adisuryadi / lineman

Lineman helps you build fat-client JavaScript apps. It produces happiness by building assets, mocking servers, running specs on every file change

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Lineman

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Lineman is a tool to help you build fat-client webapp projects. It requires node.js & npm and wouldn't be possible without grunt.

For an overview, consider checking out the demo screencast!

Why Lineman?

Suppose that you're starting a new single page web application and you want to reap the benefits of loose coupling between your client-side and server side. If that rings true, then Lineman (and similar tools) can help to keep you as productive working in the front-end as traditional HTML generation frameworks do on the back-end.

Now, for the features!

Lineman is a productivity tool, in that it provides a development server which:

Lineman is also a build tool, because when you're ready to deploy:

At the end of the day, Lineman is just a handful of conventions and grunt task configurations that can help you get up-and-running more quickly than rolling your own. It's easy to extend and modify as your application grows.

Getting started

First, you'll need node.js. If you plan on running tests, you'll also want PhantomJS somewhere on your PATH. (This is where the aforementioned screencast picks up.)

Next, you'll need to install Lineman globally:

$ npm install -g lineman

Once Lineman is installed, you can either ask it to generate a new project for you, or you might consider cloning from a pre-existing template.

lineman new

To create a new project, run the lineman binary with the new command and tell it where you'd like the project to go:

$ lineman new my-project

This will create a new directory named "my-project" and copy in Lineman's archetypal project.

Starting from a template

We have a few template projects floating around to help you get up-and-running even more faster.

Working with Lineman

Development

To see all of the options available to you in the terminal use the -h or --help option:

$ lineman --help

From the project directory, you can start a server at localhost:8000:

$ lineman run

Internally, Grunt's watch task will monitor for file changes; in turn, Lineman's default configuration will fire the appropriate tasks when a file of a given type is saved.

With any luck, visiting the server in your browser will yield something as beautiful as this:

Development Screenshot

The Hello World code shows off JST compilation, CoffeeScript, and Less. When you edit a source file, your changes are usually reflected by the time you can refresh your browser.

Server-side APIs

Lineman has a very narrow focus: helping you build client-side apps as a collection of ready-to-deploy static assets. That said, almost all nontrivial client-side apps require some interaction with a server, and no developer could be expected to write working code without either faking the server-side or plugging the client and server together. Lineman offers support for both!

Stubbing server-side endpoints

Users may define custom HTTP services to aid development in config/server.js by exporting a function named drawRoutes. Here's a trivial example:

module.exports = {
  drawRoutes: function(app) {
    app.get('/api/greeting/:message', function(req, res){
      res.json({ message: "OK, "+req.params.message });
    });
  }
};

With this definition in place, if the client-side app makes a request to "/api/greeting/ahoy!", this route will handle the request and return some JSON.

Because Lineman uses express for the development server, please reference its documentation for details on all the nifty things you can do.

Proxying requests to another server

Lineman also provides a facility to forward any requests that it doesn't know how to respond to a proxy service. Typically, if you're developing a client-side app in Lineman and intend to pair it to a server-side app (written, say, in Ruby on Rails), you could run a local Rails server on port 3000 while running Lineman, and your JavaScript could seamlessly send requests to Rails on the same port as Lineman's development server.

To enable proxying, set the enabled flag on the apiProxy configuration of the server task in config/application.js, like this:

  server: {
    apiProxy: {
      enabled: true,
      port: 3000
    }
  }

With this feature, you'll be able to develop your client-side and server-side code in concert, while still keeping the codebases cleanly separated.

Specs

Lineman provides a way to run your specs constantly as you work on your code with the lineman spec command:

$ lineman spec

Heads up! lineman spec only runs your tests, so be sure to keep lineman run running in another process (e.g. an extra terminal tab) to continue to monitor file changes.

The spec command will launch the fantastic test framework Testem supports Safari, Chrome, Firefox, Opera, PhantomJS and (IE9, IE8, IE7 if on Windows). By default we have configured Testem to launch Chrome for tests during development.

You can override this by modifying the launch_in_dev property within config/spec.json

We have found that running tests in Chrome during development is ideal as it enables the insertion of debugger; statements into javascript which allows debugging in the browser.

Growl/Growl-ish notification

You can also enable testem Growl/Growl-ish notification so you don't have to look at terminal while developing. To enable this feature, set the growl flag on the options property of the spec task in config/application.js, like this:

  spec: {
    options: {
      growl: true
    }
  }

Continuous Integration Specs

You can also run specs with output generated for your CI environment in TAP 13 format:

$ lineman spec-ci

This configuration executes specs headlessly using only PhantomJS. You can override this by modifying the launch_in_ci property within config/spec.json

Production

When you're ready to send your application off to a remote server, just run the lineman build task.

$ lineman build

The above runs a task that produces a production-ready web application in the project's dist/ directory.

Cleaning

To clean the two build directories (dist and generated), just run the clean task:

$ lineman clean

Project directory structure

Lineman generates a very particular directory structure. It looks like this:

.
├── app
│   ├── js                  # <-- JS & CoffeeScript
│   ├── img                 # <-- images (are merged into the 'img' folder inside of generated & dist)
│   └── templates           # <-- client-side templates
│       ├── homepage.us     # <-- a template used to produce the application's index.html
│       ├── other.us        # <-- other templates will be compiled to a window.JST object
│       └── thing.hb        # <-- underscore & handlebars are both already set up
│       └── _partial.hb     # <-- a handlebars partial, usable from within other handlebars templates
├── config
│   ├── application.js      # <-- Override application configuration
│   ├── files.js            # <-- Override named file patterns
│   ├── server.js           # <-- Define custom server-side endpoints to aid in development
│   └── spec.json           # <-- Override spec run configurations
├── dist                    # <-- Generated, production-ready app assets
├── generated               # <-- Generated, pre-production app assets
├── grunt.js                # <-- gruntfile defines app's task config
├── package.json            # <-- Project's package.json
├── tasks                   # <-- Custom grunt tasks can be defined here
├── spec
│   ├── helpers             # <-- Spec helpers (loaded before other specs)
│   └── some-spec.coffee    # <-- All the Jasmine specs you can write (JS or Coffee)
└── vendor                  # <-- 3rd-party assets will be prepended or merged into the application
    ├── js                  # <-- 3rd-party Javascript
    │   └── underscore.js   # <-- Underscore, because underscore is fantastic.
    ├── img                 # <-- 3rd-party images (are merged into the 'img' folder inside of generated & dist)
    └── css                 # <-- 3rd-party CSS

Custom Tasks

Lineman can easily be extended to do extra grunt-work for your application above-and-beyond the built-in grunt tasks. You may add tasks to your project in two ways:

  • If you're writing a task yourself, add it to the tasks/ directory. Lineman will automatically load any tasks found here.
  • If you want to use a task that's packaged in an external npm module, add it to your package.json as a dependency and run npm install.

Once they're loaded, you can manually run the task from the command line using lineman grunt (which just delegates through to grunt):

$ lineman grunt taskname

But you're probably more interested in adding the custom task to run along with the other tasks in lineman run and/or lineman build. You can add any task to these commands by adding it to the appropriate array under the appendTasks object in config/application.js:

  prependTasks: {
    common: ["A"],
    dev: ["B"],
    dist: ["C"]
  },
  appendTasks: {
    common: ["D"],
    dev: ["E"],
    dist: ["F"]
  }

In the above example, tasks "A" & "D" would run during both lineman run and lineman build. Meanwhile, "B" & "E" would run only during lineman run, while "C" & "F" would only run during lineman build.

Tasks specified under prependTasks way will be run before Lineman's built-in tasks for the corresponding phase, while tasks specified under appendTasks will run immediately afterward. For reference, check out Lineman's default configuration.

If you need more fine-grained control—say you want to replace or remove a default task—you can use custom JavaScript in your application config file to edit the appropriate array directly; here's an example of removing a task from the Ember.js template.

Adding NPM based tasks

To load NPM-based tasks that aren't part of the standard Lineman dependencies, you can add the module names to the loadNpmTasks object in config/application.js. Note that these still need to be added to your app's package.json dependencies and installed to node_modules with npm install.

  loadNpmTasks: ["npm_task_to_load"]

Adding Custom tasks

Lineman will automatically require all files in the tasks directory and load them into Grunt. If you have custom tasks, you can leave them there and add them to the build as above.

Troubleshooting

Too Many Open Files

The lineman run command keeps file handles on all your projects files at once. If you're seeing a message that looks like this:

undefined: [Lundefined:Cundefined] EMFILE, too many open files

Or this

Error: watch Unknown system errno 23

Then it probably means your project has gotten big enough to either run into the user limit on open file descriptors or (in the case of the latter), the hard limit on your operating system's file table .

To resolve this issue, we recommend first increasing the user limit on open files with the ulimit command. You might do this at the beginning of any terminal session or in your ~/.profile dotfile.

ulimit -n 2048

Deployment

Static assets

The great thing about a tool whose focus is narrowly on HTML, CSS, and JavaScript is that's all you have to worry about when it comes time to deploy. When you're ready to deploy, just run:

$ lineman build

And this will place a version of your app with minified assets that's ready to be deployed wherever you like. Maybe you'll plan on integrating it with your server-side's existing deployment, or maybe you'll host the files on a static file server.

Heroku

Deploying your app to heroku couldn't be easier. Once you have the heroku toolbelt installed, simply run this from your project:

heroku create --stack cedar --buildpack http://github.com/testdouble/heroku-buildpack-lineman.git

Now, whenever you git push heroku, our custom buildpack will build your project with lineman and then start serving your minified site assets with apache!

What's really neat about this workflow is that while heroku takes care of building the assets for you (meaning you don't have to worry about checking in or transferring any generated assets), at runtime node is nowhere to be found! Your site is just static assets running on apache.

About

the name

Lineman got its name from finding that the word "grunt" was first used to describe unskilled railroad workers. Grunts that made the cut were promoted to linemen.

the motivation

Most fat-client web applications are still written as second-class denizens within server-side project directories. This has inhibited the formation of a coherent community of people who write applications HTML, CSS, and JavaScript, because the server-side technology is dominant. Front-end work on a Rails project differs greatly from front-end work on a Java project, even though they're building the same thing!

All we wanted was a cozy & productive application development tool that didn't saddle our client-side code with a particular server-side technology. Intentionally dividing backend and front-end projects applies a healthy pressure to decouple the two.

It doesn't hurt that with Lineman, we're able to bootstrap new client-side apps faster than we ever have before.

the terms

Lineman was created by test double, a software studio in Columbus, Ohio. It's distributed under the MIT license.

Running Lineman's Tests

If you're interested in contributing to Lineman, it's probably worth knowing how to run Lineman's tests. It's a little tricky, because we're using Ruby & RSpec to integration-test a node project.

Once you've cloned lineman, here's all you need to install lineman's dependencies and the run its tests.

$ npm install
$ cd test
$ bundle install
$ bundle exec rspec

About

Lineman helps you build fat-client JavaScript apps. It produces happiness by building assets, mocking servers, running specs on every file change


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