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Unleash is the open source feature toggle service.
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Nuno Góis a9c24e4262
chore: simplify package scripts (#3736)
# Simplify package scripts

This PR's purpose is to raise a discussion surrounding our current
package scripts.

It includes some suggestions that aim to simplify the scripts and
hopefully bring a much more straightforward approach to developing and
contributing to Unleash.

Building (prod) should only happen **explicitly** and when needed.

## Before PR (current behavior)

- Clone the project;
- Open 2 terminals: One for `unleash` and another for
`unleash/frontend`;
- On `unleash`: 
  - Run `yarn` (which will also build, for some reason?);
  - Run `yarn start:dev` to start backend in dev mode (`tsc-watch`);
- On `unleash/frontend`:
  - Run `yarn` (which will also build, for some reason?);
  - Run `yarn start` to start frontend in dev mode (`vite`);

So it seems to me like we build unnecessarily every time we install
dependencies. Neither dev scripts need to build the project, as backend
uses `tsc-watch` and frontend uses `vite`. I'm unsure why this is the
case, as building can take a very long time.


![image](https://github.com/Unleash/unleash/assets/14320932/5ecb7df1-e5b4-4d70-ba7e-97119f5d1116)

There's also some complexity in the way we need to split the terminal to
`cd` into `frontend` and treat it as a different project. The fact that
we have different script names is also confusing (`yarn start`, `yarn
start:dev`, etc).

## After PR

- Clone the project;
- Run `yarn` to install all dependencies;
- Run `yarn dev` to get started developing Unleash;

Running `yarn` should take care of everything needed to start
developing. This includes installing dependencies for frontend as well.
It should not build projects if we are not being explicit about it,
especially since we don't need to build them at this stage.


![image](https://github.com/Unleash/unleash/assets/14320932/614e42fc-3467-432f-91fc-624b1b35c7c1)

Running `yarn dev` should start the project in dev mode. This means
running both projects in `dev` mode, which for `backend` means running
`tsc-watch` and for `frontend` means running `vite`.

Here this PR attempts to provide a better DX by using
[concurrently](https://www.npmjs.com/package/concurrently) and
[wait-on](https://www.npmjs.com/package/wait-on) - This means both tasks
are ran simultaneously, stdout is labeled accordingly, and are stopped
together. It also means that `frontend` waits for `backend` to be
serving at `4242` before starting, since `frontend` starts pretty much
immediately with `vite` and `backend` takes a bit longer. Of course,
when the `backend` is hot-reloading you may still find some
`ECONNREFUSED`s on `frontend` stdout while it recompiles.


![image](https://github.com/Unleash/unleash/assets/14320932/8bde8ee2-3cad-4e3f-a0db-9eed60cfb04d)

No more splitting your terminal and treating `frontend` as a separate
project.

## Discussion points

Maybe there's a better alternative to `tsc-watch`? I briefly explored
some alternatives and while they had a much faster starting speed,
hot-reload was sometimes slower. IMO we should aspire to run
`src/server-dev.ts` directly and only compile when needed.

Running `dev:backend` still serves a version of the frontend (at 4242).
**Why? Can we remove that behavior?**
I can't imagine a scenario in dev where we wouldn't want to run the
latest version of the frontend with `vite`.

~~**Note:** This PR removes all other out-of-scope scripts to focus on
this revamp. If we decide to merge it, we should evaluate what other
existing scripts we still want to include. May be a good opportunity to
clean up unused ones and only include the ones we really use. This
includes scripts that our GH actions rely on.~~

**Update:** In an effort to minimize impact surface of this PR and make
it a bit more ready for merging:
- It updates some docs in
2a4ff805e8
and
1bbc488251
to reflect our new simplified flow;
- It includes the old package scripts for now in
039bc04699;
- It updates some of our GH actions to reflect the new scripts in
7782cb9b12;

Given its current status I'll promote the PR to "ready for review". 

I still think we should have a second look at our existing scripts and
GH actions to see what we really need and/or should adapt, but it should
be a team effort so we have a broader context. Maybe on a follow-up PR.

Does this require any changes to related projects (e.g. Enterprise)?

---------

Co-authored-by: Gastón Fournier <gaston@getunleash.io>
2023-05-12 11:23:22 +01:00
.do open-api addon controller (#1721) 2022-06-22 13:49:18 +03:00
.github chore: simplify package scripts (#3736) 2023-05-12 11:23:22 +01:00
.husky refactor: fix husky and lint-staged setup (#1654) 2022-06-02 08:08:53 +02:00
coverage feat: Instance stats for export/import (#3121) 2023-02-15 14:39:16 +02:00
docker chore: update to node 18 (#3527) 2023-04-18 10:35:32 +02:00
docs/api/oas docs: Remove/update references to Heroku (#2099) 2022-10-19 12:02:00 +00:00
examples feat: update docs to match v4. 2021-05-18 11:19:33 +02:00
frontend chore: simplify package scripts (#3736) 2023-05-12 11:23:22 +01:00
perf feat: add segments (#1426) 2022-03-29 14:59:14 +02:00
scripts chore(deps): update dpage/pgadmin4 docker tag to v6.21 (#3693) 2023-05-06 08:11:45 +00:00
src chore: add another migration that remigrates the proper way (#3719) 2023-05-11 15:33:04 +02:00
website chore: simplify package scripts (#3736) 2023-05-12 11:23:22 +01:00
.dockerignore Docker cross-compilation with buildx (#2003) 2022-08-30 12:39:28 +00:00
.editorconfig Move e2e tests from frontend to backend .github (#1975) 2022-08-29 12:25:11 +00:00
.eslintignore Feat/add change request settings (#2390) 2022-11-11 10:09:25 +02:00
.eslintrc chore: add linter rules for regexp (#3500) 2023-04-17 07:11:22 +00:00
.gitignore Test npm publish (#3554) 2023-04-18 15:44:19 +02:00
.lycheeignore chore: ignore Twitter link from being checked (#2971) 2023-01-23 22:09:28 +01:00
.mergify.yml chore: mergify (#3631) 2023-04-26 16:07:34 +02:00
.node-version chore: update node-version file (#3562) 2023-04-21 09:25:10 +02:00
.nvmrc chore: update to node 18 (#3527) 2023-04-18 10:35:32 +02:00
.prettierignore Personal access tokens backend (#2064) 2022-09-16 10:54:27 +03:00
app.json fix: tell heroku to not build in production mode 2022-10-18 21:35:50 +02:00
CHANGELOG.md chore: update CHANGELOG.md 2021-10-29 13:18:38 +02:00
CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md Added version to simplify tracking in Vanta & SOC2 2022-05-05 11:08:56 +02:00
CONTRIBUTING.md chore: simplify package scripts (#3736) 2023-05-12 11:23:22 +01:00
docker-compose.yml Update docker-compose.yml (#3256) 2023-03-06 14:30:28 +01:00
Dockerfile feat: set timezone to utc (#3666) 2023-05-03 10:25:56 +03:00
LICENSE
package.json chore: simplify package scripts (#3736) 2023-05-12 11:23:22 +01:00
README.md added flutter documentation (#2736) 2023-01-03 13:07:01 +01:00
renovate.json feat: wait for deps to be somewhat stable (#2768) 2023-01-05 12:45:48 +01:00
tsconfig.json chore: enable strictNullCheck but ignore problems at compile time (#3273) 2023-03-10 10:27:56 +01:00
yarn.lock chore: simplify package scripts (#3736) 2023-05-12 11:23:22 +01:00

About Unleash

Unleash is an open source feature management solution. It improves the workflow of your development team and leads to quicker software delivery. Unleash increases efficiency and gives teams full control of how and when they enable new functionality for end users. Unleash lets teams ship code to production in smaller releases whenever they want.

Feature toggles make it easy to test how your code works with real production data without the fear that you'll accidentally break your users' experience. It also helps your team work on multiple features in parallel without each maintaining an separate feature branch.

Unleash is the largest open source solution for feature flagging on GitHub. There's 12 official client and server SDKs and 10+ community SDKs available; you can even make your own if you want to. You can use Unleash with any language and any framework.


Get started in 2 steps

1. Start Unleash

With git and docker installed, it's easy to get started:

Run this script:

git clone git@github.com:Unleash/unleash.git
cd unleash
docker compose up -d

Then point your browser to localhost:4242 and log in using:

  • username: admin
  • password: unleash4all

If you'd rather run the source code in this repo directly via Node.js, see the step-by-step instructions to get up and running in the contributing guide.

2. Connect your SDK

Find your preferred SDK in our list of official SDKs and import it into your project. Follow the setup guides for your specific SDK.

If you use the docker compose file from the previous step, here's the configuration details you'll need to get going:

  • For front-end SDKs, use:
    • URL: http://localhost:4242/api/frontend/
    • clientKey: default:development.unleash-insecure-frontend-api-token
  • For server-side SDKs, use:
    • Unleash API URL: http://localhost:4242/api/
    • API token: default:development.unleash-insecure-api-token

If you use a different setup, your configuration details will most likely also be different.

Check a feature toggle

Checking the state of a feature toggle in your code is easy! The syntax will vary depending on your language, but all you need is a simple function call to check whether a toggle is available. Here's how it might look in Java:

if (unleash.isEnabled("AwesomeFeature")) {
  // do new, flashy thing
} else {
  // do old, boring stuff
}

Run Unleash on a service?

If you don't want to run Unleash locally, we also provide easy deployment setups for Heroku and Digital Ocean:

Deploy to Heroku Deploy to DigitalOcean

Configure and run Unleash anywhere

The above sections show you how to get up and running quickly and easily. When you're ready to start configuring and customizing Unleash for your own environment, check out the documentation for getting started with self-managed deployments, Unleash configuration options, or running Unleash locally via docker.


Online demo

Try out the Unleash online demo.

The Unleash online demo


Community and help — sharing is caring

We know that learning a new tool can be hard and time-consuming. We have a growing community that loves to help out. Please don't hesitate to reach out for help.

Join Unleash on Slack

💬 Join Unleash on Slack if you want ask open questions about Unleash, feature toggling or discuss these topics in general.

💻 Create a GitHub issue if you have found a bug or have ideas on how to improve Unleash.

📚 Visit the documentation for more in-depth descriptions, how-to guides, and more.


Contribute to Unleash

Building Unleash is a collaborative effort, and we owe a lot of gratitude to many smart and talented individuals. Building it together with community ensures that we build a product that solves real problems for real people. We'd love to have your help too: Please feel free to open issues or provide pull requests.

Check out the CONTRIBUTING.md file for contribution guidelines and the Unleash developer guide for tips on environment setup, running the tests, and running Unleash from source.

Contributors

The Unleash contributors


Features our users love

Flexibility and adaptability

Security and performance

  • Privacy by design (GDPR and Schrems II). End-user data never leaves your application.
  • Audit logs
  • Enforce OWASP's secure headers via the strict HTTPS-only mode
  • Flexible hosting options: host it on premise or in the cloud (any cloud)
  • Scale the Unleash Proxy independently of the Unleash server to support any number of front-end clients without overloading your Unleash instance

Looking for more features?

If you're looking for one of the following features, please take a look at our Pro and Enterprise plans:


Architecture

Read more in the system overview section of the Unleash documentation.


Unleash SDKs

To connect your application to Unleash you'll need to use a client SDK for your programming language.

Official server-side SDKs:

Official front-end SDKs:

The front-end SDKs connects via the Unleash Proxy in order to ensure privacy, scalability and security.

Community SDKs:

If none of the official SDKs fit your need, there's also a number of community-developed SDKs where you might find an implementation for your preferred language (such as Elixir, Dart, Clojure, and more).


Users of Unleash

Unleash is trusted by thousands of companies all over the world.

Proud Open-Source users: (send us a message if you want to add your logo here)

The Unleash logo encircled by logos for Finn.no, nav (the Norwegian Labour and Welfare Administration), Budgets, Otovo, and Amedia. The encircling logos are all connected to the Unleash logo.


Migration guides

Unleash has evolved significantly over the past few years, and we know how hard it can be to keep software up to date. If you're using the current major version, upgrading shouldn't be an issue. If you're on a previous major version, check out the Unleash migration guide!


Want to know more about Unleash?

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