dashy/docs/development-guides.md

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Development Guides

A series of short tutorials, to guide you through the most common development tasks.

Sections:

Creating a new theme

Adding a new theme is really easy. There's two things you need to do: Pass the theme name to Dashy, so that it can be added to the theme selector dropdown menu, and then write some styles!

1. Add Theme Name

Choose a snappy name for you're theme, and add it to the builtInThemes array inside defaults.js.

2. Write some Styles!

Put your theme's styles inside color-themes.scss. Create a new block, and make sure that data-theme matches the theme name you chose above. For example:

html[data-theme='tiger'] {
  --primary: #f58233;
  --background: #0b1021;
}

Then you can go ahead and write you're own custom CSS. Although all CSS is supported here, the best way to define you're theme is by setting the CSS variables. You can find a list of all CSS variables, here.

For a full guide on styling, see Theming Docs.

Note that if you're theme is just for yourself, and you're not submitting a PR, then you can instead just pass it under appConfig.cssThemes inside your config file. And then put your theme in your own stylesheet, and pass it into the Docker container - see how.

Writing Translations

For full docs about Dashy's multi-language support, see Multi-Language Support

Dashy is using vue-i18n to manage multi-language support.

Adding a new language is pretty straightforward, with just three steps:

1. Create a new Language File

Create a new JSON file in ./src/assets/locales name is a 2-digit ISO-639 code for your language, E.g. for German de.json, French fr.json or Spanish es.json - You can find a list of all ISO codes at iso.org.

2. Translate!

Using en.json as an example, translate the JSON values to your language, while leaving the keys as they are. It's fine to leave out certain items, as if they're missing they will fall-back to English. If you see any attribute which include curly braces ({xxx}), then leave the inner value of these braces as is, as this is for variables.

{
  "theme-maker": {
    "export-button": "Benutzerdefinierte Variablen exportieren",
    "reset-button": "Stile zurücksetzen für",
    "show-all-button": "Alle Variablen anzeigen",
    "save-button": "Speichern",
    "cancel-button": "Abbrechen",
    "saved-toast": "{theme} Erfolgreich aktualisiert",
    "reset-toast": "Benutzerdefinierte Farben für {theme} entfernt"
  },
}
3. Add your file to the app

In ./src/utils/languages.js, you need to do 2 small things:

First import your new translation file, do this at the top of the page. E.g. import de from '@/assets/locales/de.json';

Second, add it to the array of languages, e.g:

export const languages = [
  {
    name: 'English',
    code: 'en',
    locale: en,
    flag: '🇬🇧',
  },
  {
    name: 'German', // The name of your language
    code: 'de', // The ISO code of your language
    locale: de, // The name of the file you imported (no quotes)
    flag: '🇩🇪', // An optional flag emoji
  },
];

You can also add your new language to the readme, under the Language Switching section, and optionally include your name/ username if you'd like to be credited for your work. Done!

If you are not comfortable with making pull requests, or do not want to modify the code, then feel free to instead send the translated file to me, and I can add it into the application. I will be sure to credit you appropriately.

Adding a new option in the config file

This section is for, if you're adding a new component or setting, that requires an additional item to be added to the users config file.

All of the users config is specified in ./public/conf.yml - see Configuring Docs for info. Before adding a new option in the config file, first ensure that there is nothing similar available, that is is definitely necessary, it will not conflict with any other options and most importantly that it will not cause any breaking changes. Ensure that you choose an appropriate and relevant section to place it under.

Next decide the most appropriate place for your attribute:

  • Application settings should be located under appConfig
  • Page info (such as text and metadata) should be under pageInfo
  • Data relating to specific sections should be under section[n].displayData
  • And for setting applied to specific items, it should be under item[n]

In order for the user to be able to add your new attribute using the Config Editor, and for the build validation to pass, your attribute must be included within the ConfigSchema. You can read about how to do this on the ajv docs. Give your property a type and a description, as well as any other optional fields that you feel are relevant. For example:

"fontAwesomeKey": {
  "type": "string",
  "pattern": "^[a-z0-9]{10}$",
  "description": "API key for font-awesome",
  "example": "0821c65656"
}

or

"iconSize": {
  "enum": [ "small", "medium", "large" ],
  "default": "medium",
  "description": "The size of each link item / icon"
}

Next, if you're property should have a default value, then add it to defaults.js. This ensures that nothing will break if the user does not use your property, and having all defaults together keeps things organised and easy to manage.

If your property needs additional logic for fetching, setting or processing, then you can add a helper function within ConfigHelpers.js.

Finally, add your new property to the configuring.md API docs. Put it under the relevant section, and be sure to include field name, data type, a description and mention that it is optional. If your new feature needs more explaining, then you can also document it under the relevant section elsewhere in the documentation.

Checklist:

  • Ensure the new attribute is actually necessary, and nothing similar already exists
  • Update the Schema with the parameters for your new option
  • Set a default value (if required) within defaults.js
  • Document the new value in configuring.md
  • Test that the reading of the new attribute is properly handled, and will not cause any errors when it is missing or populated with an unexpected value

Updating Dependencies

Running yarn upgrade will updated all dependencies based on the ranges specified in the package.json. The yarn.lock file will be updated, as will the contents of ./node_modules, for more info, see the yarn upgrade documentation. It is important to thoroughly test after any big dependency updates.


Developing Netlify Cloud Functions

When Dashy is deployed to Netlify, it is effectively running as a static app, and therefore the server-side code for the Node.js endpoints is not available. However Netlify now supports serverless cloud lambda functions, which can be used to replace most functionality.

1. Run Netlify Dev Server

First off, install the Netlify CLI: npm install netlify-cli -g Then, from within the root of Dashy's directory, start the server, by running: netlify dev

2. Create a lambda function

This should be saved it in the ./services/serverless-functions directory

exports.handler = async () => ({
  statusCode: 200,
  body: 'Return some data here...',
});

3. Redirect the Node endpoint to the function

In the netlify.toml file, add a 301 redirect, with the path to the original Node.js endpoint, and the name of your cloud function

[[redirects]]
  from = "/status-check"
  to = "/.netlify/functions/cloud-status-check"
  status = 301
  force = true

Hiding Page Furniture on Certain Routes

For some pages (such as the login page, the minimal start page, etc) the basic page furniture, (like header, footer, nav, etc) is not needed. This section explains how you can hide furniture on a new view (step 1), or add a component that should be hidden on certain views (step 2).

1. Add the route name to the should hide array

In ./src/utils/defaults.js, there's an array called hideFurnitureOn. Append the name of the route (the same as it appears in router.js) here.

2. Add the conditional to the structural component to hide

First, import the helper function:

import { shouldBeVisible } from '@/utils/MiscHelpers';

Then you can create a computed value, that calls this function, passing in the route name:

export default {
  ...
  computed: {
    ...
    isVisible() {
      return shouldBeVisible(this.$route.name);
    },
  },
};

Finally, in the markup of your component, just add a v-if statement, referencing your computed value

<header v-if="isVisible">
  ...
</header>

Adding / Using Environmental Variables

All environmental variables are optional. Currently there are not many environmental variables used, as most of the user preferences are stored under appConfig in the conf.yml file.

You can set variables either in your environment, or using the .env file.

Any environmental variables used by the frontend are preceded with VUE_APP_. Vue will merge the contents of your .env file into the app in a similar way to the 'dotenv' package, where any variables that you set on your system will always take preference over the contents of any .env file.

If add any new variables, ensure that there is always a fallback (define it in defaults.js), so as to not cause breaking changes. Don't commit the contents of your .env file to git, but instead take a few moments to document what you've added under the appropriate section. Try and follow the concepts outlined in the 12 factor app.