that can serve files should be sufficient for distributing the glob.
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10. Once you've uploaded the glob, you should then update the corresponding entry in the docket file that represents Landscape which currently resides at `pkg/garden/desk.docket-0`. Both the full URL and the hash should be updated to match the glob we just created, on the line that looks like this:
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```hoon
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glob-http+['https://bootstrap.urbit.org/glob-0v5.fdf99.nph65.qecq3.ncpjn.q13mb.glob' 0v5.fdf99.nph65.qecq3.ncpjn.q13mb]
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```
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11. This can now be safely committed and deployed.
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[react]: https://reactjs.org/
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[typescript]: https://www.typescriptlang.org/
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[tailwind css]: https://tailwindcss.com/
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[vite]: https://vitejs.dev/
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