## Description This page describes development practices for this codebase. ## Linting Most of our linters require babashka. Before running them, please install https://github.com/babashka/babashka#installation. To invoke all the linters in this section, run `bb dev:lint`. ### Clojure code To lint: ``` clojure -M:clj-kondo --lint src ``` We lint our Clojure(Script) code with https://github.com/clj-kondo/clj-kondo/. If you need to configure specific linters, see [this documentation](https://github.com/clj-kondo/clj-kondo/blob/master/doc/linters.md). Where possible, a global linting configuration is used and namespace specific configuration is avoided. There are outstanding linting items that are currently ignored to allow linting the rest of the codebase in CI. These outstanding linting items should be addressed at some point: * Comments starting with `TODO:lint` * Code marked with `#_:clj-kondo/ignore` require a good understanding of the context to address as they usually involve something with a side effect or require changing multiple fns up the call stack. ### Unused vars We use https://github.com/borkdude/carve to detect unused vars in our codebase. To run this linter: ``` bb lint:carve ``` By default, the script runs in CI mode which prints unused vars if they are found. The script can be run in an interactive mode which prompts for keeping (ignoring) an unused var or removing it. Run this mode with: ``` bb lint:carve '{:interactive true}' ``` When a var is ignored, it is added to `.carve/ignore`. Please add a comment for why a var is ignored to help others understand why it's unused. ### Large vars Large vars have a lot of complexity and make it hard for the team to maintain and understand them. To run this linter: ``` bb lint:large-vars ``` To configure the linter, see the `[:tasks/config :large-vars]` path of bb.edn. ### Document namespaces Documentation helps teams share their knowledge and enables more individuals to contribute to the codebase. Documenting our namespaces is a good first step to improving our documentation. To run this linter: ``` bb lint:ns-docstrings ``` To skip documenting a ns, use the common `^:no-doc` metadata flag. ### Datalog linting We use [datascript](https://github.com/tonsky/datascript)'s datalog to power our modeling and querying layer. Since datalog is concise, it is easy to write something invalid. To avoid typos and other preventable mistakes, we lint our queries and rules. Our queries are linted through clj-kondo and [datalog-parser](https://github.com/lambdaforge/datalog-parser). clj-kondo will error if it detects an invalid query. ### Invalid translations Our translations can be configured incorrectly. We can catch some of these mistakes [as noted here](./contributing-to-translations.md#fix-mistakes). ## Testing We have unit and end to end tests. ### End to End Tests To run end to end tests ``` bash yarn electron-watch # in another shell yarn e2e-test # or npx playwright test ``` ### Unit Testing Our unit tests use the [shadow-cljs test-runner](https://shadow-cljs.github.io/docs/UsersGuide.html#_testing). To run them: ```bash yarn test ``` By convention, a namespace's tests are found at a corresponding namespace of the same name with an added `-test` suffix. For example, tests for `frontend.db.model` are found in `frontend.db.model-test`. There are a couple different ways to develop with tests: #### Focus Tests Tests can be selectively run on the commandline using our own test runner which provides the same test selection options as [cognitect-labs/test runner](https://github.com/cognitect-labs/test-runner#invoke-with-clojure--m-clojuremain). For this workflow: 1. Run `clj -M:test watch test` in one shell 2. Focus tests: 1. Add `^:focus` metadata flags to tests e.g. `(deftest ^:focus test-name ...)`. 2. In another shell, run `node static/tests.js -i focus` to only run those tests. To run all tests except those tests run `node static/tests.js -e focus`. 3. Or focus namespaces: Using the regex option `-r`, run tests for `frontend.util.page-property-test` with `node static/tests.js -r page-property`. Multiple options can be specified to AND selections. For example, to run all `frontend.util.page-property-test` tests except for the focused one: `node static/tests.js -r page-property -e focus` For help on more options, run `node static/tests.js -h`. #### Autorun Tests To run tests automatically on file save, run `clojure -M:test watch test --config-merge '{:autorun true}'`. Specific namespace(s) can be auto run with the `:ns-regexp` option e.g. `clojure -M:test watch test --config-merge '{:autorun true :ns-regexp "frontend.util.page-property-test"}'`. #### Database tests To write a test that uses a datascript db: * Be sure your test ns has test fixtures from `test-helper` ns to create and destroy test databases after each test. * The easiest way to set up test data is to use `test-helper/load-test-files`. * For the repo argument that most fns take, pass it `test-helper/test-db` For examples of these tests, see `frontend.db.query-dsl-test` and `frontend.db.model-test`. ## Accessibility Please refer to our [accessibility guidelines](accessibility.md). ## Logging For logging, we use https://github.com/lambdaisland/glogi. When in development, be sure to have [enabled custom formatters](https://github.com/binaryage/cljs-devtools/blob/master/docs/installation.md#enable-custom-formatters-in-chrome) in the desktop app and browser. Without this enabled, most of the log messages aren't readable. ## Data validation and generation We use both [spec](https://github.com/clojure/spec.alpha) and [malli](https://github.com/metosin/malli) for data validation and (and generation someday). malli has the advantage that its schema is data and can be used for additional purposes. See plugin-config for an example. Specs should go under `src/main/frontend/spec/` and be compatible with clojure and clojurescript. See `frontend.spec.storage` for an example. Malli schemas should go under `src/main/frontend/schema/` and be compatible with clojure and clojurescript. See `frontend.schema.handler.plugin-config` for an example. By following these conventions, these should also be usable by babashka. This is helpful as it allows for third party tools to be written with logseq's data model. ## Development Tools There are some babashka tasks under `nbb:` which are useful for inspecting database changes in realtime. See [these docs](https://github.com/logseq/bb-tasks#logseqbb-tasksnbbwatch) for more info.