ht @rschamp for the suggestions!
3 KiB
scratch-www
Standalone web client for Scratch
To Build
npm install
npm run build
To Run
npm start
During development, npm start
watches any update you make to files in either ./static
or ./src
and triggers a rebuild of the project. In development the build is stored in memory, and not served from the ./build
directory.
Once running, open http://localhost:8333
in your browser. If you wish to have the server reload automatically, you can install either nodemon or forever.
To stop
Use ^C
to stop the node process npm start
starts.
Configuration
npm start
can be configured with the following environment variables
Variable | Default | Description |
---|---|---|
API_HOST |
https://api.scratch.mit.edu |
Hostname for API requests |
NODE_ENV |
null |
If not production , app acts like development |
PORT |
8333 |
Port for devserver (http://localhost:XXXX) |
PROXY_HOST |
'' |
Pass-through location for scratchr2 |
To Test
npm test
Current issues with the development
We're currently in the process of transitioning into this web client from Scratch's existing structure. As we transition, there are going to be some issues along the way that relate to how this client needs to interact with the existing infrastructure to work properly in production.
On top of migrating to using this as our web client, Scratch is also transitioning into using a new API backend, Scratch REST API. As that is also currently in development and incomplete, we are set up to fall back to using existing Scratch endpoints if an API endpoint does not exist – which is where the PROXY_HOST
comes in.
Most of the issues we have currently revolve around the use of PROXY_HOST
. This variable is used to specify what url to fall back onto should a request fail within the context of this webclient, or when using the API_HOST
. If not specified in the process, it will not be used, and any request that is not made through the web client or the API will be unreachable.
Setting PROXY_HOST=https://scratch.mit.edu
allows the web client to retrieve data from the Scratch website in your development environment. However, because of security concerns, trying to send data to Scratch through your development environment won't work. This means the following things will be broken for the time being:
- Login on the splash page (In the process of being fixed)
- Some update attempts to production data made through a development version of the web client