# Description of Changes
This PR moves most of the contents of `@clockworklabs/spacetimedb-sdk`
into the `spacetimedb` module. The `spacetimedb` module now exports
`sdk` and `server` as separate subpaths where `sdk` contains the code
which was previously in `@clockworklabs/spacetimedb-sdk`.
In particular it makes the following moves:
- `/sdks/typescript/packages/sdk` -> `/sdks/typescript`
- most of the contents of `/sdks/typescript/packages/sdk` ->
`crates/bindings-typescript`
- `/sdks/typescript/packages/test-app` ->
`crates/bindings-typescript/test-app`
The following packags was NOT moved:
`/sdks/typescript/examples/quickstart-chat`
## Motivation
In accordance with
https://github.com/clockworklabs/SpacetimeDB/issues/3250, we would like
to consolidate `@clockworklabs/spacetimedb-sdk` into a single
`spacetimedb` package so that users can import the different things they
need from a single package.
### Pros:
- allow users to install a single package with subpaths `spacetimedb`,
`spacetimedb/react`, `spacetimedb/sdk`, `spacetimedb/server`, etc.
- Is much simpler for bundling, etc.
- Is backwards compatible with `@clockworklabs/spacetimedb-sdk` which
now becomes a thin wrapper
- eventually allow us to break up the `spacetimedb` package into other
packages if we want to split them up (e.g. `@spacetimedb/lib`,
`@spacetimedb/sdk`, etc.) and we can solve the build complexity that
introduces when we get to it
- eventually allow us to move `bindings-csharp` out of the crates
directory where it probably doesn't belong anyway
- organizes all TypeScript packages into the packages directory where
you'd normally expect them, with the possible exception of
`/sdks/typescript` if we wanted to leave that separate
### Cons:
- The `sdk` directory is now a bit of a ruse as to where the code
actually lives since it's just a thin wrapper. If it eventually becomes
its own independent package, we'll also have to break up spacetimedb
into `@spacetimedb/lib` and `@spacetimedb/server` so that
`@clockworklabs/spacetimedb-sdk` can depend on `@spacetimedb/lib` while
being a dependency of `spacetimedb`.
Ideally this change would have been made later, however, it became
necessary for the following **heinously disastrous chain of forcing
moves**:
1. Adding `react` support necessitated shipping react as an optional
peer dependency under `@clockworklabs/spacetimedb-sdk/react`
2. This required adding a new build target/export/bundle
3. Previously `@clockworklabs/spacetimedb-sdk` was configured to have
`noExternal` for `spacetimedb` meaning it would collect the library into
the sdk bundle. I attempted to continue this for react support but...
4. Creating a new `react` bundle which also pulled in `spacetimedb`
caused their to be nominal type conflicts between classes in the
duplicate `spacetimedb` bundles.
5. Changing `spacetimedb` to be included as `external` caused compile
errors because `@clockworklabs/spacetimedb-sdk` is configured in
`tsconfig.json` to fail on unused variables and it was now including the
source of `spacetimedb` which is not configured to error on unused
variables and has "unused" private variables which are actually used by
us secretly, but not exposed to the clients.
> SIDE NOTE: The unused variables settings cannot be turned off on a
line by line basis, so it has to be turned off entirely, but in order to
maintain the linting checks we had I used `eslint` to enforce the rule
so that we could disable it line by line. (This caused me to discover
quite a lot of things that were broken that were caught by `eslint`
being applied to the entire project. `eslint` was previously only
applied to the `quickstart-chat` and the `crates/bindings-typescript`
library)
6. Changing the build to be external, now requires `spacetimedb` to also
be published to npm as its own module which
`@clockworklabs/spacetimedb-sdk` now imports, which requires that we add
`tsup` config to `spacetimedb` to publish a built version of the
library.
7. The only way to avoid that is to move the `sdk` and `react` code from
`@clockworklabs/spacetimedb-sdk` into the existing `spacetimedb` package
to avoid the duplicate import problem on step 4 and change
`@clockworklabs/spacetimedb-sdk` back to again use `noExternal` for its
`spacetimedb` dependency.
And here we are. I chose not to move `/crates/bindings-typescript` even
though that's probably not a great place long term. It would be better
to have it in `/packages/spacetimedb` or `/npm-packages/spacetimedb` or
`/ts-packages/spacetimedb` or something, and move all our TypeScript
packages in there. But that is a different matter.
The net result however is that we have a new `spacetimedb` package which
exports the different parts of the API under:
- `spacetimedb`
- `spacetimedb/server`
- `spacetimedb/sdk`
- `spacetimedb/react`
while still not breaking the existing deploy process, nor any
users/developers who are currently using
`@clockworklabs/spacetimedb-sdk`.
I think long term should we ever decide to split `spacetimedb` up into
multiple packages or if we have additional unrelated packages, we should
publish them to the `@spacetimedb` org which I reserved for us here:
https://www.npmjs.com/org/spacetimedb
> NOTE: `spacetimedb` is a package and `@spacetimedb` is an org.
`spacetimedb/sdk` is not a separate package, it's a subpath export of
the `spacetimedb` package, whereas `@spacetimedb/sdk` would be (and
would need to be) it's own separate package. You can certainly have both
`spacetimedb/sdk` and `@spacetimedb/sdk`. We could for example host the
code for the sdk at `@spacetimedb/sdk` and just reexport it from
`spacetimedb` under the `spacetimedb/sdk` subpath.
# API and ABI breaking changes
This should not change or modify the API or ABI in any way. If it does
so accidentally it is a bug, although I carefully went through the
exports.
# Expected complexity level and risk
3 because it changes how the SDK is built a bit and rearranges a lot of
paths.
# Testing
- [x] All of the CI passes
- [x] I also ran quickstart-chat to confirm that it is not broken
- [x] I also ran test-app
# Description of Changes
Some minor cleanups in the flow for regenerating the CLI reference.
# API and ABI breaking changes
None
# Expected complexity level and risk
1
# Testing
- [x] Existing CI passes
Co-authored-by: Zeke Foppa <bfops@users.noreply.github.com>
# Description of Changes
This PR:
- standardizes the prettier config across all TypeScript projects
- adds a root level package.json
- standardizes all `pnpm` commands to be the same
- updates documentation accordingly
- adds some additional typescript testing for serialization and
deserialization
**IMPORTANT!** Once this PR merges we will need to change the
`compile-and-test` required check to `build-and-test`
# API and ABI breaking changes
No breaking changes.
# Expected complexity level and risk
2 - It in principle doesn't change any code, but could affect deploy
processes.
# Testing
- [x] Just the automated testing that we had previously
- [x] I added additional automated tests
---------
Co-authored-by: Zeke Foppa <bfops@users.noreply.github.com>
* First commit to test images
* Progress on the unity tutorial
* moar docs
* Part 3 incoming
* Part 3 and almost part 4!
* Finalized part 4 and deleted unused files
* Small fixes and clarifications
* Review typos and fixes
* Fixed link validation for images
* Removed the reference to an image which is going to be moving
* Fixed the tsconfig issue (it was not actually using the tsconfig)
* Shortened titles
* Just testing something
* Undo change
* Consistent headers
* Commenting out images for now
* Missed an image
* Added a script to check the validity of docs links and a .github action
* Removed erroneous thing
* Switched the action trigger
* Added workflow to ensure that the nav.ts has been built to nav.js
* typo
* Build nav.ts
* typo thing
* Fixed script issue
* Fix
* Fixed a few links
* Added relative link resolution and fixed the broken links
* now checking fragments
* Now checking fragments properly and publishing some stats
* Forgot exit code
* Fix broken links
Well, in at least some cases, just remove broken links.
- The BSATN ref contained links to type defns, but didn't have type defns.
Replace the links with plain text.
- HTTP database links for recovery-code related routes were getting mangled
in some way I couldn't figure out, so the links weren't working
despite their targets clearly existing.
Conveniently, those routes have been removed,
so remove the links and the corresponding sections.
- The JSON doc (erroneously called "SATN") contained typos,
spelling "producttype" as "productype".
- C# SDK ref had links to a section on the `Address` type, but no such section.
Replace the links with plain text.
- Rust SDK ref had a link getting mangled in a way I couldn't figure out.
Simplify the section title so that the anchor name is predictable.
- TypeSciprt SDK ref used camelCase names in anchor links,
but we downcase all section titles to create anchor names.
Also slap a section in README.md which says how to run the checker locally.
---------
Co-authored-by: Phoebe Goldman <phoebe@goldman-tribe.org>