Because Ionic Apps need some JHipster 💙 too!
The Ionic JHipster Starter is designed to be used with a JHipster backend. You can create a project with it directly, or use Ionic for JHipster.
This project provides a base template of functionality for an Ionic app. The Ionic for JHipster module provides entity generation and additional features that require logic to install (e.g. OAuth authentication).
- Getting Started
- Pages
- Providers
- i18n (adding languages)
- Testing
To use this starter, install the latest version of the Ionic CLI and run:
ionic start ionic4j oktadeveloper/jhipster --type angular
You can also install it using the Ionic for JHipster Module:
npm install -g generator-jhipster-ionic @ionic/cli @angular/cli
ionic4j
This module allows you to generate entities using:
ionic4j entity <name>
Or by importing JDL:
ionic4j import-jdl <file.jdl>
NOTE: If you have any issues with the commands above, you can also use the yo jhipster-ionic
equivalents.
yo jhipster-ionic # create an app
yo jhipster-ionic:entity <name>
yo jhipster-ionic:import-jdl <file.jdl>
In production, you will need to enable CORS in your backend's src/main/resources/config/application-prod.yml
file. Set the allowed-origins so it works with ionic serve
:
cors:
allowed-origins: "http://localhost:8100"
The Ionic JHipster Starter comes with a variety of ready-made pages.
The Ionic JHipster Starter comes with some basic implementations of common services.
The User
service is used to authenticate users through its
login(accountInfo)
and signup(accountInfo)
methods, which perform POST
requests to an API endpoint that you will need to configure.
The ApiService
is a simple CRUD frontend to an API.
The Ionic JHipster Starter comes with internationalization (i18n) out of the box with ngx-translate. This makes it easy to change the text used in the app by modifying only one file.
To add new languages, add new files to the src/assets/i18n
directory,
following the pattern of LANGCODE.json where LANGCODE is the language/locale
code (ex: en/gb/de/es/etc.).
This starter borrows its testing infrastructure from Daniel Sogl's Ionic Super Starter. Thanks Daniel!
There are a number of scripts in package.json
you can use to run tests:
"test": "jest",
"test:watch": "jest --watch",
"test:ci": "jest --runInBand",
"test:coverage": "jest --coverage",
"e2e": "ng e2e --port 8100"
Jest is used as the unit test runner in this project. Jest is a complete and easy to set-up JavaScript testing solution created by Facebook. Some of its benefits are:
- Fast and sandboxed
- Built-in code coverage reports
- Zero configuration
NOTE: If you'd like to convert your project so you can run ng test
to run your tests, see Angular CLI: "ng test" with Jest in 3 minutes.
To run a unit test you have three options.
- Run
npm test
runs all your created unit-tests - Run
npm run test:ci
if you want to run the unit-tests with you favorite CI - To create a test-coverage report you can run
npm run test:coverage
Daniel created Ionic Mocks with Jest Support by forking the ionic-mocks ionic-mock repository. There are still some issues. Feel free to help him out with his ionic-mocks-jest repository.
If you want to add ionic-native mocks you should definitely check out Chris Griffith's ionic-native-mocks repository
See the unit test example at src/app/app.component.spec.ts
.
The E2E test configuration is from the official ionic-unit-testing-example repository. The e2e folder structure has been changed a bit.
/e2e
- pages
- spec
Add your pages into the /pages
folder and your tests into the /spec
folder.
See the example end-to-end test in e2e/spec/app.e2e-spec.ts
.
To run the e2e tests:
npm run e2e
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