With our React app now complete, we can put together the final desk and publish it.
Config files
So far we've written the following files for the back-end:
ourfiles├── app│ └── journal.hoon├── lib│ └── journal.hoon├── mar│ └── journal│ ├── action.hoon│ └── update.hoon└── sur└── journal.hoon
There's a handful of extra files we need in the root of our desk:
desk.bill
- the list of agents that should be started when our app is installed.sys.kelvin
- the kernel version our app is compatible with.desk.docket-0
- configuration of our app tile, front-end glob and other metadata.
We only have one agent to start, so desk.bill
is very simple:
:~ %journal==
Likewise, sys.kelvin
just contains:
[%zuse 418]
The desk.docket-0
file is slightly more complicated:
:~title+'Journal'info+'Dear diary...'color+0xd9.b06dversion+[0 1 0]website+'https://urbit.org'license+'MIT'base+'journal'glob-ames+[~zod 0v0]==
The fields are as follows:
title
is the name of the app - this will be displayed on the tile and when people search for the app to install it.info
is a brief description of the app.color
- the RGB hex color of the tile.version
- the version number of the app. The fields represent major, minor and patch version.website
- a link to a website for the app. This would often be its Github repo.license
- the license of for the app.base
- the desk name of the app.glob-ames
- the ship to retrieve the front-end files from, and the hash of those files. We've put~zod
here but this would be the actual ship distributing the app when it's live on the network. The hash is0v0
initially, but once we upload the front-end files it will be updated to the hash of those files automatically. Note that it's also possible to distribute front-end files from a separate web server. In that case, you'd useglob-http
rather thanglob-ames
. The Glob section of the distribution guide covers this alternative approach in more detail.
Our files should now look like this:
ourfiles├── app│ └── journal.hoon├── desk.bill├── desk.docket-0├── lib│ └── journal.hoon├── mar│ └── journal│ ├── action.hoon│ └── update.hoon├── sur│ └── journal.hoon└── sys.kelvin
New desk
Next, we'll create a new %journal
desk on our ship by forking an existing one. Once created, we can mount it to the unix filesystem.
In the dojo of a fake ship:
> |merge %journal our %webterm>=> |mount %journal>=
Now we can browse to it in the unix terminal:
cd ~/zod/journal
Currently it has the same files as the %webterm
desk, so we need to delete those:
rm -r .
Apart from the kernel and standard library, desks need to be totally self-contained, including all mark files and libraries necessary to build them. For example, since our app contains a number of .hoon
files, we need the hoon.hoon
mark, and its dependencies. The easiest way to ensure our desk has everything it needs is to copy in the "dev" versions of the %base
and %garden
desks. To do this, we first clone the Urbit git repository:
git clone https://github.com/urbit/urbit.git urbit-git
If we navigate to the pkg
directory in the cloned repo:
cd ~/urbit-git/pkg
...we can combine the base-dev
and garden-dev
desks with the included symbolic-merge.sh
script:
./symbolic-merge.sh base-dev journal./symbolic-merge.sh garden-dev journal
Now, we copy the contents of the new journal
folder into our empty desk:
cp -rL journal/* ~/zod/journal/
Note we've used the L
flag to resolve symbolic links, because the dev-desks contain symlinks to files in the actual arvo
and garden
folders.
We can copy across all of our own files too:
cp -r ~/ourfiles/* ~/zod/journal/
Finally, in the dojo, we can commit the whole lot:
|commit %journal
Glob
The next step is to build our front-end and upload the files to our ship. In the journal-ui
folder containing our React app, we can run:
npm run build
This will create a build
directory containing the compiled front-end files. To upload it to our ship, we need to first install the %journal
desk. In the dojo:
|install our %journal
Next, in the browser, we navigate to the %docket
globulator at http://localhost:8080/docket/upload
(replacing localhost with the actual host):
We select our journal
desk, then we hit Choose file
, and select the whole build
directory which was created when we build our React app. Finally, we hit glob!
to upload it.
If we now return to the homescreen of our ship, we'll see our tile displayed, and we can open our app by clicking on it:
Publishing
The last thing we need to do is publish our app, so other users can install it from our ship. To do that, we just run the following command in the dojo:
:treaty|publish %journal
Resources
App publishing/distribution documentation - Documentation covering third party desk composition, publishing and distribution.
Glob documentation - Comprehensive documentation of handling front-end files.
Desk publishing guide - A step-by-step guide to creating and publishing a desk.