id | slug | title | description | date | tags | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
kibDevDocsOpsCliDevMode |
/kibana-dev-docs/ops/cli-dev-mode |
@kbn/cli-dev-mode |
A package to manage the Kibana cli behavior when in development |
2022-05-24 |
|
This package exposes a function that manages the alternate behavior of the Kibana cli when using
the --dev
flag. This mode provides several useful features in a single CLI for a nice developer
experience:
- automatic server restarts when code changes
- runs the
@kbn/optimizer
to build browser bundles - runs a base path proxy which helps developers test that they are writing code which is compatible with custom basePath settings while they work
- pauses requests when the server or optimizer are not ready to handle requests so that when users load Kibana in the browser it's always using the code as it exists on disk
To accomplish this, and to make it easier to test, the CliDevMode
class manages the following
objects.
The Watcher
manages a @parcel/watcher instance to watch the
server files, logs about file changes observed and provides an observable to the DevServer
via
its serverShouldRestart$()
method.
The DevServer
object is responsible for everything related to running and restarting the Kibana
server process:
- listens to restart notifications from the
Watcher
object, sendingSIGKILL
to the existing server and launching a new instance with the current code - writes the stdout/stderr logs from the Kibana server to the parent process
- gracefully kills the process if the SIGINT signal is sent
- kills the server if the SIGTERM signal is sent, process.exit() is used, a second SIGINT is sent, or the graceful shutdown times out
- proxies SIGHUP notifications to the child process, though the core team is working on migrating this functionality to the KP and making this unnecessary
The Optimizer
object manages a @kbn/optimizer
instance, adapting its configuration and
logging to the data available to the CLI.
This proxy injects a random three character base path in the URL that Kibana is served from to help ensure that Kibana features are written to adapt to custom base path configurations from users.
The basePathProxy also has another important job, ensuring that requests don't fail because the
server is restarting and that the browser receives front-end assets containing all saved
changes. We accomplish this by observing the ready state of the Optimizer
and DevServer
objects and pausing all requests through the proxy until both objects report that they
aren't building/restarting based on recently saved changes.