@iobroker/adapter-dev

All developer dependencies an ioBroker adapter developer needs

Usage no npm install needed!

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README

ioBroker adapter-dev

All dependencies an ioBroker adapter developer needs.

node npm License

Installation

To use this library add it to your dev dependencies:

npm install --save-dev @iobroker/adapter-dev

Add the following to the scripts section of your package.json:

  "scripts": {
    // ... other scripts before this
    "translate": "translate-adapter",
    // If you need to compile React or TypeScript:
    "build": "build-adapter",
  }

If you don't have any i18n JSON files yet, call the following exactly once:

npm run translate to-json

TL;DR

  • You should only update i18n JSON files and you shouldn't touch words.js anymore.
  • Add new strings only to the English JSON file.
  • Call the following command whenever you add any text in JSON files (inside the admin i18n folder or in io-package.json).
    • If you have an HTML/JavaScript admin UI: npm run translate all
    • If you have a React admin UI: npm run translate
  • Run the following commands to (re)compile your adapter:
    • If you are using TypeScript: npm run build-adapter typescript
    • If you have a React admin UI: npm run build-adapter react
    • If you have both: npm run build-adapter all

Manage Translations

With the above setup completed, you can use the different commands of translate-adapter simply by calling:

npm run translate <command>

The commands exist in three forms (all three will be shown as examples below):

  • full name: a self-explaining name
  • short code: a one-character command
  • legacy name: the same name as previously used in gulp

In most cases, you don't need to specify any additional arguments as the defaults should match most adapters.

Note: if you need to provide arguments, you must add a double dash -- before any arguments!

npm run translate <command> -- <args>

Global Command Line Arguments

The following command line arguments can be passed to all commands:

  • --io-package: Path to the io-package.json file. Short: -p. Default: ./io-package.json
  • --admin: Path to the admin directory. Short: -a. Default: ./admin
  • --words: Path to the words.js file. Short: -w. Default: searches it in the admin directory, either <admin-dir>/words.js or <admin-dir>/js/words.js.
  • --base: Path to the english i18n file, multiple files are possible. Short: -b. Default: searches it in the admin directory, it will be <admin-dir>/i18n/en/translations.json or/and <admin-dir>/src/i18n/en.json
  • --languages: Specify a subset of languages to be translated. Short -l. Default: all languages.

translate Command

This is the default command and does not need to be specified.

npm run translate                             # (default)
npm run translate translate                   # full name/legacy
npm run translate t                           # short code
npm run translate t -- -l de fr it            # Only translate into german, french and italian

Translates all not yet translated strings in io-package.json and the i18n JSON files to all supported languages using Google Translate.

Previously known as gulp translate.

to-json Command

npm run translate to-json                     # full name
npm run translate j                           # short code
npm run translate adminWords2languages        # legacy

Converts words.js to the different i18n JSON files; this should be used exactly once when there are no JSON files yet.

Previously known as gulp adminWords2languages.

to-words Command

npm run translate to-words                    # full name
npm run translate w                           # short code
npm run translate adminLanguages2words        # legacy

Updates words.js from the different i18n JSON files; call this whenever you modify any of your JSON files manually. This is also automatically called by Weblate whenever translations are updated.

Previously known as gulp adminLanguages2words.

all Command

npm run translate all                         # full name
npm run translate a                           # short code
npm run translate translateAndUpdateWordsJS   # legacy

Calls translate and afterwards updates words.js using to-words followed by to-json.

Previously known as gulp translateAndUpdateWordsJS.

Environment Variables

Instead of Command Line Arguments

All command line arguments can also be provided as environment variables. Just prefix any argument with IOBROKER_TRANSLATE_:

  • --io-package becomes IOBROKER_TRANSLATE_IO_PACKAGE
  • --admin becomes IOBROKER_TRANSLATE_ADMIN
  • --words becomes IOBROKER_TRANSLATE_WORDS
  • --base becomes IOBROKER_TRANSLATE_BASE
  • --languages becomes IOBROKER_TRANSLATE_LANGUAGES

Translate with Google Translate Credentials

If you wish to use the Google Translate V3 API, you can set the environment variable GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS to point to a credentials file, so the translations can use larger quota for translations (which may result in costs).

The file can be generated on the Google Cloud Platform by creating a Service Account for Google Translate V3. See here for additional information. The expected format looks something like this:

{
    "type": "service_account",
    "project_id": "your-project-id-123456",
    "private_key_id": "1234567890abcdef1234567890abcdef12345678",
    "private_key": "-----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY-----\n...\n-----END PRIVATE KEY-----\n",
    "client_email": "your-app-name@your-project-id-123456.iam.gserviceaccount.com",
    "client_id": "123456789012345678901",
    "auth_uri": "https://accounts.google.com/o/oauth2/auth",
    "token_uri": "https://oauth2.googleapis.com/token",
    "auth_provider_x509_cert_url": "https://www.googleapis.com/oauth2/v1/certs",
    "client_x509_cert_url": "https://www.googleapis.com/robot/v1/metadata/x509/your-app-name%40your-project-id-123456.iam.gserviceaccount.com"
}

Compile adapter files

The build-adapter command uses esbuild under the hood for lightning fast compilation. It has an extensive set of options you can use to fine tune the compilation process, although the defaults should work out of the box when the adapter was created with @iobroker/create-adapter:

npm run build typescript [options]      # TypeScript, full name
npm run build ts         [options]      # TypeScript, short code
npm run build react      [options]      # React
npm run build all        [options]      # Everything (at the moment this is TypeScript and React)

These options are available for all commands:

  • --watch, short -w: Watch for changes and recompile

These only have an effect for the ts/typescript and all commands:

  • --typescriptRootDir: Directory where the TypeScript part of the adapter is located. Default: .
  • --typescriptOutDir: Directory where the compiled TypeScript output will be placed, relative to typescriptRootDir. Default: build
  • --typescriptPattern: Glob pattern for TypeScript source files, relative to typescriptRootDir. Should not be changed unless bundling is enabled. Each match will result in a separate bundle. Default: src/**/*.ts
  • --typescriptTsConfig: Path to the tsconfig.json file used for building TypeScript, relative to typescriptRootDir. Default: tsconfig.build.json
  • --typescriptBundle: Bundle compiled TypeScript output into one file per entry point. Default: false
  • --typescriptFormat: Format of the output file(s). Only CommonJS (cjs) is supported at the moment.
  • --typescriptCompileTarget: Compilation target for TypeScript. Determines which JS features will be used in the output file. Should be in sync with the minimum Node.js version supported by the adapter/ioBroker. Default: node12

These only have an effect for the react and all commands:

  • --reactRootDir: Directory where the React part of the adapter is located. Default: admin
  • --reactOutDir: Directory where the compiled React output will be placed, relative to reactRootDir. Default: build
  • --reactPattern: Glob pattern for React source files, relative to reactRootDir. Each match will result in a separate bundle. Default: src/{index,tab}.{tsx,jsx}
  • --reactTsConfig: Path to the tsconfig.json file used for building React, relative to reactRootDir. Default: tsconfig.json
  • --reactBundle: Bundle compiled React output into one file per entry point. Default: true
  • --reactFormat: Format of the output file(s). Supports iife and esm, but ESM should only be selected when targeting modern browsers exclusively.
  • --reactCompileTarget: Compilation target for React. Determines which JS features will be used in the output file. Default: es2018

Using a config file

By default, the build script looks for a .buildconfig.json file where the above options can be saved (without leading --), so they don't have to be specified on the command line. Example:

{
    "typescriptBundle": true,
    "typescriptCompileTarget": "node16"
}

This path can be changed with the --config option, short -c.

Changelog

1.0.0 (2022-02-15)

  • (AlCalzone) Add build script to compile TypeScript and React using the blazing fast esbuild

0.1.0 (2021-09-21)

  • (UncleSamSwiss) Removed dependency on gulp
  • (UncleSamSwiss) Rewrote translation management as a regular Node.js application

0.0.4 (2021-05-26)

  • (UncleSamSwiss) Implemented gulp tasks very similar to the existing tasks

0.0.3 (2021-05-06)

  • (UncleSamSwiss) Fixed npm publishing

0.0.2 (2021-05-06)

  • (UncleSamSwiss) Initial repository setup