Follow the instructions below to install, build, and run the Project Hoverboard locally in less than 15 minutes.
- Fork repository and clone your fork locally
- Install Node.js (v12+)
- Install project dependencies:
npm ci
(yarn
should work but it's not officially supported) - Create Firebase account and login into Firebase CLI:
npx firebase login
- Update Hoverboard config and Resources. More info can be found here
- Import initial data to the Firebase Database
- Generate
serviceAccount.json
file- Go to console.firebase.google.com -> Project settings -> Service accounts
- Ensure that Node.js is selected and press Generate new private key
- Read the warning and press Generate key
- Save the file as
serviceAccount.json
and to the root of your hoverboard directory (❗Do NOT commit this file to the public repository)
- Enable Firestore in web console at console.firebase.google.com -> Database -> Cloud Firestore -> Create database. Select locked mode and press Enable
- [Optional] You can edit
docs/default-firebase-data.json)
file using your own data - Run
npm run firestore:init
- Generate
The diagram below is a brief summary of the directories within the project.
/
|---config/
|---data/
|---dist/
|---docs/
|---functions/
|---images/
|---internals/
|---node_modules/
|---src/
| |---elements/
| |---mixins/
| |---pages/
|
dist/
is the directory to deploy to production.config/
folder for core project setup.data/
folder with all data for the template including rest of config and resources for pages.docs/
documentation.functions/
directory with Firebase cloud functions used for notifications, optimizations, saving data, etc.images/
is for static images.internals/
contains scripts that helps user to work with the project and it's data (docs).node_modules/
is the place of Node dependencies.src/
is where you store all of your source code and do all of your development.elements/
is where you keep your custom elements.pages/
is where you keep your pages' description.
- Run locally
npm start
- Deploy
npm run deploy
There are two CLI flags you can set when running npm scripts:
NODE_ENV
: Control if code should be optimized for a production deployment with minimization or a faster local development.BUILD_ENV
: Whichconfig
JSON file should be used when building. This is where you set the Firebase project details.
The common npm scripts are:
npm start
: Start a local development server.npm run build
: Build a production version of the site to thedist
directory.npm run serve
: Build a production version of the site and serve it locally.npm run deploy
: Build a production version of the site and deploy it to Firebase.
Below is the grid of the common npm script commands and thier supported CLI flags.
start |
build |
serve |
deploy |
|
---|---|---|---|---|
NODE_ENV |
development |
production |development |
production |development |
production |
BUILD_ENV |
development |production |custom |
production |development |custom |
production |development |custom |
production |development |custom |
For example npm start
only supports NODE_ENV=development
and defaults to BUILD_ENV=development
while npm run build
defaults to NODE_ENV=production
and BUILD_ENV=production
but supports NODE_ENV=development
and BUILD_ENV=development
.
Now that your Hoverboard is up and running, learn how to configure the app for your needs, or how to deploy the app to the web.