Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
275 lines (165 loc) · 15.4 KB

CONTRIBUTING.md

File metadata and controls

275 lines (165 loc) · 15.4 KB

Vite Contributing Guide

Hi! We're really excited that you're interested in contributing to Vite! Before submitting your contribution, please read through the following guide. We also suggest you read the Project Philosophy in our documentation.

You can use StackBlitz Codeflow to fix bugs or implement features. You'll see a Codeflow button on issues to start a PR to fix them. A button will also appear on PRs to review them without needing to check out the branch locally. When using Codeflow, the Vite repository will be cloned for you in an online editor, with the Vite package built in watch mode ready to test your changes. If you'd like to learn more, check out the Codeflow docs.

Open in Codeflow

Repo Setup

To develop locally, fork the Vite repository and clone it in your local machine. The Vite repo is a monorepo using pnpm workspaces. The package manager used to install and link dependencies must be pnpm.

To develop and test the core vite package:

  1. Run pnpm i in Vite's root folder.

  2. Run pnpm run build in Vite's root folder.

  3. If you are developing Vite itself, you can go to packages/vite and run pnpm run dev to automatically rebuild Vite whenever you change its code.

You can alternatively use Vite.js Docker Dev for a containerized Docker setup for Vite.js development.

Vite uses pnpm v8. If you are working on multiple projects with different versions of pnpm, it's recommended to enable Corepack by running corepack enable.

Ignoring commits when running git blame

We have a .git-blame-ignore-revs file to ignore formatting changes. To make this file used by git blame, you need to run the following command.

git config --local blame.ignoreRevsFile .git-blame-ignore-revs

Debugging

To use breakpoints and explore code execution, you can use the "Run and Debug" feature from VS Code.

  1. Add a debugger statement where you want to stop the code execution.

  2. Click the "Run and Debug" icon in the activity bar of the editor, which opens the Run and Debug view.

  3. Click the "JavaScript Debug Terminal" button in the Run and Debug view, which opens a terminal in VS Code.

  4. From that terminal, go to playground/xxx, and run pnpm run dev.

  5. The execution will stop at the debugger statement, and you can use the Debug toolbar to continue, step over, and restart the process...

Debugging Errors in Vitest Tests Using Playwright (Chromium)

Some errors are masked and hidden away because of the layers of abstraction and sandboxed nature added by Vitest, Playwright, and Chromium. In order to see what's actually going wrong and the contents of the devtools console in those instances, follow this setup:

  1. Add a debugger statement to the playground/vitestSetup.ts -> afterAll hook. This will pause execution before the tests quit and the Playwright browser instance exits.

  2. Run the tests with the debug-serve script command, which will enable remote debugging: pnpm run debug-serve resolve.

  3. Wait for inspector devtools to open in your browser and the debugger to attach.

  4. In the sources panel in the right column, click the play button to resume execution, and allow the tests to run, which will open a Chromium instance.

  5. Focusing the Chromium instance, you can open the browser devtools and inspect the console there to find the underlying problems.

  6. To close everything, just stop the test process back in your terminal.

Testing Vite against external packages

You may wish to test your locally modified copy of Vite against another package that is built with Vite. For pnpm, after building Vite, you can use pnpm.overrides to do this. Note that pnpm.overrides must be specified in the root package.json, and you must list the package as a dependency in the root package.json:

{
  "dependencies": {
    "vite": "^4.0.0"
  },
  "pnpm": {
    "overrides": {
      "vite": "link:../path/to/vite/packages/vite"
    }
  }
}

And re-run pnpm install to link the package.

Running Tests

Integration Tests

Each package under playground/ contains a __tests__ directory. The tests are run using Vitest + Playwright with custom integrations to make writing tests simple. The detailed setup is inside vitest.config.e2e.js and playground/vitest* files.

Some playgrounds define variants to run the same app using different config setups. By convention, when running a test spec file in a nested folder in __tests__, the setup will try to use a config file named vite.config-{folderName}.js at the playground's root. You can see an example of variants in the assets playground.

Before running the tests, make sure that Vite has been built. On Windows, you may want to activate Developer Mode to resolve issues with symlink creation for non-admins. Also, you may want to set git core.symlinks to true to resolve issues with symlinks in git.

Each integration test can be run under either dev server mode or build mode.

  • pnpm test by default runs every integration test in both serve and build mode, and also unit tests.

  • pnpm run test-serve runs tests only under serve mode.

  • pnpm run test-build runs tests only under build mode.

  • pnpm run test-serve [match] or pnpm run test-build [match] runs tests in specific packages that match the given filter. e.g. pnpm run test-serve asset runs tests for both playground/asset and vite/src/node/__tests__/asset under serve mode.

    Note package matching is not available for the pnpm test script, which always runs all tests.

Unit Tests

Other than tests under playground/ for integration tests, packages might contain unit tests under their __tests__ directory. Unit tests are powered by Vitest. The detailed config is inside vitest.config.ts files.

  • pnpm run test-unit runs unit tests under each package.

  • pnpm run test-unit [match] runs tests in specific packages that match the given filter.

Test Env and Helpers

Inside playground tests, you can import the page object from ~utils, which is a Playwright Page instance that has already navigated to the served page of the current playground. So, writing a test is as simple as:

import { page } from '~utils'

test('should work', async () => {
  expect(await page.textContent('.foo')).toMatch('foo')
})

Some common test helpers (e.g. testDir, isBuild, or editFile) are also available in the utils. Source code is located at playground/test-utils.ts.

Note: The test build environment uses a different default set of Vite config to skip transpilation during tests to make it faster. This may produce a different result compared to the default production build.

Extending the Test Suite

To add new tests, you should find a related playground to the fix or feature (or create a new one). As an example, static assets loading is tested in the assets playground. In this Vite app, there is a test for ?raw imports with a section defined in the index.html for it:

<h2>?raw import</h2>
<code class="raw"></code>

This will be modified with the result of a file import:

import rawSvg from './nested/fragment.svg?raw'
text('.raw', rawSvg)

...where the text util is defined as:

function text(el, text) {
  document.querySelector(el).textContent = text
}

In the spec tests, the modifications to the DOM listed above are used to test this feature:

test('?raw import', async () => {
  expect(await page.textContent('.raw')).toMatch('SVG')
})

Note on Test Dependencies

In many test cases, we need to mock dependencies using link: and file: protocols. pnpm treats link: as symlinks and file: as hardlinks. To test dependencies as if they were copied into node_modules, use the file: protocol. Otherwise, use the link: protocol.

For a mock dependency, make sure you add a @vitejs/test- prefix to the package name. This will avoid possible issues like false-positive alerts.

Debug Logging

You can set the DEBUG environment variable to turn on debugging logs (e.g. DEBUG="vite:resolve"). To see all debug logs, you can set DEBUG="vite:*", but be warned that it will be quite noisy. You can run grep -r "createDebugger('vite:" packages/vite/src/ to see a list of available debug scopes.

Pull Request Guidelines

  • Checkout a topic branch from a base branch (e.g. main), and merge back against that branch.

  • If adding a new feature:

    • Add accompanying test case.
    • Provide a convincing reason to add this feature. Ideally, you should open a suggestion issue first, and have it approved before working on it.
  • If fixing a bug:

    • If you are resolving a special issue, add (fix #xxxx[,#xxxx]) (#xxxx is the issue id) in your PR title for a better release log (e.g. fix: update entities encoding/decoding (fix #3899)).
    • Provide a detailed description of the bug in the PR. Live demo preferred.
    • Add appropriate test coverage if applicable.
  • It's OK to have multiple small commits as you work on the PR. GitHub can automatically squash them before merging.

  • Make sure tests pass!

  • No need to worry about code style as long as you have installed the dev dependencies. Modified files are automatically formatted with Prettier on commit (by invoking Git Hooks via simple-git-hooks).

  • PR title must follow the commit message convention so that changelogs can be automatically generated.

Maintenance Guidelines

The following section is mostly for maintainers who have commit access, but it's helpful to go through if you intend to make non-trivial contributions to the codebase.

Issue Triaging Workflow

Pull Request Review Workflow

Notes on Dependencies

Vite aims to be lightweight, and this includes being aware of the number of npm dependencies and their size.

We use Rollup to pre-bundle most dependencies before publishing! Therefore, most dependencies, even those used in runtime source code, should be added under devDependencies by default. This also creates the following constraints that we need to be aware of in the codebase.

Usage of require()

In some cases, we intentionally lazy-require some dependencies to improve start-up performance. However, note that we cannot use simple require('somedep') calls since these are ignored in ESM files, so the dependency won't be included in the bundle, and the actual dependency won't even be there when published since they are in devDependencies.

Instead, use (await import('somedep')).default.

Think Before Adding a Dependency

Most deps should be added to devDependencies even if they are needed at runtime. Some exceptions are:

  • Type packages. Example: @types/*.
  • Deps that cannot be properly bundled due to binary files. Example: esbuild.
  • Deps that ship their own types that are used in Vite's own public types. Example: rollup.

Avoid deps with large transitive dependencies that result in bloated size compared to the functionality it provides. For example, http-proxy itself plus @types/http-proxy is a little over 1MB in size, but http-proxy-middleware pulls in a ton of dependencies that make it 7MB(!) when a minimal custom middleware on top of http-proxy only requires a couple of lines of code.

Ensure Type Support

Vite aims to be fully usable as a dependency in a TypeScript project (e.g. it should provide proper typings for VitePress), and also in vite.config.ts. This means technically a dependency whose types are exposed needs to be part of dependencies instead of devDependencies. However, this also means we won't be able to bundle it.

To get around this, we inline some of these dependencies' types in packages/vite/src/types. This way, we can still expose the typing but bundle the dependency's source code.

Use pnpm run build-types-check to check that the bundled types do not rely on types in devDependencies.

For types shared between client and node, they should be added into packages/vite/types. These types are not bundled and are published as is (though they are still considered internal). Dependency types within this directory (e.g. packages/vite/types/chokidar.d.ts) are deprecated and should be added to packages/vite/src/types instead.

Think Before Adding Yet Another Option

We already have many config options, and we should avoid fixing an issue by adding yet another one. Before adding an option, consider whether the problem:

  • is really worth addressing
  • can be fixed with a smarter default
  • has workaround using existing options
  • can be addressed with a plugin instead

Release

If you have publish access, the steps below explain how to cut a release for a package. There are two phases for the release step: "Release" and "Publish".

"Release" is done locally to generate the changelogs and git tags:

  1. Make sure the git remote for https://github.com/vitejs/vite is set as origin.
  2. In the vite project root main branch, run git pull and pnpm i to get it up-to-date.
  3. Run pnpm release and follow the prompts to cut a release for a package. It will generate the changelog, a git release tag, and push them to origin. You can run with the --dry flag to test it out.
  4. When the command finishes, it will provide a link to https://github.com/vitejs/vite/actions/workflows/publish.yml.
  5. Click the link to visit the page, and follow the next steps below.

"Publish" is done on GitHub Actions to publish the package to npm:

  1. Shortly in the workflows page, a new workflow will appear for the released package and is waiting for approval to publish to npm.
  2. Click on the workflow to open its page.
  3. Click on the "Review deployments" button in the yellow box, a popup will appear.
  4. Check "Release" and click "Approve and deploy".
  5. The package will start publishing to npm.

Docs Translation Contribution

To add a new language to the Vite docs, see vite-docs-template.