npm install -g @microsoft/rush
rush update
# To force rush to refetch the correct version of the packages
rush update --recheck
This will install all of the npm dependencies of all projects in the
repo. Do this whenever you git pull
or your workspace is freshly
cleaned/cloned.
Note that rush update
must be done before building in VS Code or
using the command line.
rush rebuild
This will build all projects in the correct dependency order.
rush build
This will build all projects that have changed since the last rush build
in
dependency order.
cd packages/<project>
rushx build
rush test
Starting this command will rebuild the typescript files on save.
rush watch
Sometimes there are ghost files left in the dist folder (common when renaming or deleting a TypeScript file), running this will get a clean state.
rush clean
cd packages/<project>
rushx test
Tests sometimes log extra info using logVerboseTestOutput
To see
this output on the command line, set environment variable
CADL_VERBOSE_TEST_OUTPUT=true.
rush format
PR validation enforces code formatting style rules for the repo. This command will reformat code automatically so that it passes.
You can also check if your code is formatted correctly without
reformatting anything using rush check-format
.
See also below for having this happen automatically in VS Code whenever you save.
rush change
PR validation enforces every changes to packages have a changelog entry.
Rush change will ask for the following questions for each modified packages:
- message: This should be a good description of what the changes are to this package
- type:
major
: For a breaking change. DO NOT USE All versions remain in 0.x stage until GA.minor
: A new funtionality.patch
: A bug fix.none
: Not relevant to the consumer of the packages. For example some added tests.
- Mocha Test Explorer: Run tests from the IDE.
- Prettier: Automatically keep code formatted correctly on save.
Always open the root of the repo as the workspace. Things are setup to allow easy development across packages rather than opening one package at a time in the IDE.
- File -> Open Workspace, select root folder where the Cadl repo was cloned
- Or run
code /path/to/repo/root
on the command line
- Terminal -> Run Build Task (
Ctrl+Shift+B
)
This will setup a an incremental watching build for the whole repo. From there on, your changes will be built whenever you save.
Problems will be reported in the Problems pane auotomatically and the Terminal pane will have three parallel watch tasks running:
watch-source
: tsc process that recompiles on TypeScript changeswatch-spec
: process that regenerates spec.html when spec.emu.html changeswatch-tmlanguage
: process that regenerates cadl.tmlanguage when tmlanguage.ts changes
With Mocha Test Explorer installed, click on its icon in the sidebar, then click on the play button at the top or on any individual test or test group to run just one test or just one group. You can also click on the bug icon next to an individual test to debug it.
You can see additional information logged by each test using
logVerboseTestOutput
by clicking on the test and looking at the
output pane. Unlike the command line, no environment variable is
needed.
There are several "Run and Debug" tasks set up. Click on the Run and Debug icon on the sidebar, pick one from its down, and press F5 to debug the last one you chose.
- VS Code Extension: This will run and debug an experimental instance of VS Code with the Cadl extension for VS Code and Cadl language serever running live with any of your changes. It will attach to both the VS Code client process and the language server process automatically.
- Compile Scratch: Use this to debug compiling
packages/cadl-samples/scratch/*.cadl
. The Cadl source code in that folder is excluded from source control by design. Create Cadl files there to experiment and debug how the compiler reacts. - Compile Scratch (nostdlib): Same as above, but skips parsing and evaluating the Cadl standard library. Sometimes it's easier to
- Attach to Default Port: Use this to attach to a manually run
node --debug
command. - Attach to Language Server: Use this to attach to the language server process of an already running client process. Useful if you want to debug the language server in VS Code while debugging the VS client in VS.
- Regenerate .tmlanguage: This runs the code that produces the cadl.tmlanguage file that provides syntax highlighting of Cadl in VS and VS Code. Select this to debug its build process.
Install Visual Studio 16.9 or later. It is not currently possible to build the VS extension without it, and of course you'll need Visual Studio to run and debug the Visual Studio extension.
See the command line build steps above. If you have VS installed, the VS extension will be included in your command line full repo builds automatically.
If you do not have VS installed the command line build steps above will simply skip building the VS extension and only build the VS Code extension.
- Open packages/cadl-vs/Microsoft.Cadl.VisualStudio.sln in Visual Studio
- Build -> Build solution (
Ctrl+Shift+B
)
Unlike TypeScript in VS Code above, this is not a watching build, but it is relatively fast to run. Press Ctrl+Shift+B again to build any changes after you make them.
- Click on the play icon in the toolbar or press
F5
This will run and debug an experimental instance of VS with a version of the Cadl extension for VS Code running live with any of your changes to the extension or the Cadl language server.
The VS debugger will attach only to the VS client process. Use "Attach to Lanugage Server" described above to debug the language server in VS Code.
rush dogfood
This will globally install the @cadl-lang/compiler package, putting your
build of cadl
on PATH, and install the VS Code extension if VS Code
is installed.
Note the important difference between this and the steps to run and
debug the VS Code extension above: the dogfood
command installs the
Cadl extension with your changes in regular, non-experimental instance
of VS Code, meaning you will have it always, and not only when running
the debug steps above. This is exactly like using cadl vscode install
,
only instead of downloading the latest release, it uses a build with your
changes applied.
There is no automatic dogfood
process for installing the VS
extension non-experimentally, but if you build the cadl-vs project from
the command line following the steps above, or build its Release
configuration in Visual Studio, then you can install it by
double-clicking on packages/cadl-vs/Microsoft.Cadl.VisualStudio.vsix
that gets produced.
For contributors of the repo the build will trigger automatically but for other's forks it will need a manual trigger from a contributor. As a contributor you can run the following command to trigger the build and create a cadl playground link for this PR.
/azp run Cadl Pull Request Try It