3.2 KiB
Development
Any contribution is welcomed! There are no real formal contribution guidelines right now, they will maybe come later.
Repository Structure
- core - Shared core classes of the XPipe Java API, XPipe extensions, and the XPipe daemon implementation
- beacon - The XPipe beacon component is responsible for handling all communications between the XPipe daemon and the client applications, for example the various programming language APIs and the CLI
- app - Contains the XPipe daemon implementation, the XPipe desktop application, and an API to create all different kinds of extensions for the XPipe platform
- dist - Tools to create a distributable package of XPipe
- ext - Available XPipe extensions. Essentially every feature is implemented as an extension
Modularity
All XPipe components target Java 20 and make full use of the Java Module System (JPMS). All components are modularized, including all their dependencies. In case a dependency is (sadly) not modularized yet, module information is manually added using moditect. Further, note that as this is a pretty complicated Java project that fully utilizes modularity, many IDEs still have problems building this project properly. For example, you can't build this project in eclipse or vscode as it will complain about missing modules. The tested and recommended IDE is IntelliJ.
Setup
You need to have an up-to-date version of XPipe installed on your local system in order to properly run XPipe in a development environment. This is due to the fact that some components are only included in the release version and not in this repository. XPipe is able to automatically detect your local installation and fetch the required components from it when it is run in a development environment.
You need to have GraalVM Community Edition for Java 20 installed as a JDK to compile the project.
If you are on Linux or macOS, you can easily accomplish that by running the setup.sh
script.
On Windows, you have to manually install the JDK.
Building and Running
You can use the gradle wrapper to build and run the project:
gradlew app:run
will run the desktop application. You can set various useful properties inapp/build.gradle
gradlew dist
will create a distributable production version indist/build/dist/base
.gradlew <project>:test
will run the tests of the specified project.
You are also able to properly debug the built production application through two different methods:
- The
app/scripts/xpiped_debug
script will launch the application in debug mode and with a console attached to it - The
app/scripts/xpiped_debug_attach
script attaches a debugger with the help of AttachMe. Just make sure that the attachme process is running within IntelliJ, and the debugger should launch automatically once you start up the application.
Note that when any unit test is run using a debugger, the XPipe daemon process that is started will also attempt to connect to that debugger through AttachMe as well.