Project

General

Profile

Hacking Workbench » History » Version 16

Tom Clegg, 11/18/2014 05:47 PM

1 1 Tom Clegg
h1. Hacking Workbench
2
3
{{toc}}
4
5
h2. Source tree layout
6
7
Everything is in @/apps/workbench@.
8
9
Key pieces to know about before going much further:
10
11
|/|Usual Rails project layout|
12
|/app/controllers/application_controller.rb|Controller superclass with authentication setup, error handling, and generic CRUD actions|
13
|/app/controllers/*.rb|Actions other than generic CRUD (users#activity, jobs#generate_provenance, ...)|
14
|/app/models/arvados_base.rb|Default Arvados model behavior and ActiveRecord-like accessors and introspection features|
15
|/app/models/arvados_resource_list.rb|ActiveRelation-like class (what you get from Model.where() etc.)|
16
17 12 Tom Clegg
h2. Background resources
18
19
Workbench is a Rails 4 application.
20
21
* "Getting started with Rails":http://guides.rubyonrails.org/getting_started.html at rubyonrails.org
22
* "AJAX in Rails 3.1":http://blog.madebydna.com/all/code/2011/12/05/ajax-in-rails-3.html blog post (still relevant in Rails 4)
23
24 1 Tom Clegg
h2. Unlike a typical Rails project...
25
26 7 Peter Amstutz
* ActiveRecord in Workbench doesn't talk to the database directly, but instead queries the Arvados API as REST client.
27
* The Arvados query API is somewhat limited and doesn't accept SQL statements, so Workbench has to work harder to get what it needs.
28 1 Tom Clegg
* Workbench itself only has the privileges of the Workbench user: when making Arvados API calls, it uses the API token provided by the user.
29
30
h2. Unlike what you might expect...
31
32
* Workbench doesn't use the Ruby SDK. It uses a sort of baked-in Rails SDK.
33
** TODO: move it out of Workbench into a gem.
34
** TODO: use the Ruby SDK under the hood.
35
36
h2. Running in development mode
37
38 2 Misha Zatsman
h3. SSL certificates
39
40 4 Tom Clegg
You can get started quickly with SSL by generating a self-signed certificate:
41 1 Tom Clegg
42
 openssl req -new -x509 -nodes -out ~/self-signed.pem -keyout ~/self-signed.key -days 3650 -subj '/CN=arvados.example.com'
43
44
Alternatively, download a set from the bottom of the [[API server]] page.
45 2 Misha Zatsman
46
h3. Download and configure
47 1 Tom Clegg
48 2 Misha Zatsman
Follow "these instructions":http://doc.arvados.org/install/install-workbench-app.html to download the source and configure your workbench instance.
49 3 Misha Zatsman
50 4 Tom Clegg
h3. Start the server
51 1 Tom Clegg
52 4 Tom Clegg
Save something like the following at @~/bin/workbench@, make it executable[1], make sure @~/bin@ is in your path[2]:
53 1 Tom Clegg
54
 #!/bin/sh
55
set -e
56
cd ~/arvados/apps/workbench
57
export RAILS_ENV=development
58 5 Tom Clegg
bundle install --path=vendor/bundle
59 4 Tom Clegg
exec bundle exec passenger start -p 3031 --ssl --ssl-certificate ~/self-signed.pem --ssl-certificate-key ~/self-signed.key
60 1 Tom Clegg
61
The first time you run the above it will take a while to install all the ruby gems. In particular @Installing nokogiri@ takes a while
62
63
Once you see:
64
65
 =============== Phusion Passenger Standalone web server started ===============
66
67
You can visit your server at:
68
69 4 Tom Clegg
 @https://{ip-or-host}:3031/@
70
71 6 Misha Zatsman
You can kill your server with @ctrl-C@ but if you get disconnected from the terminal, it will continue running. You can kill it by running
72
73
 @ps x |grep nginx |grep master@
74
75
And then
76
77
 @kill ####@
78
79
Replacing #### with the number in the left column returned by ps
80
81 4 Tom Clegg
fn1. @chmod +x ~/bin/workbench@
82
83
fn2. In Debian systems, the default .profile adds ~/bin to your path, but only if it exists when you log in. If you just created ~/bin, doing @exec bash -login@ or @source .profile@ should make ~/bin appear in your path.
84
85
h2. Running tests
86
87
The test suite brings up an API server in test mode, and runs browser tests with Firefox.
88
89
Make sure API server has its dependencies in place.
90
91
<pre>
92 5 Tom Clegg
(cd ../../services/api && RAILS_ENV=test bundle install --path=vendor/bundle)
93 4 Tom Clegg
</pre>
94
95
Install headless testing tools.
96
97
<pre>
98
sudo apt-get install xvfb iceweasel
99
</pre>
100
101
(Install firefox instead of iceweasel if you're not using Debian.)
102
103 10 Tom Clegg
Install phantomjs. (See http://phantomjs.org/download.html for latest version.)
104
105
<pre>
106 16 Tom Clegg
wget -P /tmp https://bitbucket.org/ariya/phantomjs/downloads/phantomjs-1.9.8-linux-x86_64.tar.bz2
107
sudo tar -C /usr/local -xjf /tmp/phantomjs-1.9.8-linux-x86_64.tar.bz2
108
sudo ln -s ../phantomjs-1.9.8-linux-x86_64/bin/phantomjs /usr/local/bin/
109 10 Tom Clegg
</pre>
110
111 4 Tom Clegg
Run the test suite.
112
113
<pre>
114
RAILS_ENV=test bundle exec rake test
115 1 Tom Clegg
</pre>
116 9 Tom Clegg
117 13 Tom Clegg
h3. When tests fail...
118
119
When an integration test fails (or skips) a screenshot is automatically saved in @arvados/apps/workbench/tmp/workbench-fail-1.png@, etc.
120
121 16 Tom Clegg
By default, @rake test@ just shows F when a test fails (and E when a test crashes) and doesn't tell you which tests had problems until the entire test suite is done. During development it makes more sense to use @TESTOPTS=-v@. This reports after each test the test class and name, outcome, and elapsed time:
122 13 Tom Clegg
* <pre>
123 1 Tom Clegg
$ RAILS_ENV=test bundle exec rake test TESTOPTS=-v
124 13 Tom Clegg
[...]
125
ApplicationControllerTest#test_links_for_object = 0.10 s = .
126
[...]
127
Saved ./tmp/workbench-fail-2.png
128 16 Tom Clegg
CollectionsTest#test_combine_selected_collection_files_into_new_collection = 10.89 s = F
129 13 Tom Clegg
[...]
130
</pre>
131 9 Tom Clegg
132 1 Tom Clegg
h2. Loading state from API into models
133
134
If your model makes an API call that returns the new state of an object, load the new attributes into the local model with @private_reload@:
135
136
<pre><code class="ruby">
137
  api_response = $arvados_api_client.api(...)
138
  private_reload api_response
139
</code></pre>
140
141
h2. Features
142
143
h3. Authentication
144
145
ApplicationController uses an around_filter to make sure the user is logged in, redirect to Arvados to complete the login procedure if not, and store the user's API token in Thread.current[:arvados_api_token] if so.
146
147
The @current_user@ helper returns User.current if the user is logged in, otherwise nil. (Generally, only special pages like "welcome" and "error" get displayed to users who aren't logged in.)
148
149
h3. Default filter behavior
150
151
@before_filter :find_object_by_uuid@
152
153
* This is enabled by default, @except :index, :create@.
154
* It renames the @:id@ param to @:uuid@. (The Rails default routing rules use @:id@ to accept params in path components, but @params[:uuid]@ makes more sense everywhere else in our code.)
155
* If you define a collection method (where there's no point looking up an object with the :id supplied in the request), skip this.
156
157
<pre><code class="ruby">
158
  skip_before_filter :find_object_by_uuid, only: [:action_that_takes_no_uuid_param]
159
</code></pre>
160
161
h3. Error handling
162
163
ApplicationController has a render_error method that shows a standard error page. (It's not very good, but it's better than a default Rails stack trace.)
164
165
In a controller you get there like this
166
167
<pre><code class="ruby">
168
  @errors = ['I could not achieve what you wanted.']
169
  render_error status: 500
170
</code></pre>
171
172
You can also do this, anywhere
173
174
<pre><code class="ruby">
175
  raise 'My spoon is too big.'
176
</code></pre>
177
178
The @render_error@ method sends JSON or HTML to the client according to the Accept header in the request (it sends JSON if JavaScript was requested), so reasonable things happen whether or not the request is AJAX.
179
180
h2. Development patterns
181
182
h3. Add a model
183
184
Currently, when the API provides a new model, we need to generate a corresponding model in Workbench: it's not smart enough to pick up the list of models from the API server's discovery document.
185
186
_(Need to fill in details here)_
187
# @rails generate model ....@
188
# Delete migration
189 8 Peter Amstutz
# Change base class to ArvadosBase
190
# @rails generate controller ...@ 
191 1 Tom Clegg
192
Model _attributes_, on the other hand, are populated automatically.
193
194
h3. Add a configuration knob
195
196
Same situation as API server. See [[Hacking API Server]].
197
198
h3. Add an API method
199
200
Workbench is not yet smart enough to look in the discovery document for supported API methods. You need to add a method to the appropriate model class before you can use it in the Workbench app.
201
202
h3. Writing tests
203
204
(TODO)
205
206
h3. AJAX using Rails UJS (remote:true with JavaScript response)
207
208
This pattern is the best way to make a button/link that invokes an asynchronous action on the Workbench server side, i.e., before/without navigating away from the current page.
209
210
# Add <code class="ruby">remote: true</code> to a link or button. This makes Rails put a <code class="html">data-remote="true"</code> attribute in the HTML element. Say, in @app/views/fizz_buzzes/index.html.erb@:
211
<pre><code class="ruby">
212
<%= link_to "Blurfl", blurfl_fizz_buzz_url(id: @object.uuid), {class: 'btn btn-primary', remote: true} %>
213
</code></pre>
214
# Ensure the targeted action responds appropriately to both "js" and "html" requests. At minimum:
215
<pre><code class="ruby">
216
class FizzBuzzesController
217
  #...
218
  def blurfl
219
    @howmany = 1
220
    #...
221
    respond_to do |format|
222
      format.js
223
      format.html
224
    end
225
  end
226
end
227
</code></pre>
228
# The @html@ view is used if this is a normal page load (presumably this means the client has turned off JS).
229
#* @app/views/fizz_buzz/blurfl.html.erb@
230
<pre><code>
231
<p>I am <%= @howmany %></p>
232
</code></pre>
233
# The @js@ view is used if this is an AJAX request. It renders as JavaScript code which will be executed in the browser. Say, in @app/views/fizz_buzz/blurfl.js.erb@:
234
<pre><code class="javascript">
235
window.alert('I am <%= @howmany %>');
236
</code></pre>
237
# The browser opens an alert box:
238
<pre>
239
I am 1
240
</pre>
241
# A common task is to render a partial and use it to update part of the page. Say the partial is in @app/views/fizz_buzz/_latest_news.html.erb@:
242
<pre><code class="javascript">
243
var new_content = "<%= escape_javascript(render partial: 'latest_news') %>";
244
if ($('div#latest-news').html() != new_content)
245
   $('div#latest-news').html(new_content);
246
</code></pre>
247
248
*TODO: error handling*
249
250
h3. AJAX invoked from custom JavaScript (JSON response)
251
252
(and error handling)
253
254
h3. Add JavaScript triggers and fancy behavior
255
256
Some guidelines for implementing stuff nicely in JavaScript:
257
* Don't rely on the DOM being loaded before your script is loaded.
258
** If you need to inspect/alter the DOM as soon as it's loaded, make a setup function that fires on "document ready" and "ajax:complete".
259
** jQuery's delegated event pattern can help keep your code clean. See http://api.jquery.com/on/
260
<pre><code class="javascript">
261
// worse:
262
$('table.fizzbuzzer tr').
263
    on('mouseover', function(e, xhr) {
264
        console.log("This only works if the table exists when this setup script is executed.");
265
    });
266
// better:
267
$(document).
268
    on('mouseover', 'table.fizzbuzzer tr', function(e, xhr) {
269
        console.log("This works even if the table appears (or has the fizzbuzzer class added) later.");
270
    });
271
</code></pre>
272
273
* If your code really only makes sense for a particular view, rather than embedding @<script>@ tags in the middle of the page,
274
** use this:
275
<pre><code class="ruby">
276
<% content_for :js do %>
277
console.log("hurray, this goes in HEAD");
278
<% end %>
279
</code></pre>
280
** or, if your code should run after [most of] the DOM is loaded:
281
<pre><code class="ruby">
282
<% content_for :footer_js do %>
283
console.log("hurray, this runs at the bottom of the BODY element in the default layout.");
284
<% end %>
285
</code></pre>
286
287
* Don't just write JavaScript on the @fizz_buzzes/blurfl@ page and rely on the fact that the only @table@ element on the page is the one you want to attach your special behavior to. Instead, add a class to the table, and use a jQuery selector to attach special behavior to it.
288
** In @app/views/fizz_buzzes/blurfl.html.erb@
289
<pre>
290
<table class="fizzbuzzer">
291
 <tr>
292
  <td>fizz</td><td>buzz</td>
293
 </tr>
294
</table>
295
</pre>
296
** In @app/assets/javascripts/fizz_buzzes.js@
297
<pre><code class="javascript">
298
<% content_for :js do %>
299
$(document).on('mouseover', 'table.fizzbuzzer tr', function() {
300
    console.log('buzz');
301
});
302
<% end %>
303
</code></pre>
304
** Advantage: You can reuse the special behavior in other tables/pages/classes
305
** Advantage: The JavaScript can get compiled, minified, cached in the browser, etc., instead of being rendered with every page view
306
** Advantage: The JavaScript code is available regardless of how the content got into the DOM (regular page view, partial update with AJAX)
307
308 14 Phil Hodgson
* If the result of clicking on some link invokes Javascript that will ultimately change the content of the current page using @window.location.href=@ then it is advisable to add to the link the @force-cache-reload@ CSS class. By doing so, when a user uses the browser-back button to return to the original page, it will be forced to reload itself from the server, thereby reflecting the updated content. (Ref: https://arvados.org/issues/3634)
309
310 11 Tom Clegg
h3. Invoking chooser
311
312
Example from @app/views/projects/_show_contents.html.erb@:
313
314
<pre>
315
    <%= link_to(
316
          choose_collections_path(
317
            title: 'Add data to project:',
318
            multiple: true,
319
            action_name: 'Add',
320
            action_href: actions_path(id: @object.uuid),
321
            action_method: 'post',
322
            action_data: {selection_param: 'selection[]', copy_selections_into_project: @object.uuid, success: 'page-refresh'}.to_json),
323
          { class: "btn btn-primary btn-sm", remote: true, method: 'get', data: {'event-after-select' => 'page-refresh'} }) do %>
324
      <i class="fa fa-fw fa-plus"></i> Add data...
325
    <% end %>
326
</pre>
327
328
Tour:
329 1 Tom Clegg
330
(TODO)
331
332 15 Tom Clegg
h3. Infinite scroll
333
334
When showing a list that might be too long to render up front in its entirety, use the infinite-scroll feature.
335
336
Links/buttons that flip to page 1, 2, 3, etc. (e.g., <code class="ruby">render partial: "paging"</code>) are deprecated.
337
338
The comments that should be at the top of source:apps/workbench/app/assets/javascripts/infinite_scroll.js, when we write them, will tell you how to do it.
339
340
341
h3. Filtering lists
342
343
When a list is displayed, and the user might want to filter them by selecting a category or typing a search string, use @class="filterable"@. It's easy!
344
345
The comments at the top of source:apps/workbench/app/assets/javascripts/filterable.js tell you how to do it.
346
347 1 Tom Clegg
h3. Tabs/panes on index & show pages
348
349
(TODO)
350
351
h3. User notifications
352
353
(TODO)
354
355
h3. Customizing breadcrumbs
356
357
(TODO)
358
359
h3. Making a page accessible before login
360
361
(TODO)
362
363
h3. Making a page accessible to non-active users
364
365
(TODO)