This document describes how to set up your development environment to build and test Angular.
It also explains the basic mechanics of using git
, node
, and yarn
.
See the contribution guidelines if you'd like to contribute to Angular.
Before you can build and test Angular, you must install and configure the following products on your development machine:
-
Git and/or the GitHub app (for Mac or Windows); GitHub's Guide to Installing Git is a good source of information.
-
Node.js, (version specified in the engines field of
package.json
) which is used to run a development web server, run tests, and generate distributable files. -
Yarn (version specified in the engines field of
package.json
) which is used to install dependencies. -
Java Development Kit which is used to execute the selenium standalone server for e2e testing.
Fork and clone the Angular repository:
- Login to your GitHub account or create one by following the instructions given here.
- Fork the main Angular repository.
- Clone your fork of the Angular repository and define an
upstream
remote pointing back to the Angular repository that you forked in the first place.
# Clone your GitHub repository:
git clone [email protected]:<github username>/angular.git
# Go to the Angular directory:
cd angular
# Add the main Angular repository as an upstream remote to your repository:
git remote add upstream https://github.com/angular/angular.git
Next, install the JavaScript modules needed to build and test Angular:
# Install Angular project dependencies (package.json)
yarn install
To build Angular run:
./scripts/build-packages-dist.sh
- Results are put in the
dist/packages-dist
folder.
Bazel is used as the primary tool for building and testing Angular. Building and testing is incremental with Bazel, and it's possible to only run tests for an individual package instead of for all packages. Read more about this in the BAZEL.md document.
You should execute all test suites before submitting a PR to GitHub:
yarn bazel test packages/...
Note: The first test run will be much slower than future runs. This is because future runs will benefit from Bazel's capability to do incremental builds.
All the tests are executed on our Continuous Integration infrastructure. PRs can only be merged if the code is formatted properly and all tests are passing.
Angular uses clang-format to format the source code. If the source code is not properly formatted, the CI will fail and the PR cannot be merged.
You can automatically format your code by running:
yarn gulp format
: re-format only edited source code.yarn gulp format:all
: format all source code
A better way is to set up your IDE to format the changed file on each file save.
- Install Clang-Format extension for VS Code.
It will automatically pick up the settings from Angular's settings.json.
- Install the ClangFormatIJ plugin
- Open
Preferences->Tools->clang-format
- Find the field named "PATH"
- Add
<PATH_TO_YOUR_WORKSPACE>/angular/node_modules/clang-format/bin/<OS>/
where the OS options are:darwin_x64
,linux_x64
, andwin32
.
- Install Vim Clang-Format.
- Create a project-specific
.vimrc
in your Angular directory containing
let g:clang_format#command = '$ANGULAR_PATH/node_modules/.bin/clang-format'
where $ANGULAR_PATH
is an environment variable of the absolute path of your Angular directory.
You can check that your code is properly formatted and adheres to coding style by running:
$ yarn gulp lint
When a build of any branch on the upstream fork angular/angular is green on CircleCI,
it automatically publishes build artifacts
to repositories in the Angular org, eg. the @angular/core
package is published to
http://github.com/angular/core-builds.
You may find that your un-merged change needs some validation from external participants.
Rather than requiring them to pull your Pull Request and build Angular locally, you can
publish the *-builds
snapshots just like our CircleCI build does.
First time, you need to create the GitHub repositories:
$ export TOKEN=[get one from https://github.com/settings/tokens]
$ CREATE_REPOS=1 ./scripts/ci/publish-build-artifacts.sh [GitHub username]
For subsequent snapshots, just run
$ ./scripts/ci/publish-build-artifacts.sh [GitHub username]
The script will publish the build snapshot to a branch with the same name as your current branch, and create it if it doesn't exist.
- Install Bazel extension for VS Code.
- Install the Bazel plugin
- You can find the settings under
Preferences->Other Settings->Bazel Settings
It will automatically recognize *.bazel
and *.bzl
files.