Readers/Web/Team/Dev sessions

On Jan 29, 2015, the mobile web team met to share development workflows, tools we use, extensions, and in general how we work, in order to learn more about different ways of working with the code, patch sets, bug triaging, etc.

We plan on having this meeting monthly, and to re-cap here what we talk about so that there is a searchable log of the goodies we share and benefit community developers by having this information public.

Working with Gerrit

 * Gerrit from the command line: GerritCommandLine
 * Filter by projects, your patches, by score (Example config for .bashrc)
 * Choose a patch by number, it will download the patch, switch to it, and show the gerrit website link to it.
 * Getting the script:
 * Run  on extensions/MobileFrontend to get the script into
 * Set
 * Run it with,  , or directly from
 * Chrome Gerrit website extension: gerrit-be-nice-to-me
 * Colorizes -1/-2 rows on the patches list in red
 * Auto expands patchsets when on a patch page (useful for seeing where comments are, and immediately having access to the patchsets)
 * Auto expands comments when on a patch page
 * Gerrit emails
 * Watch the projects you care (Settings -> Watched projects)
 * Tag gerrit emails, useful if you want to know if somebody replied to your patches
 * User filters to subtag "your patches", "merged", "abandoned". Easier to skim through all those emails.
 * Gerrit website
 * When looking at a patch list, bold means that there are new changes on the patch (that you haven't seen).

Command line tools

 * Git
 * Show info on bash prompt about the current repo
 * Show branch and state with colors
 * Branch, state, and current operation (rebase, cherry-pick, etc)
 * tig: Command line git UI Screenshots
 * Clean messy gerrit branches and already merged
 * Search for the commit that broke something:
 * Ag (silver searcher): Fast code search
 * Search with regex
 * Search literally
 * Search for the function parse in javascript files
 * See supported file types for the  flag
 * Bash config (See dotfiles below)


 * Populating wiki with test data
 * Populate a list of categories on MobileFrontend - run this in your console
 * Tmux
 * Terminal multiplexer, can keep multiple long lived terminal sessions, splits, tabs
 * Beautiful status line: Tmux line

Dealing with email

 * Subscribe to multiple email lists (mobile-l, wiktech-l, ...), gerrit, phab, etc
 * Aggressively use filters and labels/tags to categorize email and read it when you want.
 * subject:Welcome list:"" -> Mark as read
 * Use Gmail's "Mute" feature to silence useless threads (sometimes threads come back from the dead? time for a filter)

Dotfiles

 * Joaquin dotfiles repo
 * MediaWiki related environment variables and aliases
 * Git aliases
 * Copy what interests you into your
 * Colors in git
 * Using vim as git's diff/editor
 * Aliases (git ls, git dc, git pp, etc)
 * .vim config

Editors

 * PhpStorm
 * Complete php and web IDE with refactoring tools and good completion
 * Open source license available for employees and probably contributors
 * Plugins
 * IdeaVim: Vim bindings
 * Puppet plugin
 * Add the whole vagrant folder as a project to get settings and whole project completion
 * Vim
 * Vundle for managing plugins
 * Neocomplete or YouCompleteMe for auto completion (or ctrl_x+ctrl_o)
 * Syntastic syntax checking on the editor
 * Install with npm globally jshint and jscs or add  to path to get good syntax checking
 * Ag.vim for code searching on the project
 * Less syntax files: groenewege/vim-less
 * Better php syntax and completion: StanAngeloff/php.vim
 * Tern.vim for javascript completion

MediaWiki

 * Populate dev instance with data
 * MobileFrontend specific
 * Populate a list of categories on MobileFrontend - run this in your console
 * Log files in vagrant server
 * and then
 * Testing that event logging works properly on the server

Meeting notes

 * Jan 20, 2015