Write a deployment packaging script (#113)

Adds a packaging script to help automate deployment. Documents the deployment process in `README.md`.

Also, moves `run-examples.sh` into the tools folder that we created for the packaging script.

Co-authored-by: Aaron Fenyes <aaron.fenyes@fareycircles.ooo>
Reviewed-on: StudioInfinity/dyna3#113
Co-authored-by: Vectornaut <vectornaut@nobody@nowhere.net>
Co-committed-by: Vectornaut <vectornaut@nobody@nowhere.net>
This commit is contained in:
Vectornaut 2025-08-11 03:33:19 +00:00 committed by Glen Whitney
parent a4565281d5
commit af18a8e7d1
5 changed files with 57 additions and 14 deletions

View file

@ -25,32 +25,37 @@ The latest prototype is in the folder `app-proto`. It includes both a user inter
### Install the prerequisites
1. Install [`rustup`](https://rust-lang.github.io/rustup/): the officially recommended Rust toolchain manager
* It's available on Ubuntu as a [Snap](https://snapcraft.io/rustup)
- It's available on Ubuntu as a [Snap](https://snapcraft.io/rustup)
2. Call `rustup default stable` to "download the latest stable release of Rust and set it as your default toolchain"
* If you forget, the `rustup` [help system](https://github.com/rust-lang/rustup/blob/d9b3601c3feb2e88cf3f8ca4f7ab4fdad71441fd/src/errors.rs#L109-L112) will remind you
- If you forget, the `rustup` [help system](https://github.com/rust-lang/rustup/blob/d9b3601c3feb2e88cf3f8ca4f7ab4fdad71441fd/src/errors.rs#L109-L112) will remind you
3. Call `rustup target add wasm32-unknown-unknown` to add the [most generic 32-bit WebAssembly target](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/rustc/platform-support/wasm32-unknown-unknown.html)
4. Call `cargo install wasm-pack` to install the [WebAssembly toolchain](https://rustwasm.github.io/docs/wasm-pack/)
5. Call `cargo install trunk` to install the [Trunk](https://trunkrs.dev/) web-build tool
6. Add the `.cargo/bin` folder in your home directory to your executable search path
* This lets you call Trunk, and other tools installed by Cargo, without specifying their paths
* On POSIX systems, the search path is stored in the `PATH` environment variable
- This lets you call Trunk, and other tools installed by Cargo, without specifying their paths
- On POSIX systems, the search path is stored in the `PATH` environment variable
### Play with the prototype
1. From the `app-proto` folder, call `trunk serve --release` to build and serve the prototype
* *The crates the prototype depends on will be downloaded and served automatically*
* *For a faster build, at the expense of a much slower prototype, you can call `trunk serve` without the `--release` flag*
* *If you want to stay in the top-level folder, you can call `trunk serve --config app-proto [--release]`* from there instead.
- The crates the prototype depends on will be downloaded and served automatically
- For a faster build, at the expense of a much slower prototype, you can call `trunk serve` without the `--release` flag
- If you want to stay in the top-level folder, you can call `trunk serve --config app-proto [--release]` from there instead.
3. In a web browser, visit one of the URLs listed under the message `INFO 📡 server listening at:`
* *Touching any file in the `app-proto` folder will make Trunk rebuild and live-reload the prototype*
- Touching any file in the `app-proto` folder will make Trunk rebuild and live-reload the prototype
4. Press *ctrl+C* in the shell where Trunk is running to stop serving the prototype
### Run the engine on some example problems
1. Go into the `app-proto` folder
2. Call `./run-examples`
* *For each example problem, the engine will print the value of the loss function at each optimization step*
* *The first example that prints is the same as the Irisawa hexlet example from the Julia version of the engine prototype. If you go into `engine-proto/gram-test`, launch Julia, and then*
1. Use `sh` to run the script `tools/run-examples.sh`
- The script is location-independent, so you can do this from anywhere in the dyna3 repository
- The call from the top level of the repository is:
```bash
sh tools/run-examples.sh
```
- For each example problem, the engine will print the value of the loss function at each optimization step
- The first example that prints is the same as the Irisawa hexlet example from the Julia version of the engine prototype. If you go into `engine-proto/gram-test`, launch Julia, and then
```julia
include("irisawa-hexlet.jl")
@ -59,9 +64,24 @@ The latest prototype is in the folder `app-proto`. It includes both a user inter
end
```
*you should see that it prints basically the same loss history until the last few steps, when the lower default precision of the Rust engine really starts to show*
you should see that it prints basically the same loss history until the last few steps, when the lower default precision of the Rust engine really starts to show
### Run the automated tests
1. Go into the `app-proto` folder
2. Call `cargo test`
### Deploy the prototype
1. From the `app-proto` folder, call `trunk build --release`
- Building in [release mode](https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/profiles.html#release) produces an executable which is smaller and often much faster, but harder to debug and more time-consuming to build
- If you want to stay in the top-level folder, you can call `trunk build --config app-proto --release` from there instead
2. Use `sh` to run the packaging script `tools/package-for-deployment.sh`.
- The script is location-independent, so you can do this from anywhere in the dyna3 repository
- The call from the top level of the repository is:
```bash
sh tools/package-for-deployment.sh
```
- This will overwrite or replace the files in `deploy/dyna3`
3. Put the contents of `deploy/dyna3` in the folder on your server that the prototype will be served from.
- To simplify uploading, you might want to combine these files into an archive called `deploy/dyna3.zip`. Git has been set to ignore this path

2
app-proto/Trunk.toml Normal file
View file

@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
[build]
public_url = "./"

5
deploy/.gitignore vendored Normal file
View file

@ -0,0 +1,5 @@
/dyna3.zip
/dyna3/index.html
/dyna3/dyna3-*.js
/dyna3/dyna3-*.wasm
/dyna3/main-*.css

View file

@ -0,0 +1,16 @@
# set paths. this technique for getting the script location comes from
# `mklement0` on Stack Overflow
#
# https://stackoverflow.com/a/24114056
#
TOOLS=$(dirname -- $0)
SRC="$TOOLS/../app-proto/dist"
DEST="$TOOLS/../deploy/dyna3"
# remove the old hash-named files
[ -e "$DEST"/dyna3-*.js ] && rm "$DEST"/dyna3-*.js
[ -e "$DEST"/dyna3-*.wasm ] && rm "$DEST"/dyna3-*.wasm
[ -e "$DEST"/main-*.css ] && rm "$DEST"/main-*.css
# copy the distribution
cp -r "$SRC/." "$DEST"

View file

@ -8,7 +8,7 @@
# the application prototype
# find the manifest file for the application prototype
MANIFEST="$(dirname -- $0)/Cargo.toml"
MANIFEST="$(dirname -- $0)/../app-proto/Cargo.toml"
# set up the command that runs each example
RUN_EXAMPLE="cargo run --manifest-path $MANIFEST --example"