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Create, test and publish Zeplin extensions with no build configuration ⚗️🦄

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Zeplin Extension Manager

Create, test and publish Zeplin extensions with no build configuration. ⚗️🦄

Getting started

You can run Zeplin Extension Manager directly to create an extension:

npx zem create my-extension

You can also use -y option to create package with default configuration.

npx zem create my-extension -y

Overview

Extensions created using the manager have built-in scripts to ease development, build, test and publish processes. No need to setup tools like Webpack or Babel—they are preconfigured and hidden by the manager.

Scripts

npm start

Starts a local server, serving the extension (by default, at http://localhost:7070). Hostname, port and the list of hosts allowed to access the local server can be provided as options.

Follow the tutorial to learn how to add a local extension to a Zeplin project.

Usage: npm start -- [options]

Options:

  -h --host <host>                    Host name (default: localhost)
  -p --port <port>                    Port (default: 7070)
  -a --allowed-hosts <allowed-hosts>  Allowed hosts

npm run build

Builds extension source, creating resources targeting production environment.

Usage: npm run build -- [options]

Options:

  -d --dev  Target development environment

npm run exec

Executes extension function(s) with sample data.

This is a super useful script to debug and test your extension, without running in it Zeplin.

Usage: npm run exec -- [function-name] [options]

Options:

  --no-build                    Use existing build.
  --defaults <default-options>  Set default extension option values (e.g, flag=false,prefix=\"pre\")

npm run test

Runs test scripts via Jest. Extension packages created using zem include a boilerplate test module. It uses Jest's snapshot testing feature to match the output of your extensions with the expected results. For example, you can take a look at our React Native extension.

Usage: npm run test -- [options]

You can check Jest's docs for options.

npm run clean

Cleans build directory.

npm run publish

Publish extension, sending it for review to be listed on extensions.zeplin.io.

Usage: npm run publish -- [options]

Options:

  --path <build-path>           Path for the extension build to publish (default: Path used by the build command)
Usage with access token:

Zeplin Extension Manager can authenticate using an access token instead of your Zeplin credentials which makes it easier to integrate it into your CI workflow.

  1. Get a zem access token from your Profile in Zeplin.
  2. Set ZEM_ACCESS_TOKEN environment variable in your CI.

Tidbits

  • Modules are transpiled to target Safari 9.1, as extensions are run both on the Web app and on the Mac app using JavaScriptCore, supporting macOS El Capitan.
  • Add an ESLint configuration and the source code will automatically be linted before building.
  • You can create webpack.zem.js at your root to customize webpack config. The module should export a function that takes current webpack config as an argument and return customized webpack config. For example:
module.exports = function({ module: { rules, ...module }, ...webpackConfig }) {
  return {
    ...webpackConfig,

    resolve: {
      extensions: [".ts"]
    },
    module: {
      ...module,
      rules: [
        {
          test: /\.tsx?$/,
          use: "ts-loader",
          exclude: /node_modules/,
        },
        ...rules,
      ],
    },
  };
};

Community solutions

Zero

baybara-pavel/zero

Similar to zem, Zero lets you quickly start working on a Zeplin extension with Webpack.

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Create, test and publish Zeplin extensions with no build configuration ⚗️🦄

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