$ yarn install
File public/app-config.json
must be created by duplicating public/app-config.template.json
and filling in the encryptionKey.
The app uses the DHIS2 data store to persist custom data. Whenever the schema of the data store changes, we'll create a migration task with an incremental version. *.ts files in this folder are automatically loaded.
When writing a migration, we must define the old/new types of data structures used in that migration task. Note that we cannot rely on types on the app, as they may have diverged. For fields/objects we must reference but don't care the type, we will use unknown
(not any
).
When the app starts, it will check the data store version and open a dialog if a migration is required. You can also run the migrations on the CLI:
$ yarn migrate 'http://admin:PASSWORD@localhost:8080'
The app provides a server-side scheduler script that runs synchronization rules in the background. The script requires Node v10+.
- Unzip metadata-synchronization-server.zip and can be executed like this:
$ cd metadata-synchronization-server
$ node index.js -c app-config.json
To connect to the destination instance, it requires a configuration file. If no configuration file is supplied the following is used as a placeholder:
{
"encryptionKey": "encryptionKey",
"baseUrl": "https://play.dhis2.org/2.30",
"username": "admin",
"password": "district"
}
$ yarn start
Now in your browser, go to http://localhost:8081
.
Notes:
-
Requests to DHIS2 will be transparently proxied (see
src/setupProxy.js
) fromhttp://localhost:8081/dhis2/path
tohttp://localhost:8080/path
to avoid CORS and cross-domain problems. -
The optional environment variable
REACT_APP_DHIS2_AUTH=USERNAME:PASSWORD
forces some credentials to be used by the proxy. This variable is usually not set, so the app has the same user logged in atREACT_APP_DHIS2_BASE_URL
. -
The optional environment variable
REACT_APP_PROXY_LOG_LEVEL
can be helpful to debug the proxyfied requests (accepts: "warn" | "debug" | "info" | "error" | "silent") -
Create a file
.env.local
(copy it from.env
) to customize environment variables so you can simply runyarn start
. -
why-did-you-render is installed, but it does not work when using standard react scripts (
yarn start
). Instead, useyarn craco-start
to debug re-renders with WDYR. Note that hot reloading does not work out-of-the-box with craco.
$ yarn start -p 8082 core-app|data-metadata-app|module-package-app|modules-list|package-exporter|msf-aggregate-data-app
This will open the development server for the given front-end at port 8082 and will connect to DHIS 2 instance http://localhost:8080.
REACT_APP_DHIS2_BASE_URL=http://localhost:8080
To use a different DHIS2 instance url set this environment variable before running a start
command.
Run unit tests:
$ yarn test
Run integration tests locally:
$ export CYPRESS_DHIS2_AUTH='admin:district'
$ export CYPRESS_EXTERNAL_API="http://localhost:8080"
$ export CYPRESS_ROOT_URL=http://localhost:8081
$ export CYPRESS_ENCRYPTION_KEY=anyKey
$ yarn cy:e2e:run # non-interactive
$ yarn cy:e2e:open # interactive UI
Application should be running at CYPRESS_ROOT_URL with as the environment variable REACT_APP_CYPRESS set to True.
For this to work in Travis CI, you will have to create an environment variables (Settings -> Environment Variables) CYPRESS_DHIS2_AUTH with the password used in your testing DHIS2 instance and CYPRESS_ENCRYPTION_KEY used to encrypt passwords of receiver instances.
Note tests only pass on the testing docker instance eyeseetea/dhis2-data:2.30-datasync-sender
To build all the front-ends:
$ yarn build
To build a given front-end:
$ yarn build [all|core-app|data-metadata-app|module-package-app|modules-list|package-exporter|msf-aggregate-data-app|sp-emergency-responses]
To build the scheduler:
$ yarn build-scheduler
This script generate a metadata-synchronization-server.zip file.
$ yarn update-po
# ... add/edit translations in po files ...
$ yarn localize