Thanks for your interest in contributing to the package! ❤️
This document describes how to set up a development environment and submit your contributions.
The following tools need to be installed to develop on package locally.
The basic commands to get the repository cloned and built locally follow:
$ git clone git@github.com:spacecomx/cdk-billing-alarm.git
$ cd cdk-billing-alarm
$ yarn # install dependencies
$ yarn build # build project with projen
The package uses projen that has the following scripts:
build
- builds the package and runs all unit testswatch
- watches for file changes and builds them progressivelytest
- executes all unit teststest:update
- executes all unit tests and overwrites snapshot expectations (those.snap
files).test:watch
- runs all unit tests and reruns tests when files are changedpackage
- emits publishable artifacts todist
.eslint
- run linter against source code
Each of these scripts can be executed using yarn <script>
or npx projen <script>
.
Tests are located under test
and executed from javascript code, so
make sure to compile once before running any tests.
One trick for quickly iterating is to run yarn watch
in one terminal, and
yarn test:watch
in another. Then, when you change your unit tests the code
will automatically recompile, thus triggering the tests to automatically re-run.
Eslint is used to lint and format our typescript code. The eslint
script can be run from the root of the package.
You can integrate the linting and formatting workflow with your editor or ide by installing the approporiate eslint plugin. For example, when using Visual Studio Code, the eslint plugin exposes a number of options including "fix on save". This will auto correct lint and formatting errors whenever possible while saving a document.
Currently the package uses projen that bumps versions automatically thru a GitHub action when a commit pushed to master successfully builds. Projen follows semantic versioning through the standard-version npm utility.
- Commit title and message (and PR title and description) must adhere to conventionalcommits.
- The title must begin with
feat(module): title
,fix(module): title
,refactor(module): title
,doc(module): title
orchore(module): title
, where the module refers to the projects or components that the change centers on. The module can be omitted, so "feat: title" is okay as well. - Title should be lowercase.
- No period at the end of the title.
- The title must begin with
- Commit message should describe motivation. Think about your code reviewers and what information they need in order to understand what you did. If it's a big commit (hopefully not), try to provide some good entry points so it will be easier to follow.
- Commit message should indicate which issues are fixed:
fixes #<issue>
orcloses #<issue>
. - Shout out to collaborators.
- If not obvious (i.e. from unit tests), describe how you verified that your change works.
- If this commit includes breaking changes, they must be listed at the end in the following format (notice how multiple breaking changes should be formatted):
BREAKING CHANGE: Description of what broke and how to achieve this behavior now
* **module-name:** Another breaking change
* **module-name:** Yet another breaking change