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authorDarius Jahandarie <djahandarie@gmail.com>2023-11-09 13:30:31 +0000
committerGitHub <noreply@github.com>2023-11-09 13:30:31 +0000
commit5c5a167b4792af379cdacf633513cebf20728cd2 (patch)
tree5b6be3620a557d0b9177047003f6d742d9d2a32d /dev/lib/handlebars/README.md
parentb64f51c3b13a46af4dd7f1e43048ac19c781ca7b (diff)
parent0f4d36938fd0d844f548aa5a7f7e7842df8dfb41 (diff)
Merge pull request #307 from themoeway/modernize
Modernize codebase
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+# @kbn/handlebars
+
+A custom version of the handlebars package which, to improve security, does not use `eval` or `new Function`. This means that templates can't be compiled into JavaScript functions in advance and hence, rendering the templates is a lot slower.
+
+## Limitations
+
+- Only the following compile options are supported:
+ - `data`
+ - `knownHelpers`
+ - `knownHelpersOnly`
+ - `noEscape`
+ - `strict`
+ - `assumeObjects`
+ - `preventIndent`
+ - `explicitPartialContext`
+
+- Only the following runtime options are supported:
+ - `data`
+ - `helpers`
+ - `partials`
+ - `decorators` (not documented in the official Handlebars [runtime options documentation](https://handlebarsjs.com/api-reference/runtime-options.html))
+ - `blockParams` (not documented in the official Handlebars [runtime options documentation](https://handlebarsjs.com/api-reference/runtime-options.html))
+
+## Implementation differences
+
+The standard `handlebars` implementation:
+
+1. When given a template string, e.g. `Hello {{x}}`, return a "render" function which takes an "input" object, e.g. `{ x: 'World' }`.
+1. The first time the "render" function is called the following happens:
+ 1. Turn the template string into an Abstract Syntax Tree (AST).
+ 1. Convert the AST into a hyper optimized JavaScript function which takes the input object as an argument.
+ 1. Call the generate JavaScript function with the given "input" object to produce and return the final output string (`Hello World`).
+1. Subsequent calls to the "render" function will re-use the already generated JavaScript function.
+
+The custom `@kbn/handlebars` implementation:
+
+1. When given a template string, e.g. `Hello {{x}}`, return a "render" function which takes an "input" object, e.g. `{ x: 'World' }`.
+1. The first time the "render" function is called the following happens:
+ 1. Turn the template string into an Abstract Syntax Tree (AST).
+ 1. Process the AST with the given "input" object to produce and return the final output string (`Hello World`).
+1. Subsequent calls to the "render" function will re-use the already generated AST.
+
+_Note: Not parsing of the template string until the first call to the "render" function is deliberate as it mimics the original `handlebars` implementation. This means that any errors that occur due to an invalid template string will not be thrown until the first call to the "render" function._
+
+## Technical details
+
+The `handlebars` library exposes the API for both [generating the AST](https://github.com/handlebars-lang/handlebars.js/blob/master/docs/compiler-api.md#ast) and walking it by implementing the [Visitor API](https://github.com/handlebars-lang/handlebars.js/blob/master/docs/compiler-api.md#ast-visitor). We can leverage that to our advantage and create our own "render" function, which internally calls this API to generate the AST and then the API to walk the AST.
+
+The `@kbn/handlebars` implementation of the `Visitor` class implements all the necessary methods called by the parent `Visitor` code when instructed to walk the AST. They all start with an upppercase letter, e.g. `MustacheStatement` or `SubExpression`. We call this class `ElasticHandlebarsVisitor`.
+
+To parse the template string to an AST representation, we call `Handlebars.parse(templateString)`, which returns an AST object.
+
+The AST object contains a bunch of nodes, one for each element of the template string, all arranged in a tree-like structure. The root of the AST object is a node of type `Program`. This is a special node, which we do not need to worry about, but each of its direct children has a type named like the method which will be called when the walking algorithm reaches that node, e.g. `ContentStatement` or `BlockStatement`. These are the methods that our `Visitor` implementation implements.
+
+To instruct our `ElasticHandlebarsVisitor` class to start walking the AST object, we call the `accept()` method inherited from the parent `Visitor` class with the main AST object. The `Visitor` will walk each node in turn that is directly attached to the root `Program` node. For each node it traverses, it will call the matching method in our `ElasticHandlebarsVisitor` class.
+
+To instruct the `Visitor` code to traverse any child nodes of a given node, our implementation needs to manually call `accept(childNode)`, `acceptArray(arrayOfChildNodes)`, `acceptKey(node, childKeyName)`, or `acceptRequired(node, childKeyName)` from within any of the "node" methods, otherwise the child nodes are ignored.
+
+### State
+
+We keep state internally in the `ElasticHandlebarsVisitor` object using the following private properties:
+
+- `contexts`: An array (stack) of `context` objects. In a simple template this array will always only contain a single element: The main `context` object. In more complicated scenarios, new `context` objects will be pushed and popped to and from the `contexts` stack as needed.
+- `output`: An array containing the "rendered" output of each node (normally just one element per node). In the most simple template, this is simply joined together into a the final output string after the AST has been traversed. In more complicated templates, we use this array temporarily to collect parameters to give to helper functions (see the `getParams` function).
+
+## Testing
+
+The tests for `@kbn/handlebars` are integrated into the regular test suite of Kibana and are all jest tests. To run them all, simply do:
+
+```sh
+node scripts/jest packages/kbn-handlebars
+```
+
+By default, each test will run both the original `handlebars` code and the modified `@kbn/handlebars` code to compare if the output of the two are identical. To isolate a test run to just one or the other, you can use the following environment variables:
+
+- `EVAL=1` - Set to only run the original `handlebars` implementation that uses `eval`.
+- `AST=1` - Set to only run the modified `@kbn/handlebars` implementation that doesn't use `eval`.
+
+## Development
+
+Some of the tests have been copied from the upstream `handlebars` project and modified to fit our use-case, test-suite, and coding conventions. They are all located under the `packages/kbn-handlebars/src/spec` directory. To check if any of the copied files have received updates upstream that we might want to include in our copies, you can run the following script:
+
+```sh
+./packages/kbn-handlebars/scripts/check_for_upstream_updates.sh
+```
+
+_Note: This will look for changes in the `4.x` branch of the `handlebars.js` repo only. Changes in the `master` branch are ignored._
+
+Once all updates have been manually merged with our versions of the files, run the following script to "lock" us into the new updates:
+
+```sh
+./packages/kbn-handlebars/scripts/update_upstream_git_hash.sh
+```
+
+This will update file `packages/kbn-handlebars/src/spec/.upstream_git_hash`. Make sure to commit changes to this file as well.
+
+## Debugging
+
+### Print AST
+
+To output the generated AST object structure in a somewhat readable form, use the following script:
+
+```sh
+./packages/kbn-handlebars/scripts/print_ast.js
+```
+
+Example:
+
+```sh
+./packages/kbn-handlebars/scripts/print_ast.js '{{value}}'
+```
+
+Output:
+
+```js
+{
+ type: 'Program',
+ body: [
+ {
+ type: 'MustacheStatement',
+ path: {
+ type: 'PathExpression',
+ data: false,
+ depth: 0,
+ parts: [ 'value' ],
+ original: 'value'
+ },
+ params: [],
+ hash: undefined,
+ escaped: true
+ }
+ ]
+}
+```
+
+By default certain properties will be hidden in the output.
+For more control over the output, check out the options by running the script without any arguments.
+
+### Print generated code
+
+It's possible to see the generated JavaScript code that `handlebars` create for a given template using the following command line tool:
+
+```sh
+./node_modules/handlebars/print-script <template> [options]
+```
+
+Options:
+
+- `-v`: Enable verbose mode.
+
+Example:
+
+```sh
+./node_modules/handlebars/print-script '{{value}}' -v
+```
+
+You can pretty print just the generated code using this command:
+
+```sh
+./node_modules/handlebars/print-script '{{value}}' | \
+ node -e 'process.stdin.on(`data`, c => console.log(`(${eval(`(${c})`).code})`))' | \
+ npx prettier --write --stdin-filepath template.js | \
+ npx cli-highlight -l javascript
+```