commit | 94f75d139fa7623c48e581a067e6b05a59758a21 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Jatin Lodhia <jlodhia@google.com> | Wed Oct 28 16:24:40 2015 -0700 |
committer | Jatin Lodhia <jlodhia@google.com> | Wed Oct 28 16:24:40 2015 -0700 |
tree | 8cec2ed3ee44f30ed2ab4eaf6fc103cf3ada3014 | |
parent | e2bd09d5285ca1c85889227925f313100dba2b7e [diff] |
travel: Rename struct SyncgroupPrefix to a more generic 'TableRow' MultiPart: 8/8 Change-Id: I748658e6f6e8a4bb78d600aa049f50b2de7e1af8
An example travel planner using Vanadium.
If you have a $JIRI_ROOT
setup you can install Node.js from $JIRI_ROOT/third_party
by running:
jiri profile install nodejs
Optionally, it is possible to use your own install of Node.js if you would like to use a more recent version.
The default make task will install any modules listed in the package.json
and build a browser bundle from src/index.js
via browserify.
make
It is possible to have the build happen automatically any time a JavaScript file changes using the watch tool:
watch make
Local instances require a blessed syncbase instance. To attain blessings and start syncbase, use:
make syncbase [creds=<creds subdir>] [port=<syncbase port>]
Related target:
make creds [creds=<creds subdir>]
You can similarly run with fresh creds or syncbase data via:
make clean-creds make clean-syncbase
To run a local dev server use:
make start [port=<port>]
To connect to a syncbase instance other than the default, navigate to:
localhost:<server port>/?syncbase=<syncbase name or port>