The UI supports static branding at build time. Dynamically switching brands is not possible with the current implementation.
Each of the project modules need to do some branding enablement.
-
@konveyor-ui/commonpulls in the branding assets and packages the configuration, strings and assets within the common package. The other modules pull branding from the common module. -
@konveyor-ui/clientuses branding from the common package:-
The location of
favicon.ico,manifest.jsonand any other branding assets that may be referenced in thebrandingStringsare sourced from the common package. -
The
brandingStringsare used by the dev-server runtime, to fill out theindex.htmltemplate. -
The about modal and application masthead components use the branding strings provided by the common module to display brand appropriate logos, titles and about information. Since the common module provides all the information, it is packaged directly into the app at build time.
-
-
@konveyor-ui/serveruses thebrandingStringsfrom the common package to fill out theindex.htmltemplate.
To provide an alternate branding to the build, specify the path to the branding assets
with the BRANDING environment variable. Relative paths in BRANDING are computed
from the project source root.
Each brand requires the presence of at least the following files:
strings.jsonfavicon.icomanifest.json
With a file path of /alt/custom-branding, a build that uses an alternate branding
is run as:
> BRANDING=/alt/custom-branding npm run buildThe dev server can also be run this way. Since file watching of the branding assets is not implemented in the common module's build watch mode, it may be necessary to manually build the common module before running the dev server. When working on a brand, it is useful to run the dev server like this:
> export BRANDING=/alt/custom-branding
> npm run build -w common
> npm run start:dev
> unset BRANDING # when you don't want to use the custom branding path anymoreThe expected shape of strings.json is defined in branding.ts.
The default version of the file is branding/strings.json.
A minimal viable example of the file is:
{
"application": {
"title": "Konveyor"
},
"about": {
"displayName": "Konveyor"
},
"masthead": {}
}At build time, the json file is processed as an ejs template. The
variable brandingRoot is provided as the relative root of the branding
assets within the build of the common module. Consider the location of strings.json
in your branding directory as the base brandingRoot when creating a new brand.
For example, to properly reference a logo within this branding structure:
special-brand/
images/
masthead-logo.svg
about-logo.svg
strings.json
Use a url string like this:
{
"about": {
"imageSrc": "<%= brandingRoot %>/images/about-logo.svg"
}
}and in the output of BRANDING=special-brand npm run build -w common, the imageSrc
will be branding/images/about-logo.svg with all of the files in special-branding/*
copied to and available to the client and server modules from
@konveyor-ui/common/branding/*.
A standard favorite icon file favicon.ico is required to be in the same directory
as strings.json
A standard web app manifest
file manifest.json is required to be in the same directory as strings.json.
All branding strings and assets are pulled in to the common module. The client and server modules access the branding from the common module build.
The common module relies on rollup packaging to embed all of the brand for easy
use. The use of branding strings in client and server modules is straight forward.
Pulling in strings.json and providing the base path to the brand assets is a
more complicated.
The common module provides the brandingAssetPath() function to let the build time
code find the root path to all brand assets. Webpack configuration files use this
function to source the favicon.ico, manifest.json and other brand assets to be copied
to the application bundle.
The brandingStrings is typed and sourced from a json file. To pass typescript builds,
a stub json file needs to be available at transpile time. By using a typescript paths
of @branding/strings.json, the stub json is found at transpile time. The generated
javascript will still import the path alias. The
virtual rollup plugin
further transform the javascript output by replacing the @branding/strings.json import
with a dynamically built module containing the contents of the brand's strings.json.
The brand json becomes a virtual module embedded in the common module.
A build for a custom brand will fail (1) if the expected files cannot be read, or (2)
if strings.json is not a valid JSON file. Note: The context of stings.json is
not currently validated. If something is missing or a url is malformed, it will only
be visible as a runtime error.