dev
branch:
, deployed app: Heroku
main
branch:
, deployed app: Heroku
A web application for keeping track of items and loaning them out, written in Ruby on Rails. Created in the Scalable Software Engineering course at the HPI in Potsdam.
We use the Conventional Commits Specification v1.0.0 for writing commit messages. Please refer to the website for specific instructions.
Since we don't have many different modules / services, we do not specify a commit scope (write fix: ...
instead of fix(module): ...
).
We use the recommended commit types from the specification, namely:
feat:
A code change that introduces a new feature to the codebase (this correlates with MINOR in Semantic Versioning)fix:
A code change that patches a bug in your codebase (this correlates with PATCH in Semantic Versioning)refactor:
A code change that neither fixes a bug nor adds a featurebuild:
Changes that affect the build system or external dependencies (example scopes: pip, npm)ci:
Changes to CI configuration files and scripts (examples: GitHub Actions)docs:
Documentation only changesperf:
A code change that improves performancetest:
Adding missing tests or correcting existing tests
We practice Scaled Trunk-Based Development with a dev
branch as trunk. Hence our feature branches are short-lived and merged back into dev
as soon as possible. After consultation with POs, dev
can be merged into main
at any time to create a production release.
Our branches are named {team-initals}/{feature-name}
, eg. gdm/print-qrcode
. This allows folder grouping by team and easy identification of the feature being worked on.
Each PR requires at least one approved review before it can be merged into dev
. Each PR branch must be rebased on dev
before merging (or have dev
merged into the PR branch before).
Also please do not squash your commits.
We follow the Ruby Style Guide, which is enforced by RuboCop. Please use an editor extension to ensure that Rubocop offenses are highlighted directly.
Rubocop also allows to automatically fix offenses:
bundle exec rubocop --auto-correct
- Stimulus JS as the default JavaScript framework, augmenting HTML
- Bootstrap for layout, styling and icons
- Devise library for authentication
- FactoryBot to generate test data
- Capybara for feature testing
- shoulda for additional RSpec matchers
bundle exec rails db:migrate RAILS_ENV=development && bundle exec rails db:migrate RAILS_ENV=test
Migrate both test and development databasesrails assets:clobber && rails assets:precompile
Redo asset compilation
bundle exec rspec
Run the full test suite--format doc
More detailed test output-e 'search keyword in test name'
Specify what tests to run dynamically--exclude-pattern "spec/features/**/*.rb"
Exclude feature tests (which are typically fairly slow)
bundle exec rspec spec/<rest_of_file_path>.rb
Specify a folder or test file to runbundle exec rspec --profile
Examine run time of tests- Code coverage reports are written to
coverage/index.html
after test runs (by simplecov)
debug
anywhere in the code to access an interactive consolesave_and_open_page
within a feature test to inspect the state of a webpage in a browserrails c --sandbox
Test out some code in the Rails console without changing any datarails dbconsole
Starts the CLI of the database you're usingbundle exec rails routes
Show all the routes (and their names) of the applicationbundle exec rails about
Show stats on current Rails installation, including version numbers
rails g migration DoSomething
Create migration db/migrate/*_DoSomething.rbrails generate
takes a--pretend
/-p
option that shows what will be generated without changing anything
Ensure you have access to a Unix-like environment through:
- Your local Linux / MacOS installation
- Using the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL)
- Using a VM, e.g. Virtualbox and Vagrant
- Using a docker container
ruby --version
Ensure Ruby v2.7.4 using rbenv or RVMsqlite3 --version
Ensure SQLite3 database installationbundle --version
Ensure Bundler installation (gem install bundler
)bundle config set without 'production' && bundle install
Install gem dependencies fromGemfile
rails db:migrate
Setup the database, run migrationsrails assets:precompile && rails s
Compile assets & start dev server (default port 3000)bundle exec rspec --format documentation
Run the tests (using RSpec framework)
Note: This is only required in a production environment. There are hard-coded OIDC client credentials in this project which are configured to work in a local environment.
- register a new application with the redirect URI
http://{BASE_URL}/users/auth/openid_connect/callback
(adapt the base URL accordingly). - set the following variables in your rails environment:
OPENID_CONNECT_CLIENT_ID
OPENID_CONNECT_CLIENT_SECRET
To create a new user for debug purposes, open the rails console with rails console
then enter
user = User.create(
email: "[email protected]",
full_name: "Max Mustermann",
description: "A nice student!",
password: "ThisIs_My!Super#Secure/Pw")
Any errors during creation are logged to user.errors
(password length, special characters).