Iron (Fe) is an opinionated yet flexible FrontEnd development framework.
We want Iron to be a foundation for projects. Like all foundations Iron(Fe) is a place to start, but a foundation is just a beginning. There can be many directions you can go after you have a firm foundation. We want to give front end developers who work with AEM access to the same tools that we have when working outside AEM. Iron makes a few decisions for you.
- Iron encourages you to write your components in small sets of independent functionality.
- All components are blueprinted common js modules.
- with a main.js and a main.css files these small bits of code will help you stay organized as your project grows.
- Components are bundled via Browserify webpack or whatever else you fancy.
- Bundles are formed in client libraries.
- once the code is bundled it can be moved to a client library in AEM and then built via maven.
npm install -g iron-fe
iron myProjectName
Options:
-h, --help output usage information
-V, --version output the version number
-c, --component [name] Create a component with specified name
-b, --bundle [name] Create an AEM bundle with a specified name
-l, --clientlib [name] Create a Client Library with a specified name
The functions nested under bundles are to help you construct the bundles that can get moved into client libraries.
Bundles.match takes a file path of a component and will return a list of bundles. Each of those bundles are an explicit dependency of an individual component.
import iron from 'iron-fe'; // var iron = require( 'iron-fe' );
let myComponentPath = "the/path/to/my/component.js"
iron.bundles.match( myComponentPath )
Here you have the option of getting all or just one of the bundles you have generated in the aem-bundles folder.
This function will give you one bundle back with its relevant information.
import iron from 'iron-fe'; // var iron = require( 'iron-fe' );
let myBundle = iron.bundles.get.one( 'myBundle' );
---------
{
components: [
{ name: 'appEntry', isGlobal: false },
{ name: 'maps', isGlobal: false }
],
name: 'mainApp',
path: 'aem-bundles/app',
main: 'main.directories.js',
config: {
clientLibPath: '/Absolute/Path/to/bundle',
autoGenerate: { js: true, styles: true },
useGlobalComponents: true,
components: [ 'appEntry', 'maps' ]
}
}
This function will give you all bundles you have in your project with each bundle's relevant information.
import iron from 'iron-fe'; // var iron = require( 'iron-fe' );
let bundles = iron.bundles.get.all( );
---------
[
{
components: [
{ name: 'appEntry', isGlobal: false },
{ name: 'maps', isGlobal: false }
],
name: 'mainApp',
path: 'aem-bundles/app',
main: 'main.mainApp.js',
config: {
clientLibPath: '/Absolute/Path/to/clientlib',
autoGenerate: { js: true, styles: true },
useGlobalComponents: true,
components: [ 'appEntry', 'maps' ]
}
},
{
components: [
{ name: 'appEntry', isGlobal: false },
{ name: 'maps', isGlobal: false }
{ name: 'fonts', isGlobal: false }
],
name: 'homePape',
path: 'aem-bundles/homePape',
main: 'main.homePape.js',
config: {
clientLibPath: '/Absolute/Path/to/clientlib',
autoGenerate: { js: true, styles: true },
useGlobalComponents: true,
components: [ 'appEntry', 'maps', 'fonts' ]
}
}
]
This can be used in a build pre build step to generate an object of all the components listed in the bundles config json.
/**
*
* This file was generated. To edit the contents edit the
* .ironrc file for your project.
*
*/
export default {
'nav' : require( './../../components/nav/nav.js' ),
'footer' : require( './../../components/footer/footer.js' ),
'video' : require( './../../components/video/video.js' )
}
Iron will add a iron-templates
folder to you iron-fe folder. In the iron-templates
folder you will find 3 sub-folders. You can add your own custom template files here for each generator. For instance if your project has a base include that ever javascript component should have you can add a project specific template there.
- Choose the folder in which you want to add you custom template in the
iron-templates
folder - Add a new file to that folder and name it what ever you want with an extension of
extension.template
.- For example if I wanted a custom javascript template for the component generator the template file name might look like this
ironDemo.js.template
- For example if I wanted a custom javascript template for the component generator the template file name might look like this
- Once you have your template open up the .ironrc file and change the key in the templateConfigs object to match the name of your new template.
- using the same example above. I would change the templateConfigs.components.js from ironDefault to ironDemo.