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Contributing

Issues

You can find our open issues in the project's issue tracker. Please let us know if you find any issues or have any feature requests there.

Contributing

If you want to contribute to the project, your help is very welcome. Just fork the project, make your changes and send us a pull request. You can find the detailed description of how to do this in Github's guide to contributing to projects.

Our Roadmap page is a comprehensive list of tasks we want to do in the future. It is a good place to start if you want to contribute to Vizzu. In case you have something else in mind, that's awesome and we are very interested in hearing about it.

CI-CD

Development environment

The following steps demonstrate how to set up the development environment on an Ubuntu 22.04 operating system. However, the process can be adapted for other operating systems as well.

To contribute to the JavaScript part of the project, it is recommended to use Node.js 18.

Run the following command to install the JavaScript development dependencies:

npm install

The JavaScript development requirements are installed based on the package-lock.json file. To update the development requirements, you can use the command npm run lock:js.

However, for the documentation we are also using Python. If you plan to contribute to this part of the project, you will need Python, preferably version 3.10.

Run the following command to install the Python development dependencies:

./tools/ci/run/init-py.sh

The Python development requirements are installed based on the tools/ci/pdm.lock file. To update the development requirements, you can use the command npm run lock:py.

Note: For all available npm scripts, run npm run --list.

To contribute to the C++ part of the project, it is recommended to use Docker, but based on the Dockerfiles below, you can also configure the necessary dependencies on your local machine.

Run the following commands to build and run the Desktop version's development environment

docker build -t vizzu/vizzu-dev-desktop -f tools/ci/docker/vizzu-dev-desktop .
docker run -i -t -v .:/workspace vizzu/vizzu-dev-desktop bash

or you can use a specific version of the prebuilt image:

docker run -i -t -v .:/workspace vizzu/vizzu-dev-desktop:0.10 bash

Run the following commands to build and run the WASM version's development environment

docker build -t vizzu/vizzu-dev-wasm -f tools/ci/docker/vizzu-dev-wasm .
docker run -i -t -v .:/workspace vizzu/vizzu-dev-wasm bash

or you can use a specific version of the prebuilt image:

docker run -i -t -v .:/workspace vizzu/vizzu-dev-wasm:0.10 bash

Building the project

Building Desktop version

Run the following script in the running vizzu-dev-desktop container to build the Desktop version and run the C++ unit tests:

./tools/ci/run/pkg-build-desktop.sh

Note: A successful gcc and a clang build are required to contribute, just like successful format checks and linter checks (on the cvizzu and vizzutest targets).

Run the following script in the running vizzu-dev-desktop container to build the Desktop version with gcc, clangformat, and run the C++ unit tests:

./tools/ci/run/pkg-build-desktop-clangformat.sh

Run the following script in the running vizzu-dev-desktop container to build the Desktop version with clang, clangtidy, cppcheck and run the C++ unit tests:

./tools/ci/run/pkg-build-desktop-clangtidy.sh

Building WASM version

Run the following script in the running vizzu-dev-wasm container to build the WASM version, run the C++ unit tests, check binary sizes, compile TypeScript, run JavaScript unit tests, create vizzu.min.js and check d.ts:

./tools/ci/run/pkg-build-wasm.sh

Note: To debug WASM version under Chrome:

  • set Chrome/DevTools/Settings/Experiments/'WebAssembly Debugging: Enable DWARF support' to true
  • set [repo]/project/cmake/emcc.txt: CMAKE_EXE_LINKER_FLAGS_DEBUG --source-map-base to the URL where the browser can find cvizzu.wasm.map file.

Building npm package

If you used the above script to build the WASM version, the minified JavaScript file is already created otherwise you can run npm run build:ts && npm run rollup. After run the following command in order to create the npm package:

npm run set-version
npm run build:js

Note: This task will set the version number in the package.json file.

Note: You can build the npm package without building the WASM version:

npm run build:wasm-wocpp
npm run set-version
npm run build:js

CI

The CI pipeline includes code formatting checks, code analysis, typing validation, and unit tests for the Vizzu project.

To run the entire CI pipeline, execute the following npm script:

npm run ci

However, if you want to run the CI steps on specific parts of the project, you can use the following scripts: ci:src, ci:docs, or ci:tools.

Formatting

You can check the code's formatting using the format script:

npm run format

If you need to fix any formatting issues, you can use the fix-format script:

npm run fix-format

If you wish to format specific parts of the project, you can use the following scripts: format:src, format:docs, format:tools, or fix-format:src, fix-format:docs, fix-format:tools.

Code analyses

To perform code analyses, you can use the lint script:

npm run lint

If you need to run code analyses for specific parts of the project, you can utilize the following scripts: lint:src, lint:docs, or lint:tools.

Typing

For type checking, you can use the type script:

npm run type

If you want to check specific parts of the project, you can use the following script: type:tools.

Testing

Run the following command to start e2e testing:

npm test

For information on how e2e testing works and what options it has, please see the program help:

npm test -- --help

Manual testing

Test cases can be viewed using different versions of Vizzu using the manual checker.

npm run test:man
# Press CTRL and click on the URL to open it in the default browser

For more options please see the program help.

npm run test:man -- --help

"Nightly" builds

Builds from the CI are available on the following URLs. However, you should use these only for development purposes since they are subject to frequent and sometimes unstable changes.

  • build from the HEAD commit of the main branch:

    https://vizzu-lib-main.storage.googleapis.com/lib/vizzu.js

    and the minified, boundled version:

    https://vizzu-lib-main.storage.googleapis.com/lib/vizzu.min.js

  • all builds of the past 30 days:

    https://vizzu-lib-main-sha.storage.googleapis.com/lib-HASH/vizzu.js

    where HASH is the first 7 character of the commit's git hash.

Documentation

Note: The showcases and some images are stored in the vizzu-lib-doc repository. If you wish to build the site, run the following command:

git clone --single-branch --branch main --depth 1 'git@github.com:vizzuhq/vizzu-lib-doc'

Note: If you also want to generate thumbnails, run the following command:

npm run gen-thumbnail

To build the documentation, you can use the build-docs script:

npm run build-docs

You can read the online version at lib.vizzuhq.com.

Release

Vizzu is distributed on npm. Note: You need to be an administrator to release the project.

To release Vizzu, follow the steps below:

  • You should increase the version number in src/chart/main/version.cpp.
  • If the major or minor version has changed, increase the version in .github/workflows/docker-vizzu-dev-desktop.yml, .github/workflows/docker-vizzu-dev-wasm.yml, tools/ci/gcp/cloudbuild/cloudbuild.yaml and CONTRIBUTING.md.
  • Set the release and release date in CHANGELOG.md, under the Unreleased title.
  • Create the release notes from CHANGELOG.md and publish the new release on Releases.