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mirror of https://github.com/Unleash/unleash.git synced 2025-06-27 01:19:00 +02:00
unleash.unleash/frontend
Thomas Heartman e4ead3bd67
Refactor: get rid of editable constraint wrapper (#9921)
This (admittedly pretty big) PR removes a component layer, moves all
logic for updating constraint values into a single module, and dumbs
down other components.

The main changes are:
- EditableConstraintWrapper is gone. All the logic in there has been
moved into the new `useEditableConstraint` hook. Previously it was split
between the wrapper, editableConstraint itself, the legalValues
component.
- the `useEditableConstraint` hook accepts a constraint and a save
function and returns an editable version of that constraint, the
validator for input values, a function that accepts update commands,
and, when relevant, existing and deleted legal values.
- All the logic for updating a constraint now exists in the
`constraint-reducer` file. As a pure function, it'll be easy to unit
test pretty thoroughly to make sure all commands work as they should
(tests will come later)
- The legal values selector has been dumbed down consiberably as it no
longer needs to create its own internal weak map. The internal
representation of selected values is now a set, so any kind of lookup is
now constant time, which should remove the need for the extra layer of
abstraction.

## Discussion points

I know the reducer pattern isn't one we use a *lot* in Unleash, but I
found a couple examples of it in the front end and it's also quite
similar to how we handle state updates to change request states. I'd be
happy to find a different way to represent it if we can keep it in a
single, testable interface.

Semi-relatedly: I've exposed the actions to submit for the updates at
the moment, but we could map these to functions instead. It'd make
invocations a little easier (you wouldn't need to specify the action
yourself; only use the payload as a function arg if there is one), but
we'd end up doing more mapping to create them. I'm not sure it's worth
it, but I also don't mind if we do 💁🏼
2025-05-09 11:47:22 +02:00
..
.yarn/releases chore(deps): update yarn to v4.7.0 (#9475) 2025-03-10 14:41:07 +00:00
cypress refactor: remove flagOverviewRedesign flag (#9888) 2025-05-06 10:25:57 +02:00
public
scripts feat: update Orval config (#8038) 2024-09-02 15:14:48 +02:00
src Refactor: get rid of editable constraint wrapper (#9921) 2025-05-09 11:47:22 +02:00
.editorconfig
.gitignore chore: Add Thomas's weird files to .gitignore (#8872) 2024-11-27 16:53:33 +01:00
.npmignore
.nvmrc
.yarnrc.yml chore(deps): update yarn to v4.7.0 (#9475) 2025-03-10 14:41:07 +00:00
check-imports.rc
cypress.config.ts
cypress.d.ts
index.html feat: use Unleash React SDK in Admin UI (#9723) 2025-04-10 08:26:30 +02:00
index.js feat: biome lint frontend (#4903) 2023-10-02 13:25:46 +01:00
orval.config.js feat: update Orval config (#8038) 2024-09-02 15:14:48 +02:00
package.json chore(deps): update dependency vite to v5.4.19 [security] (#9899) 2025-05-06 08:15:37 +00:00
README.md feat: application usage frontend (#4561) 2023-08-24 13:13:02 +03:00
tsconfig.json
tsconfig.node.json
vercel.json
vite.config.mts chore: add file and component names to styled output class names in dev (#9351) 2025-02-24 14:45:20 +01:00
yarn.lock chore(deps): update dependency vite to v5.4.19 [security] (#9899) 2025-05-06 08:15:37 +00:00

frontend

This directory contains the Unleash Admin UI frontend app.

Run with a local instance of the unleash-api

Refer to the Contributing to Unleash guide for instructions. The frontend dev server runs (in port 3000) simultaneously with the backend dev server (in port 4242):

yarn install
yarn dev

Run with a sandbox instance of the Unleash API

Alternatively, instead of running unleash-api on localhost, you can use a remote instance:

cd ./frontend
yarn install
yarn run start:sandbox

Running end-to-end tests

We have a set of Cypress tests that run on the build before a PR can be merged so it's important that you check these yourself before submitting a PR. On the server the tests will run against the deployed Heroku app so this is what you probably want to test against:

yarn run start:sandbox

In a different shell, you can run the tests themselves:

yarn run e2e:heroku

If you need to test against patches against a local server instance, you'll need to run that, and then run the end to end tests using:

yarn run e2e

You may also need to test that a feature works against the enterprise version of unleash. Assuming the Heroku instance is still running, this can be done by:

yarn run start:enterprise
yarn run e2e

Generating the OpenAPI client

The frontend uses an OpenAPI client generated from the backend's OpenAPI spec. Whenever there are changes to the backend API, the client should be regenerated:

For now we only use generated types (src/openapi/models). We will use methods (src/openapi/apis) for new features soon.

yarn gen:api
rm -rf src/openapi/apis

clean up src/openapi/index.ts imports, only keep first line export * from './models';

This script assumes that you have a running instance of the enterprise backend at http://localhost:4242. The new OpenAPI client will be generated from the runtime schema of this instance. The target URL can be changed by setting the UNLEASH_OPENAPI_URL env var.

Analyzing bundle size

npx vite-bundle-visualizer in the root of the frontend directory