How to setup a JS development environment in 2018

This blog post is a summary of the excellent Pluralsight Course by Cory House.

Editor and Configuration

First of all, editor of choice here is surprise surprise VS Code. I’m actually happly surprised that Erich Gamma is behind this.

Use EditorConfig to manage, well, editor configurations. Tabs VS spaces, etc. Note that VS Code need to install a plugin for it to work.

The example .editorconfig file:

root = true [ * ] indent_style = space indent_size = 2 end_of_line = lf insert_final_newline = true trim_trailing_whitespace = true charset = utf - 8 [ * . md ] trim_trailing_whitespace = true

Package Management

Package Manager

The choice of our package manager is npm.

The package.json has all the packages that will be used in the course.

{ "name" : "javascript-development-environment" , "version" : "1.0.0" , "description" : "JavaScript development environment Pluralsight course by Cory House" , "scripts" : {}, "author" : "Cory House" , "license" : "MIT" , "dependencies" : { "npm" : "^6.0.1" , "whatwg-fetch" : "1.0.0" }, "devDependencies" : { "babel-cli" : "6.16.0" , "babel-core" : "6.17.0" , "babel-loader" : "6.2.5" , "babel-preset-latest" : "6.16.0" , "babel-register" : "6.16.3" , "chai" : "3.5.0" , "chalk" : "1.1.3" , "cheerio" : "0.22.0" , "compression" : "1.6.2" , "cross-env" : "3.1.3" , "css-loader" : "0.25.0" , "eslint" : "3.8.1" , "eslint-plugin-import" : "2.0.1" , "eslint-watch" : "2.1.14" , "express" : "4.14.0" , "extract-text-webpack-plugin" : "1.0.1" , "html-webpack-plugin" : "2.22.0" , "jsdom" : "9.8.0" , "json-schema-faker" : "0.3.6" , "json-server" : "0.8.22" , "localtunnel" : "1.8.1" , "mocha" : "3.1.2" , "nock" : "8.1.0" , "npm-run-all" : "3.1.1" , "nsp" : "2.6.2" , "numeral" : "1.5.3" , "open" : "0.0.5" , "rimraf" : "2.5.4" , "style-loader" : "0.13.1" , "webpack" : "1.13.2" , "webpack-dev-middleware" : "1.8.4" , "webpack-hot-middleware" : "2.13.0" , "webpack-md5-hash" : "0.0.5" } }

To install the packages, do npm install .

Package Security

Since everyone can submit to npm, it is better to check for any vulnerabilities before using packages.

https://nodesecurity.io/

To install:

npm install -g nsp

To run:

nsp check

Development Web Server

We are gonna use Express as our development web server.

Create the /buildScript/srcServer.js :

var express = require ( 'express' ); var path = require ( 'path' ); var open = require ( 'open' ); var port = 3000 ; var app = express (); app . get ( '/' , function ( req , res ) { res . sendFile ( path . join ( __dirname , '../src/index.html' )); }); app . listen ( port , function ( err ) { if ( err ) { console . log ( err ); } else { open ( 'http://localhost:' + port ); } });

Then create the /src/index.html :

< html > < body > < h1 > Hello World!! </ h1 > </ body > </ html >

Sharing Work In Progress

For expose your WIP to the world, let’s use localtunnel.

npm install -g localtunnel

Start your app.

lt --port 8000

Automation

We choose npm script here. Let’s try it out.

npm scripts

First, write the script to start the dev server, in package.json :

... "scripts" : { "start" : "node buildScript/srcServer.js" }, ...

Now we can start the server by just npm start

Pre/Post Hooks

Create buildScript/startMessage.js :

var chalk = require ( 'chalk' ); console . log ( chalk . green ( 'Starting app in dev mode...' ));

Then add prestart to the scripts:

... "scripts" : { "prestart" : "node buildScript/startMessage.js" , "start" : "node buildScript/srcServer.js" }, ...

Now if we run npm start , the prestart script will be ran before the start script.

Add Security Check and Share

We now create a script to run security check and share:

... "scripts" : { "prestart" : "node buildScript/startMessage.js" , "start" : "node buildScript/srcServer.js" , "security-check" : "nsp check;exit 0" , "share" : "lt --port 3000" }, ...

Notice that in this way, nsp doesn’t need to be installed globally.

One thing that is not mentioned in the video is that if nsp check finds some vulnerabilities, it will fail npm. To fix this, we can just force it to always return 0.

Concurrent Tasks

Run mutiple tasks in parallel:

... "start" : "npm-run-all --parallel security-check open:src" , "open:src" : "node buildScripts/srcServer.js" , ...

Transpiling

We choose Babel to compile newer javascript code to older one.

Let’s first add the .babelrc to the root of our project:

{ "presets" : [ "latest" ] }

This basically says use the latest JS.

Let’s try to use the module feature from ES6 in startMessage.js :

import chalk from 'chalk' ;

Now in package.json we use babel-node instead of ´node´.

... "prestart" : "babel-node buildScripts/startMessage.js" , ...

Bundling

We choose ES6 Modules to be the module format and webpack as the bundler.

Configure Webpack with Express

Now create a webpack.config.dev.js in the root:

import path from 'path' ; export default { debug : true , devtool : 'inline-source-map' , noInfo : false , entry : [ path . resolve ( __dirname , 'src/index' ) ], target : 'web' , output : { path : path . resolve ( __dirname , 'src' ), publicPath : '/' , filename : 'bundle.js' }, plugins : [], module : { loaders : [ { test : /\.js$/ , exclude : /node_modules/ , loaders : [ 'babel' ]}, { test : /\.css$/ , loaders : [ 'style' , 'css' ]} ] } }

Then we need to configure Express to use it.

In /buildScripts/srcServer.js :

... import webpack from 'webpack' import config from '../webpack.config.dev' const port = 3000 const app = express () const compiler = webpack ( config ) app . use ( require ( 'webpack-dev-middleware' )( compiler , { noInfo : true , publicPath : config . output . publicPath })) ...

Create an App Entry Point

First create /src/index.js :

import numeral from 'numeral' const courseValue = numeral ( 1000 ). format ( '$0,0.00' ) console . log ( `I would pay ${ courseValue } for this course!` )

Now start the app, you should see that bundle.js from the browser, it is not really a physical file but in memory.

Handling CSS with Webpack

First let’s create /src/index.css :

body { font-family : sans-serif ; } table th { padding : 5px }

Now we can import this css into our index.html through index.js .

In index.js add one line:

import './index.js'

Sourcemap

Sourcemap allows us to see the original code in the browser console. We have already configured it in our webpack config

devtool: 'inline-source-map' .

Now if you try to set a debugger break point in the index.js , you can see the original code in the browser console.

The cool thing is that this sourcemap will only be downloaded when the console is open, neat.

Linting

We choose ESLint.

Create /.eslintrc.json :

{ "root" : true , "extends" : [ "eslint:recommended" , "plugin:import/errors" , "plugin:import/warnings" ], "parserOptions" : { "ecmaVersion" : 7 , "sourceType" : "module" }, "env" : { "browser" : true , "node" : true , "mocha" : true }, "rules" : { "no-console" : 1 } }

Next, create a lint script in the package.json :

... "scripts" : { "lint" : "esw webpack.config.* src buildScripts --color; exit 0" }, ...

Watch files

To watch for file changes and run eslint, we create another script, and add it to the start script.

... "scripts" : { ... "start" : "npm-run-all --parallel security-check open:src lint:watch" , "lint:watch" : "npm run lint -- --watch" , ... }, ...

Testing and Continuous Integration

First of all, let’s frame the scope here, we are talking about unit testing, not UI testing.

OK, now we have to make 6 decisions:

Testing Framework: Mocha Assertion Library: Chai Helper Library: JSDOM, Cheerio Where to Run Tests: Here we choose JSDOM again. Where do Test Files Belong? Alongside the file being tested. When should tests run? Unit Tests Should Run When You Hit Save.

Now we have made the decisions, let’s it all setup.

First let’s add a script to configure the tests /buildScripts/testSetup.js :

// This file is't transpiled, so must use CommonJS and ES5 // Register babel to transpile before our tests run. require ( 'babel-register' )(); // Disable webpack features that Mocha doesn't understand require . extensions [ '.css' ] = function () {};

Now create a task to run tests:

"scripts" : { ... "test" : "mocha --reporter progress buildScripts/testSetup.js \"src/**/*.test.js\"" , ... }, ...

Now let’s write some simple tests to try it out.

Create /src/index.test.js :

import { expect } from 'chai' ; import jsdom from 'jsdom' ; import fs from 'fs' ; describe ( 'Our first test' , () => { it ( 'should pass' , () => { expect ( true ). to . equal ( true ); }); }); describe ( 'index.html' , () => { it ( 'should say hello' , ( done ) => { const index = fs . readFileSync ( "./src/index.html" , "utf-8" ); jsdom . env ( index , function ( err , window ) { const h1 = window . document . getElementsByTagName ( 'h1' )[ 0 ]; expect ( h1 . innerHTML ). to . equal ( "Hello World!" ); done (); window . close (); }); }) })

Now if you run npm test , you will see 2 tests pass.

OK, let’s next configure the tests to be ran on every save.

Add the following task in package.json and add it in start :

"scripts" : { ... "start" : "npm-run-all --parallel security-check open:src lint:watch test:watch" , "test:watch" : "npm run test -- --watch" ... },

Setup Travis CI

Go to Travis and login with github account, go to profile and enable the js-dev-env project.

Now create /.travis.yml :

language : node_js node_js : - "6"

That’s all you need to setup Travis, now just wait and see the result.

HTTP Calls

Let’s first create a dummy api endpoint localhost:3000/users which just returns a list of user objects.

In /buildScripts/srcServer.js , add the following code:

app . get ( '/users' , function ( req , res ) { res . json ([ { "id" : 1 , "firstName" : "Bob" , "lastName" : "Smith" , "email" : "bob@gmail.com" }, { "id" : 2 , "firstName" : "Tammy" , "lastName" : "Norton" , "email" : "tammy@gmail.com" }, { "id" : 3 , "firstName" : "Tinna" , "lastName" : "Lee" , "email" : "tina@yahoo.com" } ]); });

Next, let’s create /src/api/userApi.js :

import 'whatwg-fetch' ; export function getUsers () { return get ( 'users' ); } function get ( url ) { return fetch ( url ). then ( onSuccess , onError ); } function onSuccess ( response ) { return response . json (); } function onError ( error ) { console . log ( error ); // eslint-disable-line no-console }

Then, put a table in the /src/index.html :

< h1 > Users </ h1 > < table > < thead > < th > </ th > < th > Id </ th > < th > First Name </ th > < th > Last Name </ th > < th > Email </ th > </ thead > < tbody id = "users" ></ tbody > </ table >

And in /src/index.js add:

import {getUsers} from './api/userApi'; // Populate table of users via API call getUsers().then(result => { let usersBody = ""; result.forEach(user => { usersBody += ` < tr > < td >< a href = "#" data-id = "${user.id}" class = "deleteUser" > Delete </ a ></ td > < td > ${user.id} </ td > < td > ${user.firstName} </ td > < td > ${user.lastName} </ td > < td > ${user.email} </ td > </ tr > ` }); window.document.getElementById('users').innerHTML = usersBody; });

Now we can see a list of users displayed in the table, great.

Our Plan for Mocking HTTP

Now let’s glue them together to generate some fake data!

First create /buildScripts/mockDataSchema.js :

export const schema = { "type" : "object" , "properties" : { "users" : { "type" : "array" , "minItems" : 3 , "maxItems" : 5 , "items" : { "type" : "object" , "properties" : { "id" : { "type" : "number" , "unique" : true , "minimum" : 1 }, "firstName" : { "type" : "string" , "faker" : "name.firstName" }, "lastName" : { "type" : "string" , "faker" : "name.lastName" }, "email" : { "type" : "string" , "faker" : "internet.email" } }, "required" : [ "id" , "firstName" , "lastName" , "email" ] } } }, "required" : [ "users" ] };

Next, write a script /buildScripts/generateMockData.js to generate fake data:

/* This script generate mock data for local development. */ /* eslint-disable no-console */ import jsf from 'json-schema-faker' ; import { schema } from './mockDataSchema' ; import fs from 'fs' ; import chalk from 'chalk' ; import faker from "faker" // This is a fix from github which is not in the video jsf . extend ( "faker" , function () { return faker }) const json = JSON . stringify ( jsf ( schema )); fs . writeFile ( "./src/api/db.json" , json , function ( err ) { if ( err ) { return console . log ( chalk . red ( err )); } else { console . log ( chalk . green ( "Mock data generated." )); } });

Finally, configure package.json to include it and also use json server serve the data.

"scripts" : { ... "start" : "npm-run-all --parallel security-check open:src lint:watch test:watch start-mockapi" , "generate-mock-data" : "babel-node buildScripts/generateMockData" , "prestart-mockapi" : "npm run generate-mock-data" , "start-mockapi" : "json-server --watch src/api/db.json --port 3001" ... },

We would like to use the fake api for development. How to do that?

Well first let’s create /src/api/baseUrl.js :

export default function getBaseUrl () { const inDevelopment = window . location . hostname === 'localhost' ; return inDevelopment ? 'http://localhost:3001' : '/' ; }

Now in /api/userApi.js make the following changes:

import getBaseUrl from './baseUrl' ; function get ( url ) { return fetch ( baseUrl + url ). then ( onSuccess , onError ); }

Now we have the get users api, let’s also add delete users api. First add the delete user api in /src/api/userApi.js :

export function deleteUser ( id ){ return del ( `users/ ${ id } ` ) } function del ( url ) { const request = new Request ( baseUrl + url , { method : 'DELETE' }); return fetch ( request ). then ( onSuccess , onError ); }

Then in /src/index.js add the following code:

// Populate table of users via API call getUsers (). then ( result => { ... const deleteLinks = window . document . getElementsByClassName ( 'deleteUser' ); // Must use array.from to create a real array from a DOM collection // getElementsByClassName only returns an "array like" object Array . from ( deleteLinks , link => { link . onclick = function ( event ) { const element = event . target ; event . preventDefault (); deleteUser ( element . attributes [ "data-id" ]. value ); const row = element . parentNode . parentNode ; row . parentNode . removeChild ( row ); }; }); });

Now if you click the delete button, that user will be removed from the screen, and also from the fake json data db!

Project Structure

Some useful tips on structuring JS projects:

JS Belongs in a .js File Organize by Feature instead of File Type Extract logic into *POJO*s.

Production Build

Minification and Sourcemaps

First create a webpack.config.prod.js for production:

import path from 'path' ; import webpack from 'webpack' ; export default { debug : true , devtool : 'source-map' , noInfo : false , entry : [ path . resolve ( __dirname , 'src/index' ) ], target : 'web' , output : { path : path . resolve ( __dirname , 'dist' ), publicPath : '/' , filename : 'bundle.js' }, plugins : [ // Eliminate duplicate packages when generating bundle new webpack . optimize . DedupePlugin (), // Minify JS new webpack . optimize . UglifyJsPlugin () ], module : { loaders : [ { test : /\.js$/ , exclude : /node_modules/ , loaders : [ 'babel' ]}, { test : /\.css$/ , loaders : [ 'style' , 'css' ]} ] } }

Note that we changed the output to dist and also added some plugins for minifications.

Next, let’s create a /buildScripts/distServer.js to serve the files in dist :

import express from 'express' ; import path from 'path' ; import open from 'open' ; import compression from 'compression' ; /* eslint-disable no-console */ const port = 3000 ; const app = express (); app . use ( compression ()); app . use ( express . static ( 'dist' )); app . get ( '/' , function ( req , res ) { res . sendFile ( path . join ( __dirname , '../dist/index.html' )); }); app . get ( '/users' , function ( req , res ) { res . json ([ { "id" : 1 , "firstName" : "Bob" , "lastName" : "Smith" , "email" : "bob@gmail.com" }, { "id" : 2 , "firstName" : "Tammy" , "lastName" : "Norton" , "email" : "tammy@gmail.com" }, { "id" : 3 , "firstName" : "Tinna" , "lastName" : "Lee" , "email" : "tina@yahoo.com" } ]); }); app . listen ( port , function ( err ) { if ( err ) { console . log ( err ); } else { open ( 'http://localhost:' + port ); } });

Toggle Mock Api

Then, let’s put in a better way to toggle between real data and mock data, modify /src/api/baseUrl.js :

export default function getBaseUrl () { return getQueryStringParameterByName ( 'useMockApi' ) ? 'http://localhost:3001/' : '/' ; } function getQueryStringParameterByName ( name , url ) { if ( ! url ) url = window . location . href ; name = name . replace ( /[\[\]]/g , "\\$&" ); var regex = new RegExp ( "[?&]" + name + "(=([^&#]*)|&|#|$)" ), results = regex . exec ( url ); if ( ! results ) return null ; if ( ! results [ 2 ]) return '' ; return decodeURIComponent ( results [ 2 ]. replace ( /\+/g , " " )); }

Now to use mock data, we just append ?useMockApi=true to the url in the browser.

Now it’s time to write some npm script to build all of these.

Add these new tasks:

"clean-dist" : "rimraf ./dist && mkdir dist" , "prebuild" : "npm-run-all clean-dist test lint" , "build" : "babel-node buildScripts/build.js" , "postbuild" : "babel-node buildScripts/distServer.js"

Now if you run npm run build -s , it will show that no index.html found, which is what we are going to tackle next.

Dynamic HTML Generation

Our solution to this is to use webpack to dynamically generate html files.

Add the following code to /webpack.config.prod.js :

import HtmlWebpackPlugin from 'html-webpack-plugin' ; plugins : [ // Create HTML file that includes reference to bundled JS. new HtmlWebpackPlugin ({ template : 'src/index.html' , minify : { removeComments : true , collapseWhitespace : true , removeRedundantAttributes : true , useShortDoctype : true , removeEmptyAttributes : true , removeStyleLinkTypeAttributes : true , keepClosingSlash : true , minifyJS : true , minifyCSS : true , minifyURLs : true }, inject : true }), ],

Now we can remove the javascript tag from index.html since it will be injected by webpack. Also copy the same to /webpack.config.dev.js .

Bundle Splitting

We are going to put all the vendor JS libraries in a separate bundle so that the client won’t have to donwload those libraries everytime when our application code changes.

First create a /src/vendor.js :

/* This file contains references to the vendor libraries we're using in this project. This is used by webpack in the production build only*. A separate bundle for vendor code is useful since it's unlikely to change as often as the application's code. So all the libraries we reference here will be written to vendor.js so they can be cached until one of them change. So basically, this avoids customers having to download a huge JS file anytime a line of code changes. They only have to download vendor.js when a vendor library changes which should be less frequent. Any files that aren't referenced here will be bundled into main.js for the production build. */ /* eslint-disable no-unused-vars */ import fetch from 'whatwg-fetch' ;

Then modify the webpack.config.prod.js as follows:

entry : { vendor : path . resolve ( __dirname , 'src/vendor' ), main : path . resolve ( __dirname , 'src/index' ) }, output : { ... filename : '[name].js' }, plugins : [ // Use CommonsChunkPlugin to create a separate bundle // of vendor libraries so that they're cached separatetly. new webpack . optimize . CommonsChunkPlugin ({ name : 'vendor' }), ... ],

Cache Busting

If we attach a hash number at the end of every files, then the client can cache the files forever until we make a new release.

Let’s do it.

In webpack.config.prod.js :

import WebpackMd5Hash from 'webpack-md5-hash' ; output : { ... filename : '[name].[chunkhash].js' }, plugins : [ // Hash the files using MD5 so that their names change when the content changes. new WebpackMd5Hash (), ... ]

Extract and Minify CSS

The goal is to extract out the css file and put a hash number in its name.

So in webpack.config.prod.js :

import ExtractTextPlugin from 'extract-text-webpack-plugin' ; plugins : [ // Generate an external css file with a hash in the filename new ExtractTextPlugin ( '[name].[contenthash].css' ), ... ] module : { loaders : [ ... { test : /\.css$/ , loader : ExtractTextPlugin . extract ( 'css?sourceMap' )} ]

Error Logging

The author uses TrackJS, since it is not free, I will omit this part all together.

Production Deploy

We will deploy the api backend to Heroku and the frontend to Surge.

Deploy API to Heroku

First, take a look at the guide on how to deploy nodejs app on Heroku.

OK, now let’s try to split up our project.

First separate out the api part. The author created a repo here already so we can just use that. Remember to run npm install after clone it.

Then follow the steps:

Login to Heroku.

heroku login

Deploy the app.

heroku create

git push heroku master

heroku ps:scale web=1

heroku open

OK, now the api site is deployed!

Now we go back to our project, open /src/api/baseUrl.js and update the following code:

export default function getBaseUrl () { return getQueryStringParameterByName ( 'useMockApi' ) ? 'http://localhost:3001/' : 'https://sheltered-wildwood-50048.herokuapp.com/' ; }

Deploy UI to Surge

Add one line to scripts in package.json :

"deploy": "surge ./dist"

Then run npm run build to build once.

Now we can deploy to surge npm run deploy .

The complete source code can be found here

P.S. Now we are at the end of this course, I have to say this is totally INSANE! I have to now take a 6 hour course to setup my development environment?!?!?!?!? What kind of obsurdity is this! And what is worse? This is only the beginning. What if I want to use Angular? React? Remember this is only the “starter kit”. I really hope this blog post will become obsolete soon.

~THE END~