Move CONTRIBUTING into README and improve docs on running integration tests locally (#11373)

Co-authored-by: Sean Massa <EndangeredMassa@gmail.com>
This commit is contained in:
Jeff See
2024-04-04 01:50:04 -04:00
committed by GitHub
parent c24d85f574
commit b9f6d765c0
3 changed files with 134 additions and 108 deletions

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Move CONTRIBUTING into README and improve docs on running integration tests locally

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# Contributing
## Contributing
When contributing to this repository, please first discuss the change you wish to make via [GitHub Discussions](https://github.com/vercel/vercel/discussions/new) with the owners of this repository before submitting a Pull Request.
Please read our [Code of Conduct](CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md) and follow it in all your interactions with the project.
## Local development
This project is configured in a monorepo, where one repository contains multiple npm packages. Dependencies are installed and managed with `pnpm`, not `npm` CLI.
To get started, execute the following:
```
git clone https://github.com/vercel/vercel
cd vercel
corepack enable
pnpm install
pnpm build
pnpm lint
pnpm test-unit
```
Make sure all the tests pass before making changes.
### Running Vercel CLI Changes
You can use `pnpm dev` from the `cli` package to invoke Vercel CLI with local changes:
```
cd ./packages/cli
pnpm dev <cli-commands...>
```
See [CLI Local Development](../packages/cli#local-development) for more details.
## Verifying your change
Once you are done with your changes (we even suggest doing it along the way), make sure all the tests still pass by running:
```
pnpm test-unit
```
from the root of the project.
If any test fails, make sure to fix it along with your changes. See [Interpreting test errors](#Interpreting-test-errors) for more information about how the tests are executed, especially the integration tests.
## Pull Request Process
Once you are confident that your changes work properly, open a pull request on the main repository.
The pull request will be reviewed by the maintainers and the tests will be checked by our continuous integration platform.
## Interpreting test errors
There are 2 kinds of tests in this repository Unit tests and Integration tests.
Unit tests are run locally with `jest` and execute quickly because they are testing the smallest units of code.
### Integration tests
Integration tests create deployments to your Vercel account using the `test` project name. After each test is deployed, the `probes` key is used to check if the response is the expected value. If the value doesn't match, you'll see a message explaining the difference. If the deployment failed to build, you'll see a more generic message like the following:
```
[Error: Fetched page https://test-8ashcdlew.vercel.app/root.js does not contain hello Root!. Instead it contains An error occurred with this application.
NO_STATUS_CODE_FRO Response headers:
cache-control=s-maxage=0
connection=close
content-type=text/plain; charset=utf-8
date=Wed, 19 Jun 2019 18:01:37 GMT
server=now
strict-transport-security=max-age=63072000
transfer-encoding=chunked
x-now-id=iad1:hgtzj-1560967297876-44ae12559f95
x-now-trace=iad1]
```
In such cases, you can visit the URL of the failed deployment and append `/_logs` to see the build error. In the case above, that would be https://test-8ashcdlew.vercel.app/_logs
The logs of this deployment will contain the actual error which may help you to understand what went wrong.
### @vercel/nft
Some of the Builders use `@vercel/nft` to tree-shake files before deployment. If you suspect an error with this tree-shaking mechanism, you can create the following script in your project:
```js
const { nodeFileTrace } = require('@vercel/nft');
nodeFileTrace(['path/to/entrypoint.js'], {
ts: true,
mixedModules: true,
})
.then(o => console.log(o.fileList))
.then(e => console.error(e));
```
When you run this script, you'll see all the imported files. If anything file is missing, the bug is in [@vercel/nft](https://github.com/vercel/nft) and not the Builder.
## Deploy a Builder with existing project
Sometimes you want to test changes to a Builder against an existing project, maybe with `vercel dev` or actual deployment. You can avoid publishing every Builder change to npm by uploading the Builder as a tarball.
1. Change directory to the desired Builder `cd ./packages/node`
2. Run `pnpm build` to compile typescript and other build steps
3. Run `npm pack` to create a tarball file
4. Run `vercel *.tgz` to upload the tarball file and get a URL
5. Edit any existing `vercel.json` project and replace `use` with the URL
6. Run `vercel` or `vercel dev` to deploy with the experimental Builder
See the [Contributing Guidelines](../README.md#contributing) for more details.

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README.md
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You can use the `dev` script to run local changes as if you were invoking Vercel CLI. For example, `vercel deploy --cwd=/path/to/project` could be run with local changes with `pnpm dev deploy --cwd=/path/to/project`.
See the [Contributing Guidelines](./.github/CONTRIBUTING.md) for more details.
When contributing to this repository, please first discuss the change you wish to make via [GitHub Discussions](https://github.com/vercel/vercel/discussions/new) with the owners of this repository before submitting a Pull Request.
Please read our [Code of Conduct](CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md) and follow it in all your interactions with the project.
### Local development
This project is configured in a monorepo, where one repository contains multiple npm packages. Dependencies are installed and managed with `pnpm`, not `npm` CLI.
To get started, execute the following:
```
git clone https://github.com/vercel/vercel
cd vercel
corepack enable
pnpm install
pnpm build
pnpm lint
pnpm test-unit
```
Make sure all the tests pass before making changes.
#### Running Vercel CLI Changes
You can use `pnpm dev` from the `cli` package to invoke Vercel CLI with local changes:
```
cd ./packages/cli
pnpm dev <cli-commands...>
```
See [CLI Local Development](../packages/cli#local-development) for more details.
### Verifying your change
Once you are done with your changes (we even suggest doing it along the way), make sure all the tests still pass by running:
```
pnpm test-unit
```
from the root of the project.
If any test fails, make sure to fix it along with your changes. See [Interpreting test errors](#Interpreting-test-errors) for more information about how the tests are executed, especially the integration tests.
### Pull Request Process
Once you are confident that your changes work properly, open a pull request on the main repository.
The pull request will be reviewed by the maintainers and the tests will be checked by our continuous integration platform.
### Interpreting test errors
There are 2 kinds of tests in this repository Unit tests and Integration tests.
Unit tests are run locally with `jest` and execute quickly because they are testing the smallest units of code.
#### Integration tests
Integration tests create deployments to your Vercel account using the `test` project name. After each test is deployed, the `probes` key is used to check if the response is the expected value. If the value doesn't match, you'll see a message explaining the difference. If the deployment failed to build, you'll see a more generic message like the following:
```
[Error: Fetched page https://test-8ashcdlew.vercel.app/root.js does not contain hello Root!. Instead it contains An error occurred with this application.
NO_STATUS_CODE_FRO Response headers:
cache-control=s-maxage=0
connection=close
content-type=text/plain; charset=utf-8
date=Wed, 19 Jun 2019 18:01:37 GMT
server=now
strict-transport-security=max-age=63072000
transfer-encoding=chunked
x-now-id=iad1:hgtzj-1560967297876-44ae12559f95
x-now-trace=iad1]
```
In such cases, you can visit the URL of the failed deployment and append `/_logs` to see the build error. In the case above, that would be https://test-8ashcdlew.vercel.app/_logs
The logs of this deployment will contain the actual error which may help you to understand what went wrong.
##### Running integration tests locally
While running the full integration suite locally is not recommended, it's sometimes useful to isolate a failing test by running it on your machine. To do so, you'll need to ensure you have the appropriate credentials sourced in your shell:
1. Create an access token. Follow the insructions here https://vercel.com/docs/rest-api#creating-an-access-token. Ensure the token scope is for your personal
account.
2. Grab the team ID from the Vercel dashboard at `https://vercel.com/<MY-TEAM>/~/settings`.
3. Source these into your shell rc file: `echo 'export VERCEL_TOKEN=<MY-TOKEN> VERCEL_TEAM_ID=<MY-TEAM-ID>' >> ~/.zshrc`
From there, you should be able to trigger an integration test. Choose one
that's already isolated to check that things work:
```
cd packages/next
```
Run the test:
```
pnpm test test/fixtures/00-server-build/index.test.js
```
#### @vercel/nft
Some of the Builders use `@vercel/nft` to tree-shake files before deployment. If you suspect an error with this tree-shaking mechanism, you can create the following script in your project:
```js
const { nodeFileTrace } = require('@vercel/nft');
nodeFileTrace(['path/to/entrypoint.js'], {
ts: true,
mixedModules: true,
})
.then(o => console.log(o.fileList))
.then(e => console.error(e));
```
When you run this script, you'll see all the imported files. If anything file is missing, the bug is in [@vercel/nft](https://github.com/vercel/nft) and not the Builder.
### Deploy a Builder with existing project
Sometimes you want to test changes to a Builder against an existing project, maybe with `vercel dev` or actual deployment. You can avoid publishing every Builder change to npm by uploading the Builder as a tarball.
1. Change directory to the desired Builder `cd ./packages/node`
2. Run `pnpm build` to compile typescript and other build steps
3. Run `npm pack` to create a tarball file
4. Run `vercel *.tgz` to upload the tarball file and get a URL
5. Edit any existing `vercel.json` project and replace `use` with the URL
6. Run `vercel` or `vercel dev` to deploy with the experimental Builder
## Reference