On 2017-05-11, Stan Silvert wrote:
On 5/10/2017 6:14 PM, Bruno Oliveira wrote:
> On 2017-05-10, Stan Silvert wrote:
> > The very thought of $subject seems like heresy. Why check in something
> > that is normally pulled using npm?
> >
> > We have Angular 2 examples in Keycloak now. In the not-too-distant
> > future, our Account Management console will be written in Angular 2. So
> > node_modules has to be there somehow.
> >
> > There are basically two options:
> > 1) Merge node_modules into the Keycloak repo.
> > 2) Don't merge and then run npm install at build time.
> >
> > Productization standards push toward option #1. We need to have
> > consistent, repeatable builds.
> >
> > But I'm looking for reasons that #1 might be bad. I can't come up
with
> > a rational reason to do #2 except that it saves disk space.
> My 2 cents here. I think #1 is bad for the following reasons:
My instinct is that it's bad too. But I need to play devil's advocate.
>
> 1. That's not the convention for Node.js development. Think about Java
> devs committing JARs to our repo. Certainly that would be terrible.
That's just the heresy argument.
Not really. It's also the way which QE thinks is the way to go
(
https://github.com/keycloak/keycloak-quickstarts/pull/25#issuecomment-300...)
> 2. Code review becomes a PITA at every dependency update.
If you are talking about review in GitHub, that shouldn't be a problem.
GitHub uses linguist to hide vendor files so that it doesn't mess up your
review. All you see is the file name. By default, it doesn't show you the
whole file. Strangely enough, the linguist guys see checking in js
libraries as a common practice:
https://github.com/github/linguist#vendored-code
Well, you're assuming that we should all do our code reviews using only GH.
> 3. Merge conflicts. Just think about multiple devs contribution
to the
> same repo and updating their modules.
Maybe I'm missing something here. Wouldn't that be really rare if it ever
happened at all (in our case)?
Not if every developer decide to run npm update :)
> 4. People could manually change these modules and you would
never know
> if the change is a consequence of `npm update` or a manual change.
I really hope nobody would be dumb enough to do that!
But come to think of it, this would be a security issue if someone did it on
purpose. Someone could sneak malicious code into our repo disguised as a
legit PR. It wouldn't be easy to catch during code review.
Trust me, if people wanted to do that. They wouldn't be dumb just
a single line
> 5. This only makes sense on scenarios where dev cannot rely on
npm
> dependencies.
>
>
> IMO option #2 would be the most viable. Projects from RedHat already do
> this[1] with some success. So I don't see any need for it.
>
> [1] -
https://github.com/aerogear/aerogear-unifiedpush-server/blob/02b133ffb496...
Doesn't this make the build a LOT slower?
If slowness is the major concern, we should commit every single JAR
inside the repo and call it a day. But I don't think we do that, right?
Plus, Travis can cache the dependencies[1].
[1] -
https://docs.travis-ci.com/user/caching/
How is Aerogear dealing with productization?
You have to ask them, more precisely Matthias.
>
>
> > Any thoughts?
> > _______________________________________________
> > keycloak-dev mailing list
> > keycloak-dev(a)lists.jboss.org
> >
https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/keycloak-dev
> --
>
> abstractj
--
abstractj