Fixes: #6436
Changes made:
- Added typecheck step before twenty-ui build to check stories TS errors
- Added a tsconfig.dev.json to add stories and tests to typecheking when
in dev mode
- Added tsconfig.dev.json to storybook dev command of twenty-ui to
typecheck stories while developing
- Fixed twenty-ui stories that were broken
- Added a serve command to serve front build
- Fixed unit test from another PR
---------
Co-authored-by: Félix Malfait <felix.malfait@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Lucas Bordeau <bordeau.lucas@gmail.com>
## Bug Description
We are facing a bug in case recaptcha is enabled.
To reproduce:
- Create your recaptcha: https://www.google.com/recaptcha/about/
- update your server .env with the following variables:
```
CAPTCHA_SECRET_KEY=REPLACE_ME
CAPTCHA_SITE_KEY=REPLACE_ME
CAPTCHA_DRIVER=google-recaptcha
```
- Go to the login page, enter an existing user email and hit 'Reset your
password'.
- Add a console.log in emailPasswordResetLink in auth.resolver.ts to get
the token that would be sent by email if you don't have the mailer setup
- Browse: /reset-password/{passwordToken}
- Update the password:
<img width="1446" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/dd5b077f-293e-451a-8630-22d24ac66c42">
- See that the token is invalid
You should see two calls in your developer network tab. A successful one
to update the password and another to log you in. This 2nd call
(Challenge) does not have the captcha token provided. It should be
## Fix
- Refreshing the token on page load
- providing it to the Challenge graphql call
In this PR, I'm simplifying storybook setup:
1) Remove build --test configuration that prevent autodocs. We are not
using autodocs at all (the dev experience is not good enough), so I have
completely disabled it.
2) Clarify `serve` vs `test` vs `serve-and-test` configurations
After this PR:
- you can serve storybook in two modes: `npx nx run
twenty-front:storybook:serve:dev` and `npx nx run
twenty-front:storybook:serve:static`
- you can run tests agains an already served storybook (this is useful
in dev so you don't have to rebuild everytime to run tests): `npx nx run
twenty-front:storybook:test`
- you can conbine both: `npx nx run
twenty-front:storybook:serve-and-test:static`
TL;DR:
- removed `--configuration={args.scope}` from `storybook:static:test`
for the `storybook:static` part, as it was making `front-sb-test` jobs
in CI not reuse the cache from the `front-sb-build` job and re-build
storybook every time.
- replaced it with a new `test` configuration which optimizes storybook
build for tests and builds storybook 2x faster.
## Fix storybook:build cache usage in CI
`storybook:static:test` executes two scripts in parallel:
1. `storybook:static`, which depends on `storybook:build`
1.a. it builds storybook first with `storybook:build`, the output
directory is `storybook-static`.
1.b. then it launches an `http-server`, using what has been built in
`storybook-static`
2. `storybook:test` to execute tests (needs the storybook http-server to
be running)
When passing `--configuration=pages` or `--configuration=modules` to
`storybook:static` from step 1, those configurations are passed to the
`storybook:build` script from step 1.a as well.
But for Nx `storybook:build` and `storybook:build --configuration=pages`
(or `modules`) are not the same command, therefore one does not reuse
the cache of the other because they could output completely different
things.
As `front-sb-test` jobs are passing `--configuration={args.scope}` to
`storybook:static`, the cache of the previously executed
`storybook:build` (from `front-sb-build`) is not reused and therefore
each job re-builds Storybook with its own scope, which increases CI
time.
### Solution
- Removed scope configurations from `storybook:static` and
`storybook:build` scripts to avoid confusion.
- `storybook:test` and `storybook:dev` can keep scope configurations as
they can be useful and this doesn't impact storybook build cache in CI.
### Improve Storybook build time for testing
Added the `test` configuration to `storybook:build` and
`storybook:static` which makes Storybook build time 2x faster. It
disables addons that slow down build time and are not used in tests.
This PR introduces a Profiling feature for our story book tests.
It also implements a new CI job : front-sb-test-performance, that only
runs stories suffixed with `.perf.stories.tsx`
## How it works
It allows to wrap any component into an array of React Profiler
components that will run tests many times to have the most replicable
average render time possible.
It is simply used by calling the new `getProfilingStory` util.
Internally it creates a defined number of tests, separated by an
arbitrary waiting time to allow the CPU to give more stable results.
It will do 3 warm-up and 3 finishing runs of tests because the first and
last renders are always a bit erratic, so we want to measure only the
runs in-between.
On the UI side it gives a table of results :
<img width="515" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/twentyhq/twenty/assets/26528466/273d2d91-26da-437a-890e-778cb6c1f993">
On the programmatic side, it stores the result in a div that can then be
parsed by the play fonction of storybook, to expect a defined threshold.
```tsx
play: async ({ canvasElement }) => {
await findByTestId(
canvasElement,
'profiling-session-finished',
{},
{ timeout: 60000 },
);
const profilingReport = getProfilingReportFromDocument(canvasElement);
if (!isDefined(profilingReport)) {
return;
}
const p95result = profilingReport?.total.p95;
expect(
p95result,
`Component render time is more than p95 threshold (${p95ThresholdInMs}ms)`,
).toBeLessThan(p95ThresholdInMs);
},
```
- Fixes storybook coverage command: the coverage directory path was
incorrect, but instead of failing `storybook:test --configuration=ci`,
it was hanging indefinitely.
- Switches back to `concurrently` to launch `storybook:static` and
`storybook:test` in parallel, which allows to use options to explicitly
kill `storybook:static` when `storybook:test` fails.
- Moves `storybook:test --configuration=ci` to its own command
`storybook:static:test`: used in the CI, and can be used locally to run
storybook tests without having to launch `storybook:dev` first.
- Creates command `storybook:coverage` and enables cache for this
command.
- Fixes Jest tests that were failing.
- Improves caching conditions for some tasks (for instance, no need to
invalidate Jest test cache if only Storybook story files were modified).
Closes#5097
- Uses "nx affected" to detect what projects need to be checked in the
current PR (for now, `ci-front` and `ci-server` workflows only).
- Caches results of certain tasks (`lint`, `typecheck`, `test`,
`storybook:build`) when a PR pipeline runs. The next runs of the same
PR's pipeline will then be able to reuse the PR's task cache to execute
tasks faster.
- Caches Yarn's cache folder to install dependencies faster in CI jobs.
- Rewrites the node modules cache/install steps as a custom, reusable
Github action.
- Distributes `ci-front` jobs with a "matrix" strategy.
- Sets common tasks config at the root `nx.json`. For instance, to
activate the `typecheck` task in a project, add `typecheck: {}` to its
`project.json` and it'll use the default config set in `nx.json` for the
`typecheck` task. Options can be overridden in each individual
`project.json` if needed.
- Adds "scope" tags to some projects: `scope:frontend`, `scope:backend`,
`scope:shared`. An eslint rule ensures that `scope:frontend` only
depends on `scope:frontent` or `scope:shared` projects, same for
`scope:backend`. These tags are used by `nx affected` to filter projects
by scope and generates different task cache keys according to the
requested scope.
- Enables checks for twenty-emails in the `ci-server` workflow.
# This PR
- Moves dev and ci scripts to the `project.json` file in the
twenty-front package
- Adds a project.json file in the root of the project with the main
start command that start both twenty-server and twenty-front
applications concurrently
- Updates the script command of the root project with the start:prod
command (replacing the start command which will be used in dev with the
help of nx)
- Add a start:prod command in the twenty-front app, replacing the start
command (now used for dev purpose)
Issue ref #4645
@charlesBochet @FelixMalfait please let me know how can I improve it
---------
Co-authored-by: Thaïs Guigon <guigon.thais@gmail.com>