The Firefox Accounts (fxa) monorepo
-
Manually install the system dependencies for OS X or Ubuntu. Note that WSL is required for development work on Windows.
-
Clone this repository.
git clone https://github.com/mozilla/fxa.git
-
Run:
cd fxa npm install npm start
-
Visit 127.0.0.1:3030.
Use the PM2 tool to stop and start the servers, and read server logs.
To start all servers:
npm start
The most common commands are:
-
npm stop
- stop all servers. -
./pm2 status
- display running servers. -
./pm2 logs
- logs for all servers (note: this must be used to verify accounts). -
./pm2 logs 1
- display logs for process1
. -
./pm2 stop 1
- stop process1
. -
./pm2 restart 1
- restart process1
. -
More commands in the PM2 Readme.
See the separate CONTRIBUTING.md to learn how to contribute.
This is an example workflow for fxa.
After installing fxa run npm start
. Use ./pm2 status
command to check the status of the servers:
To avoid wasting computer resources while not working on FxA make sure to stop the servers using npm stop
.
Once you are back working on FxA just use the npm start
command to bring the servers back up. Keep in mind that the memory store will restart and all your database data will be brand new.
Use the ./pm2 logs
command to get the logs of all servers. You may also use ./pm2 logs [id]
to just see the logs for that particular server.
When you signup for an account using the form on 127.0.0.1:3030/signup
the "auth-server local mail helper" logs will print out the verification code that you need to copy paste into your browser to verify your account locally:
If you get an error
status for any of the servers please verify that you installed all required dependencies. Otherwise file an issue on this repository.
Required developer dependencies: Git, node.js 12+ with npm 6, Python 2.6+, Java 8+, Rust nightly+, libgmp, graphicsmagick, docker, grunt, gcloud CLI
OS X (with Brew):
Xcode and OS X Command Line Tools are required, install it and verify that command line tools installed:
xcode-select --install
then:
sudo easy_install pip && sudo pip install virtualenv
sudo apt-get install build-essential git libgmp3-dev graphicsmagick python-virtualenv python-dev pkg-config libssl-dev curl openjdk-11-jre firefox
Follow the Docker CE instructions to install Docker.
Docker commands require sudo, to avoid it, follow steps below:
- Add the docker group if it doesn't already exist
sudo groupadd docker
- Add the connected user $USER to the docker group
sudo gpasswd -a $USER docker
- Restart the docker daemon
sudo service docker restart
We currently use Node 12. See https://nodejs.org
Alternatively, the Node Version Manager makes working with different versions of Node easy.
nvm install 12
nvm alias default 12
Java is used to run Selenium functional tests
Download from java.com/en/download/
Rust Nightly is used for the fxa-email-service
curl https://sh.rustup.rs -sSf | sh
Once the installer begins:
- Select "2) Customize installation"
- Leave "Default host triple" blank, hit "enter"
- Type "nightly" for "Default toolchain"
- Type "y" for "Modify PATH variable?"
- Select "1) Proceed with installation"
npm install -g grunt-cli
Use npm run start-firefox
to start Firefox with local server configurations.
Available options:
FXA_ENV=local
orlatest
orstable
orstage
(NOTE:local
is default).FXA_E10S=true
- add this flag to turn on E10S. (NOTE:false
by default).FXA_DESKTOP_CONTEXT
-context=
value. (NOTE:fx_desktop_v2
is default).FIREFOX_BIN=/Applications/FirefoxNightly.app/Contents/MacOS/firefox-bin npm start
FIREFOX_DEBUGGER=true
- open Browser Toolbox on start (NOTE:false
by default for speed).
The following requires the JDK and tests the local servers only.
To run all functional tests:
npm test
Note that as of 2019-07-08, running this command at the project root will fail (see issue #725). Instead, run the command in the server that needs to be tested.
To run a specific test or tests whose name matches part of a search string:
node tests/intern.js --suites=all --grep="Test string to search for"
It's possible to debug a running node process using a variety of debuggers (see the node debugging docs for details).
In the case of Firefox Accounts, the pm2
process manager complicates setup a bit. Here's one approach that works:
- Start the whole server as usual (
npm install && npm start
from top-level in the monorepo) - Stop the pm2-managed version of whatever server you care about:
- Get the pm2
id
for the server from./pm2 ls
- Stop the process by doing
./pm2 stop NN
where NN is the pm2id
- Get the pm2
- Restart the server manually, passing the
--inspect
argument:- For fxa-content-server or fxa-payments-server, just go to the package directory and do
npm run start-dev-debug
to start a debuggable server process. - For other servers, we just haven't added a
start-dev-debug
run script yet; feel free to add one by tracing through the existing run scripts to find the actual script that runs the server (not one that forks another script).
- For fxa-content-server or fxa-payments-server, just go to the package directory and do
- Connect to the process to debug it:
- Using Google Chrome, go to
chrome://inspect
, then click the process to connect to devtools. - VSCode requires setting up a
.vscode/launch.json
file; see the VSCode docs for details.
- Using Google Chrome, go to
The node debugger can also be attached to a running test process. Firefox Accounts uses a variety of test frameworks, so the steps vary for the different servers. The --inspect
argument is used in the examples below, but --inspect-brk
can also be used to pause the process as soon as it starts.
For mocha, pass the --timeout 0
option, otherwise the test will fail if you step through it and exceed the default timeout (currently 2 seconds on fxa-shared
):
node --inspect ./node_modules/.bin/mocha --timeout 0 path/to/file
In fxa-shared
, this incantation works for some directories, but not yet others.
For jest, pass the --runInBand
argument, so it doesn't fork off the test runner to a separate process that isn't available to the inspector:
node --inspect ./node_modules/.bin/jest --runInBand --config server/jest.config.js filematcher
where filematcher
is a regex that matches against test file paths. If you omit filematcher
, Jest will run all tests (but you have to hit Enter a second time to trigger the test run).
The following technique works with any Android application and can also be used for Firefox for Android (making the Firefox for Android section optional).
Simply forward the following ports from the host machine to the Android device:
adb reverse tcp:3030 tcp:3030 # Content server
adb reverse tcp:9000 tcp:9000 # Auth server
adb reverse tcp:9010 tcp:9010 # OAuth server
adb reverse tcp:1111 tcp:1111 # Profile server
adb reverse tcp:5000 tcp:5000 # Sync server
Then run npm start
and get to work!
Skip this if you are not working on the fxa-email-service.
The pm2 scripts run the latest
docker version of the email service by default. If you want to
start making changes to the email service then do the following:
- Stop the email-service using
./pm2 stop <email_service_id>
- Build the service:
cd packages/fxa-email-service; cargo build --bin fxa_email_send
- Run the service:
cd packages/fxa-email-service; ./scripts/run_send.sh
Skip this if you are not working on Firefox for Android and FxA.
You can test sync locally in Firefox for Android using an emulator or a device on the same network. These docs were tested with the Genymotion simulator.
- Install Firefox on the device or emulator.
- Run
npm run start-android
this will: stop all local FxA servers, create a local PM2 configuration and rerun the servers.
The script will tell you which IP to use to work with FxA.
Follow the instructions of the script to update values in about:config
.
Skip this if you are not working on Firefox for iOS and FxA.
You can test sync locally in Firefox iOS using the XCode simulator. Follow the steps at github.com/mozilla/firefox-ios and setup firefox-ios build locally. Currently there is no way to dynamically switch servers in Firefox for iOS, to use local servers you need to run the script below:
FIREFOX_IOS_HOME=<path_to_firefox_ios_project> npm run config-fxios
After the script you need to rebuild firefox-ios.
If you want to inspect emails, you can run fxa with MailDev.
npm install maildev -g
npm start
./pm2 stop 'auth-server local mail helper'
Once services have started, you can start MailDev on port 9999. You might have to start MailDev with sudo permissions.
sudo maildev -s 9999
All emails sent can be viewed from http://localhost:1080.
Each package has it's own README.md and docs/
directory with info specific to that project.
- 123done README
- browserid-verifier README
- fortress README
- fxa-auth-db-mysql README / docs/
- fxa-auth-server README / docs/
- fxa-content-server README / docs/
- fxa-email-event-proxy README
- fxa-email-service README / docs/
- fxa-event-broker README / docs/
- fxa-geodb README
- fxa-js-client README
- fxa-payments-server README
- fxa-profile-server README / docs/
- fxa-shared README
- fxa-support-panel README