Enable community collaboration to jointly promote and facilitate best in class tooling capabilities
- ✓Open-source license (Apache-2.0)
- ✓Actively maintained (<30d)
- ✓Healthy fork ratio
- ✓Clear description
- ✓Topics declared
- ✓Mature repo (>1y old)
git clone https://github.com/SAP/open-ux-toolsTools overview
<img src="docs/images/sap-fiori-tools.svg" width=75px align="right" alt="SAP Fiori tools icon"> # Open UX Tools [](https://github.com/SAP/open-ux-tools/actions/workflows/pipeline.yml?query=branch%3Amain) [](https://sonarcloud.io/summary/new_code?id=SAP_open-ux-tools) [](https://sonarcloud.io/summary/new_code?id=SAP_open-ux-tools) [](https://sonarcloud.io/summary/new_code?id=SAP_open-ux-tools) [](https://sonarcloud.io/summary/new_code?id=SAP_open-ux-tools) [](https://api.reuse.software/info/github.com/SAP/open-ux-tools) The Open UX tools project aims to provide open source modules that make the development of SAP Fiori applications more efficient. The project is maintained by the same team that is responsible for [SAP Fiori tools](https://help.sap.com/viewer/product/SAP_FIORI_tools) and driven by the SAP community. The main goal of this project is to collaborate with the community to create transparency and therefore increase the adoption of our tools. **Collaboration**: SAP has a great and active development community that is eager to help improve SAP products. With SAP Fiori tools, we have collaborated with stakeholders using roundtables, surveys, and usability testing. We have even collaborated using SAP's incident management systems, connecting with users that did not just report issues but also debugged and identified the root cause. With Open UX tools, we want to take this collaboration to the next level by empowering users to contribute findings, fixes, and improvements to the project. **Transparency**: Anyone can inspect the sources, check for inconsistencies or problems, or get inspired to enhance the tools for the SAP Fiori community. Transparency matters to us. It builds trust in our tools and promotes more open communication. **Adoption**: The first consumer of these modules is SAP Fiori tools but every module is designed to be reusable by anyone building any kind of tools to develop SAP Fiori applications. This may be other open source projects or internal projects with very specific use cases. With our initial set of modules, we want to enable generator/scaffolding projects to use building blocks to create a common project structure across the SAP ecosystem. ## Modules Our long-term vision is to completely transition our SAP Fiori tools to open source. This is not an easy endeavor due to the size of the code base and dependencies to other not-yet-open-sourced modules. If you would like to better understand how we started and how we are planning to move forward, please have a look at our blog posts [History and vision of the Open UX tools](https://blogs.sap.com/2021/11/09/the-open-ux-tools-journey/) and [The Open UX Tools Journey Continues](https://blogs.sap.com/2022/07/07/the-open-ux-tools-journey-continues/). As a starting point, we have extracted the templates for generating SAP Fiori applications. The templates have been dissected into small but easy to use building blocks that are simple to combine. We then continued adding the most important UI5 tooling middlewares. The repository also contains reusable helper modules e.g. to modify UI5 tooling configuration files. The image below gives an overview of the currently included modules and their dependencies. It also shows the known consumers of these modules, the SAP Fiori generator (`@sap/generator-fiori`) and the easyUI5 open source project (`generator-easy-ui5`).  The repository contains no private modules i.e. all modules are published to [npmjs.com](https://www.npmjs.com/search?q=%40sap-ux) under the scope `@sap-ux`. The name of the published modules (without scope) matches the folder name in `packages` e.g. `./packages/fiori-freestyle-writer` is published as `@sap-ux/fiori-freestyle-writer`. Additionally, we have the `./examples` folder containing show case implementations using multiple of our modules together. ## Requirements Everything is released as node modules requiring node with a version matching `">=18"`. ## Contributing Please check the [Development Conventions and Guidelines](./docs/Guidelines.md) document as well as the [Development Setup](#development-setup) section in this document. ## Development Setup ### Local Development To install `pnpm` globally using `npm`, run the following: ```shell npm install -g pnpm ``` More information on pnpm installation options can be found [here](https://pnpm.io/installation). ### GitHub Codespaces To open and develop using GitHub Codespaces: 1. Expand the dropdown '<> Code' button on the `open-ux-tools` [github repository page](https://github.com/SAP/open-ux-tools/tree/main) 2. Select 'Codespaces' tab 3. Press the 'Create codespace on main' button to create a new GitHub Codespace based on the configuration in the file `.devcontainer/devcontainer.json` ### VS Code Development in a Container To use VS Code and develop in a container: 1. Install [docker](https://www.docker.com/get-started) 2. Install [VS Code](https://code.visualstudio.com/) or [VS Code Insiders edition](https://code.visualstudio.com/insiders/) 3. Install the [Dev Containers VS Code extension](https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=ms-vscode-remote.remote-containers) or the [Remote Development VS Code extension pack](https://aka.ms/vscode-remote/download/extension) Open currently opened workspace in dev container using the command `Dev Containers: Reopen in Container`. This will open a new window using the Dev Containers extension and the configuration in the file `.devcontainer/devcontainer.json` Alternatively, you can clone the repository in a container using the command `Dev Containers: Clone Repository in Container Volume...` and paste the repository URL. More information on VS Code development in a container can be found [here](https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/devcontainers/containers) ### Install dependencies To install `dependencies` and `devDependencies`, run following command at root of the repository: ```shell pnpm install ``` ### Build packages To transpile the packages, run the following command at the root of the repository or in the individual package: ```shell pnpm build ``` ### Format sources using `prettier` To format sources, run the following command at the root of the repository or in the individual package: ```shell pnpm format ``` ### Run linting of sources using `eslint` To run linting of sources, run the following command at the root of the repository or in the individual package: ```shell pnpm lint ``` To fix linting errors that can be fixed automatically, run the following command at the root of the repository or in the individual package: ```shell pnpm lint:fix ``` ### Run unit tests in packages To run unit tests using `jest`, run the following command at the root of the repository or in the individual package: ```shell pnpm test ``` **Note**: if the test run fails due to dependency issues, run `pnpm install && pnpm build` in the root of the repository again to make sure all projects are up-to-date. ### Debug packages When analyzing a problem, it is helpful to be able to debug the modules. How to debug them depends on the IDE you are using. In this section, it is described how you could debug with VSCode. Each of the packages has an extensive set of unit tests covering as many as possible different scenarios, therefore, as a starting point for debugging, it is a good idea to use the tests. The easiest (but not the only) way to debug a specific test in VSCode is to open a `JavaScript Debug Terminal` and then go to the package that needs to be debugged. Using the debug terminal, execute all tests with `pnpm test` or a specific one, e.g. execute `pnpm test -- test/basic.test.ts` in the `fiori-freestyle-writer` directory (`./packages/fiori-freestyle-writer`). When running either of the commands in the debug terminal, breakpoints set in VSCode will be active. Additionally, for the `*-writer` modules it is sometimes helpful to manually inspect the generated output of the unit tests on the filesystem. This can be achieved by setting the variable `UX_DEBUG` before running the tests e.g. in `fiori-freestyle-writer` run `UX_DEBUG=true pnpm test` and after the tests finish, the generated files can be found at `./test/test-output`. Additional checks can be performed on the generated projects by also setting `UX_DEBUG_FULL` e.g. `UX_DEBUG=true UX_DEBUG_FULL=true pnpm test`. This includes checks such as `npm install`, `npm run ts-typecheck`, `npm run lint` as appropriate to the project. ### Create changesets for feature or bug fix branches A [changeset](https://github.com/atlassian/changesets) workflow has been setup to version and publish packages to npmjs.com. To create changesets in a feature or bug fix branch, run one of the following commands: ```shell pnpm cset ``` ```shell pnpm changeset ``` This command brings up an [inquirer.js](https://github.com/SBoudrias/Inquirer.js/) style command line interface with prompts to capture changed packages, bump versions (patch, minor or major) and a message to be included in the changelog files. The changeset configuration files in the `.changeset` folder at the root need to be committed and pushed to the branch. These files will be used in the GitHub Actions workflow to bump versions and publish the packages. The general recommendation is to run
What people ask about open-ux-tools
What is SAP/open-ux-tools?
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SAP/open-ux-tools is tools for the Claude AI ecosystem. Enable community collaboration to jointly promote and facilitate best in class tooling capabilities It has 149 GitHub stars and was last updated today.
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You can install open-ux-tools by cloning the repository (https://github.com/SAP/open-ux-tools) or following the README instructions on GitHub. ClaudeWave also provides quick install blocks on this page.
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Our security agent has analyzed SAP/open-ux-tools and assigned a Trust Score of 100/100 (tier: Verified). See the full breakdown of passed checks and flags on this page.
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SAP/open-ux-tools is maintained by SAP. The last recorded GitHub activity is from today, with 382 open issues.
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Yes. On ClaudeWave you can browse similar tools at /categories/tools, sorted by popularity or recent activity.
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