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cycle-restart

Hot module reloading is super cool. You can change your code in an instant, and you don't have to reload the page to see the result.

The most annoying part about it is that it throws away your application state! So if you want to develop with your app in a certain state, you have to recreate that state manually each time the code is reloaded.

cycle-restart solves that problem for you! It records all the actions you perform and replays them after you change your code. Best part is that it happens in the blink of an eye!

edge/cyc is a great boilerplate project to help you get started with cycle-restart.

Installation

$ npm install cycle-restart --save-dev

How do I use it?

cycle-restart is designed to be used with hot module reloading, provided either by browserify-hmr or Webpack.

You'll want to set up your entry point (usually index.js) like so:

import {setup} from '@cycle/run';
import {makeDOMDriver} from '@cycle/dom';
import {makeHTTPDriver} from '@cycle/http';

import {rerunner, restartable} from 'cycle-restart';

import app from './src/app';

const makeDrivers = () => ({
  DOM: restartable(makeDOMDriver('.app'), {pauseSinksWhileReplaying: false}),
  HTTP: restartable(makeHTTPDriver())
});

let rerun = rerunner(setup, makeDrivers);
rerun(app);

if (module.hot) {
  module.hot.accept('./src/app', () => {
    const newApp = require('./src/app').default;

    rerun(newApp);
  });
}

API

state refers to the object containing the sinks and sources returned by Cycle.setup.

restart(setup, main, drivers, state, isolate = {}, destinationTime = null) => newstate

Runs a new main and drivers, and replays any available history recorded on state. Drivers will only be replayed if they are restartable.

If you use isolate in your application, you should supply it so that its internal counter can be reset.

You can also supply a Javascript Date as destinationTime if you wish to replay actions only up to a certain time.

restartable(driver, pauseSinksWhileReplaying = true) => newDriver

Wraps driver with the ability to record a log of actions and restart. When restart is called, actions recorded on the driver's associated sources are replayed onto the driver.

If pauseSinksWhileReplaying is true, drivers will drop any items emitted during replay. Currently, this needs to be false for the DOM driver.

rerunner(setup, makeDrivers, isolate = {}) => rerun(main, destinationTime = null) => state

Takes Cycle.setup and a function that returns your drivers and produces a function that can be called with the same main and destinationTime as restart, but automatically passes isolate and the previous state.

The rerun pattern is an abstraction of the common use case where state is saved and passed to the next restart call, and isolate does not change. rerun can also be used instead of Cycle.run to start the application for the first time.

Browserify

cycle-restart works great with browserify-hmr.

Assuming we have an index.js with the above code, and src/app.js exporting our main function. We also need an index.html with a <script> that loads our bundle.js

First, we need to install watchify and browserify-hmr:

$ npm install watchify browserify-hmr babelify --save-dev

Then we can use watchify to serve our bundle:

$ watchify -t babelify -p browserify-hmr index.js -o bundle.js

You can also use budo as a development server. budo makes it easy to also live reload your css. For an example of this, see Widdershin/cycle-hot-reloading-example

Webpack

Have a look at the webpack docs for setting up hot module reloading.

The minimum requirement to get HMR working with webpack config is first to add these two entry points to your config.entry

entry: [
    // The script refreshing the browser on none hot updates
    'webpack-dev-server/client?http://localhost:8080',
    'webpack/hot/dev-server', // For hot style updates
    mainPath, // your actual entry
  ]

and of course, the HMR plugin itself in config.plugins

plugins: [new Webpack.HotModuleReplacementPlugin()]

Finally, run the command on the directory where your webpack config file is located. Defaults to webpack.config.js

webpack-dev-server --progress --colors --inline

For an example, look at https://github.com/FeliciousX/cyclejs-starter

SystemJS

(If anyone who has experience with SystemJS could add some instructions about how to get set up, it would be greatly appreciated)

Supported drivers

cycle-restart is tested against and known to work with the following drivers:

Other drivers are likely to work off the bat. If you encounter a problem, please raise an issue and we will try and add compatability. If you use a driver not on this list and it works, let us know about it.

Isolate?

cycle-restart does in fact support isolate. If you use isolate in your apps, simply pass it as an extra argument to restart.

  import {setup} from '@cycle/run';
  import {makeDOMDriver} from '@cycle/dom';
  import {makeHTTPDriver} from '@cycle/http';
+ import isolate from '@cycle/isolate';

  import {rerunner, restartable} from 'cycle-restart';

  import app from './src/app';

  const makeDrivers = () => ({
    DOM: restartable(makeDOMDriver('.app'), {pauseSinksWhileReplaying: false}),
    HTTP: restartable(makeHTTPDriver())
  });

- const rerun = rerunner(setup, makeDrivers);
+ const rerun = rerunner(setup, makeDrivers, isolate);
  rerun(app);

  if (module.hot) {
    module.hot.accept('./src/app', () => {
      const newApp = require('./src/app').default;
      rerun(newApp);
    });
  }

Caveats

cycle-restart relies on your main function being pure. That means all real world side effects need to be encapsulated in drivers.

Here are some of the things that are likely to break right now:

Contributing

Your contribution is extremely welcome. Please feel free to open issues, pull requests or help in any way you'd like. If you're unsure how best you can contribute, get in touch and we can chat.

License

cycle-restart is released under the MIT license. Please see the LICENSE file for full text.