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Ember OSF

master Build Status: Build Status npm Version

develop Build Status: Build Status Coverage Status

This repo contains code for interacting with the OSF APIv2 inside of an Ember app. See addon API Docs for a list of what this addon provides.

Contributing

Please read the CONTRIBUTING.md

Installing tools to develop and modify this addon

See the yarn docs for installing and using yarn. These instructions will prepare your environment if you plan to modify and test this addon in isolation.

  • git clone this repository
  • yarn install --pure-lockfile
  • bower install

Using this addon in another Ember app

For production use

Other applications that wish to consume this addon should add the following line manually to the consuming Ember app's package.json file, then run yarn install and bower install inside that app.

"ember-osf": "git+https://github.com/CenterForOpenScience/ember-osf.git#NewestCommitHashGoesHere",

In the future, we will provide an installable npm package to simplify this process.

For local development

  1. Clone the repository: git clone https://github.com/CenterForOpenScience/ember-osf.git
  2. From the consuming Ember app:
  • install the addon and it's dependencies: ember install ../ember-osf
    • this generates a config/local.yml file (see 'Configuration' below)
  • link the app for local development: npm link ../ember-osf
  • Import code from ember-osf like:
import Ember from 'ember';
import OsfTokenLoginRouteMixin from 'ember-osf/mixins/osf-token-login-route';

export default Ember.Route.extend(OsfLoginRouteMixin);

Note: Running ember install will automatically install many bower and npm dependencies for ember-osf.

Configuration

Specifying configuration information

local.yml settings

If for some reason you don't have a config/local.yml you can generate one. To do this:

ember generate ember-osf

Ember-osf needs certain configuration variables to run. This is usually done via a config file structured as follows:

  OAUTH_SCOPES: osf.full_write
  REDIRECT_URI: http://localhost:4200/login

  CLIENT_ID: null
  PERSONAL_ACCESS_TOKEN: null

You will need to fill out options for each backend you want to use (see 'Running' below). We recommend using the 'test' backend for development and testing as it is the most stable of our environments. When configuring your application, make sure that your login redirect uri is correct. If it needs a trailing slash, be sure to include a trailing slash!

Edit the new file (installed in the config directory) and set:

  • CLIENT_ID to the client id of your developer application
  • PERSONAL_ACCESS_TOKEN to the newly generated token (Only required or recognized for the LOCAL backend; do not set this value for staging, production, or test backends)
  • REDIRECT_URI: Must exactly match the redirect URI used to register the OAuth developer application. Default value is appropriate for local development using ember server, with a login page at /login

Because of the potential for this file to include sensitive information, we strongly recommend adding this file to .gitignore for your project.

Alternate option: Environment variables

If you do not wish to use file-based configuration, any of the settings above can be overridden individually as environment variables with the same name as appears in the config file. Eg

BACKEND=test CLIENT_ID=gibberish ember server

If you provide a setting in both the config file and an environment variable, the environment variables take precedence.

You can always override auth-related settings, but attempts to override server URLs will be ignored unless you explicitly specify BACKEND=env (see "Running" for example).

Using the API

Most apps that use this addon will authorize requests via OAuth2. As may be apparent from the CLIENT_ID and REDIRECT_URI settings above, you will need to create a developer application on the relevant version of the OSF, and provide the appropriate settings for your app.

Advanced usage: Selecting an authorization type

We expect that most projects based on ember-osf will authenticate via OAuth 2.0 ("Token Login"); the addon is configured to use this out of the box, so long as you provide your own login page based on the appropriate mixins. This is the most effective way for third-party applications to work with our services.

If you are developing an application that will be hosted under the osf.io domain, you may wish to use cookie-based authentication instead. In that rare case, add the following lines to your config/environment.js file:

    var authorizationType = 'cookie';
    ENV.authorizationType = authorizationType;
    
    ENV['ember-simple-auth'] = {
        authorizer: `authorizer:osf-${authorizationType}`,
        authenticator: `authenticator:osf-${authorizationType}`
    };

Running the OSF Locally (optional)

For local development, you will need to be running the OSF APIv2. To connect to the APIv2 while using fakecas, you will need to generate a personal access token on your local OSF instance here- go ahead and grant full privilege access to all scopes (the osf.full_write option).

Using this addon

Ember Data: Using the OSF models

The models, serializers, adapters bundled in this addon with be available to you automatically. For example, simply do:

this.store.findAll('node')

to fetch all nodes (or at least the first page of results). If you need to fetch many results, see the API docs for information about how to handle pagination. Ember-osf also provides support for paginated relationship requests via a third-party addon.

MathJax

We use MathJax to make math look pretty in all browsers. If you want this in your application, copy this section into the <head> element of your index.html file:

<script type="text/javascript"
    src="//cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/mathjax/2.6.1/MathJax.js?config=TeX-AMS-MML_HTMLorMML">
</script>
<script type="text/x-mathjax-config">
    MathJax.Hub.Config({
        tex2jax: {inlineMath: [['$','$'], ['\\(','\\)']], processEscapes: true},
        skipStartupTypeset: true
    });
</script>

Advanced: using components and styles

Some of the ember-osf components require additional configuration to take advantage of premade widgets or styles.

Some of these settings, as well as recommended best practices, are gathered together in a demonstration app that consumes this addon.

Running

Using the addon with a specific server

We recommend developers target our test server:

  • test (test): matches production features, very stable

Ember-osf also ships with builtin support for several other servers:

  • local (local): for developers running the OSF stack locally
  • staging (stage): contains bleeding edge features, but less stable
  • staging2 (stage2) or staging3 (stage3): Staging servers that run specific feature branches, usually for functionality that is being tested for longer or not targeted for immediate release
  • production (prod): The main osf.io site. This is a good choice for apps you deploy, but please be a good citizen and avoid using the production server for your test data.

Then (using test as an example) run: BACKEND=test ember server

and visit your app at http://localhost:4200.

Note: When run from within the ember-osf repository, this command runs the dummy app contained in /tests/dummy

Using a custom OSF backend

In certain circumstances, you may wish to use a custom set of servers not known to the ember-osf addon. You can elect to specify your server URLs individually, by specifying BACKEND=env and passing additional environment variables/config file entries. For example:

BACKEND=env OSF_URL=https://e.io/ OSF_API_URL=https://api.e.io OSF_RENDER_URL=https://mfr.e.io/render OSF_FILE_URL=https://files.e.io OSF_HELP_URL=https://help.e.io OSF_COOKIE_LOGIN_URL=https://accounts.e.io/login OSF_OAUTH_URL=https://accounts.e.io/oauth2/authorize ember server

Running Tests

  • yarn test will run all tests used by Travis
  • ember test --server will run just ember tests, and reload any time that code is changed

For more information on using ember-cli, visit http://www.ember-cli.com/.

Distribution / releases

The information below applies only to package maintainers, and most users will not need this.

The following commands can be used to publish a new release of ember-osf:

  • yarn run bump-version [<newversion> | major | minor | patch]: Verify that the code is in a releasable state, increment the version number without generating a new git commit, and update documentation. See docs for recognized options.
  • yarn run make-release: Uses git flow to prepare a new release. You must be on the develop branch, commit all changes, and have run git init in this folder at least one time (ever).
  • yarn publish: Publish a new version of the package to the NPM registry. It is highly recommended that you do this from a fresh checkout of the repo, and validate the package contents before uploading. You must be a recognized NPM collaborator or this command will fail.

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