oss-mariner
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0.9.0-beta • Public • Published

Mariner

OSS Lifecycle GitHub version License Project language Issues Maintenance

Introduction

A node.js library for analyzing open source library dependencies.

Mariner's goal is to help you to support the open source projects you rely upon by making it easy to get a list of the open issues in your dependencies.

Mariner takes an input list of GitHub repos, fetches details about them from GitHub, and outputs a file containing a list of issues for each project.

NOTE: This library is in the experimental stage, so expect breaking changes even if the version number does not indicate that.

REST vs. GraphQL

The first couple alpha versions of Mariner only supported calls via GitHub's REST API. More recently, we added the ability to invoke GitHub's GraphQL API. The GraphQL API is hundreds of times faster, so the REST-related calls are now deprecated, and will be removed "soon". The GraphQL approach is shown in the runExample.ts example.

Getting Started Using Mariner

If you just want to USE Mariner, you don't need to do a git clone. Instead, you'll create your own new node project, and install the oss-mariner package via npm: npm install oss-mariner You'll also need a GitHub token and a config file. (Keep reading for more info on these.)

Step-by-step instructions for creating a project that uses Mariner

  1. Create a new project folder and use npm init to make it a node project.
  2. Copy the contents of runExample.ts into index.js.
  3. In index.js comment out the existing line that imports mariner.
  4. Also in index.js, uncomment the line saying how mariner would normally be imported.
  5. Next, create a folder named examples and create two new files inside of it: exampleData.json and config.json. You can copy the contents of our examples into those new files or you can use the examples as a template for your own data and config choices. The exampleData.json should contain the repos that you're interested in getting issues from. For more info on the format of this file, look atthe Input File Format section. More info on config.json can also be found below and the example files can be found here:
  6. Mariner supports TypeScript, but we don't have step-by-step instructions for the TypeScript example. For now, you can convert the runExample.ts example code to JavaScript:
    • Remove the public keywords from class members.
    • Remove the implements Xxxx from the FancyLogger class declaration.
    • Remove all the type declarations (like : string).
  7. Run npm install oss-mariner
  8. Add "type": "module" to package.json to allow using "import" rather than "require".
  9. Get a GitHub token. See instructions here
  10. Store your GitHub token in your system's environment by running export MARINER_GITHUB_TOKEN={Insert your GitHub token here}. You will either have to do this once each time you restart your system, or else configure your system to do so automatically.
  11. Finally, run the application to find open issues in your dependencies, using the command node index.js.

Optional: Generating HTML

  • You can generate HTML
  • The generateHtml() creates the html based on two parameters: maxIssuesAge and issuesByDependency
  • maxIssueAge defaults to 30 days, anything over 30 days won't get written, You can edit this number.
  • Example of HTML output:
<h3 class="dependency-name">facebook/jest</h3>
<table class="issue-list">
    <tr class="issue-header-row">
        <th>Title</th>
        <th>Age</th>
    </tr>
    <tr class="issue-row">
        <td class="issue-title">
            <a href="https://github.com/facebook/jest/issues/12522"
                >Rework asynchronous tests documentation</a>
        </td>
        <td class="issue-age">15&nbsp;days</td>
        <td class="issue-languages">JavaScript,CSS,Shell,Handlebars,Prolog</td>
    </tr>
    <tr class="issue-row">
        <td class="issue-title">
            <a href="https://github.com/facebook/jest/issues/12495">Use Admonitions on website</a>
        </td>
        <td class="issue-age">22&nbsp;days</td>
        <td class="issue-languages">JavaScript,CSS,TypeScript,Shell,Handlebars,Prolog</td>
    </tr>
    <tr class="issue-row">
        <td class="issue-title">
            <a href="https://github.com/facebook/jest/issues/12592"
                >[Bug]: test `notify › does not report --notify flag` is flaky</a
            >
        </td>
        <td class="issue-age">17&nbsp;days</td>
        <td class="issue-languages">JavaScript,CSS,TypeScript,Shell,Handlebars,Prolog</td>
    </tr>
</table>

Optional: Generating Markup

  • You can generate markup for use in Confluence/jira
  • The generateConfluenceMarkup() creates the markup based on two parameters: maxIssuesAge and issuesByDependency
  • maxIssueAge defaults to 30 days, anything over 30 days won't get written, You can edit this number.
  • Square brackets and curly braces in issue titles will be replaced by parentheses.
  • Example of confluenceMarkup output:
h2. Updated: February 22, 2021, 5:38 PM PST

h3. babel/babel
||_Title_||_Age_||_Languages_||
|[all the core-js imports are removed|https://github.com/babel/babel/issues/12545]|62&nbsp;days|Javascript|

h3. facebook/jest
||_Title_||_Age_||_Languages_||
|[Lost of context between tests when using dynamic ESM import|https://github.com/facebook/jest/issues/10944]|72&nbsp;days|Typescript, Javascript|

Optional: Generating Markdown

  • You can generate markdown for use in GitHub
  • The generateGitHubMarkdown() creates the markdown based on two parameters: maxIssuesAge and issuesByDependency
  • maxIssueAge defaults to 30 days, anything over 30 days won't get written, You can edit this number.
  • Example of GitHub markdown output:
## Updated: 2022-01-18T22:53:35.522Z

### babel/babel

|**Title**|**Age**|
|:----|:----|
|[[Bug]: Typescript plugin fails on named tuple positions where the name is a reserved word in JS|https://github.com/babel/babel/issues/13702]|147&nbsp;days|Typescript|
|[[preset-env] all the core-js imports are removed|https://github.com/babel/babel/issues/12545]|392&nbsp;days|
| [[Bug]: TypeError: Error while loading config - yield\* (intermediate value) is not iterable|https://github.com/babel/babel/issues/13462]|218&nbsp;days|Typescript|

Config.json Format

You can use our example config options as written, or customize the fields if you choose.

  • Every GitHub issue can have one or more labels attached to it. labelsToSearch is an array of the labels you'd like Mariner to search for in the issues it will return. The defaults in our example are ones that will make it easy for someone to make a first contribution to a repo.
  • Make sure that your inputFilePath is accurate. If you followed the steps above and put exampleData.json into a top-level folder called examples, you won't have to change the value of this variable.
  • outputFilePath is the place you'd like the results written to
  • daysAgoCreated is for deciding how fresh you want the issues to be. If you only want issues that were created in the last week, then choose 7, for example.
  • numberOfReposPerCall: we recommend not changing this number. Unless you're getting an error from GitHub that your query string is too long, in which case try a smaller number.

Input File Format

The input file is a JSON file in the format:

  • At the top level is a map/object, where each entry consists of a dependency as the key, and the number of projects that depend on that library as the value.
  • Each dependency can be identified by a complete URL or just the owner/repo string.
  • Example complete url: "https://api.github.com/repos/spring-projects/spring-framework": 19805,
  • Example owner/repo strings: "square/retrofit": 5023,
  • The project count value is mostly ignored, but is used by the "abbreviated" feature.
  • See examples/exampleData.json for a complete example.

Output File Format

The output file is a JSON file in the format:

{
  "repository/name": [
    {
      "title": "Issue Title 1",
      "createdAt": "2020-10-16T01:07:36Z",
      "repositoryNameWithOwner": "repository/name",
      "languages": ["JavaScript", "TypeScript", "CSS"],
      "url": "https://github.com/repository/name/issues/65",
      "updatedAt": "2020-10-16T01:07:36Z",
      "labels": [
        "Hacktoberfest",
        "good first issue"
      ]
    },
    {
      "title": "Issue Title 2",
      "createdAt": "2020-10-12T22:37:17Z",
      "repositoryNameWithOwner": "repository/name",
      "languages": ["JavaScript"],
      "url": "https://github.com/repository/name/issues/58",
      "updatedAt": "2020-10-12T22:37:17Z",
      "labels": [
        "Hacktoberfest",
        "good first issue"
      ]
    }
  ],
  "respository/second_name": [
    {
      "title": "Issue 102",
      "createdAt": "2020-10-03T13:16:58Z",
      "repositoryNameWithOwner": "respository/second_name",
      "languages": ["JavaScript", "Rust"],
      "url": "https://github.com/respository/second_name/issues/12137",
      "updatedAt": "2020-10-03T13:16:58Z",
      "labels": [
        "claimed",
        "good first issue",
        "i: enhancement"
      ]
    }
  ],
}

Please note that only the first 100 labels per issue will be fetched. If a single issue has over 100 labels, these will be excluded without any errors or warnings.

Token

To run Mariner, you must create a token. The GitHub token must be a valid personal access token. It does not require any permissions beyond the default, so when you create it you can leave all the boxes unchecked. Be careful not to share your token with anyone. If it gets exposed, revoke it and create a replacement. See https://github.com/settings/tokens/new for how to create a token.

More details (possibly outdated)

Mariner can be called from Javascript or from Typescript. You can see an example here: https://github.com/indeedeng/Mariner/blob/master/examples/runOldCode.ts

Mariner is in transition from the old way of accessing GitHub data (REST) to the new way (GraphQL)

To invoke mariner using the new GraphQL code, Invoke the finder(), passing the appropiate parameters in finder.findIssues() you can see an example here: https://github.com/indeedeng/Mariner/blob/master/examples/runExample.ts

If you are using the examples/runOldCode.ts file, (using the old REST code that is very slow) invoke the DependencyDetailsRetriever.run() method, passing appropriate parameters. Please see the examples/runOldCode.ts file for more information.

We don't recommend using the abbreviated feature. It will omit entries that have fewer than a hard-coded number of projects that depend on them.

Getting Help

The Open Source team at Indeed, who can be reached at opensource@indeed.com.

How To Contribute

Read the Code of Conduct and Contact the Maintainers before making any changes or a PR. If an issue doesn’t already exist that describes the change you want to make, we recommend creating one. If an issue does exist, please comment on it saying that you are starting to work on it, to avoid duplicating effort.

Getting Started Developing Mariner

Clone the repository from GitHub.

Run npm ci to install the libraries used in the project. Read more about npm ci here.

Follow the instructions in examples/runExample.ts or examples/runOldCode.ts to configure the input and output files. NOTE: An example input file is included, in the examples directory.

Run nvm use to use the appropiate version of Node specified in the .nvmrc file.

Run npm run build to compile the code to Javascript.

Run node dist/examples/runExample.js (to use GraphQL) or node dist/examples/runOldCode.ts (to use REST calls), to run the example program. It requires internet access, since it calls the GitHub API. It will take a couple minutes to complete. Some of the output includes the word "ERROR", so don't panic.

Ensure to lint your code by running npm run lint before submitting any code for review. Either manually fix the errors or run npm run lint:fix to automatically fix any errors.

Husky is set up to run linting checks pre-commit which should prevent being able to commit linting errors; however, There is a bug in husky where occasionally the hooks won't run in an IDE.

Local testing of the npm packaging

You should have local copies of both the oss-mariner project and the project that will include it. In the oss-mariner project, run npm link. This will "publish" oss-mariner locally on your computer. Then in the other project, run npm link oss-mariner. This will replace the public npm version of oss-mariner with your local copy. To undo run npm unlink --no-save oss-mariner on your project’s directory to remove the local symlink. To remove global symlink go to oss-mariner project and run npm unlink

Project Maintainers

The Open Source team at Indeed, who can be reached at opensource@indeed.com.

How to Publish

If you are a maintainer, you can follow these steps to publish a new version of the package:

  1. Create a branch named "publish-x.y.z (x.y.z will be the version number)
  2. Update the version number in package.json
  3. Run nvm use to use the appropiate version of Node specified in the .nvmrc file
  4. Run npm install to update package-lock.json
    • Search package-lock.json to be sure there are no references to 'nexus'
    • Make sure package-lock.json has the new version number
  5. Run npm run lint, then run npm test, then run npm run build to make sure there are no errors
  6. Commit and push the changes, create a PR, have it approved, and merge it into the main branch
  7. Switch to main branch and pull the new changes
  8. Do a dry run to make sure the package looks good: npm publish --dry-run
  9. Login to npm if you haven’t already: npm login
  10. Publish: npm publish
  11. Verify that the new version appears at: https://www.npmjs.com/package/oss-mariner
  12. Create a new GitHub release:
    1. On the project homepage, click on Releases
    2. Click the Draft a new release button
    3. Enter the version number in the "tag version" field
    4. Enter a release title like v2.1.3
    5. In the description list the major changes
    6. Click the Publish release button

Code of Conduct

This project is governed by the Contributor Covenant v 1.4.1.

License

This project uses the Apache 2.0 license.

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