qlbuilder
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2.8.2 • Public • Published

qlBuilder

Motivation

qlbuilder is a CLI tool which is ran from the command prompt. The tool allows Qlik Sense developers to write their Qlik scripts locally and to communicate with Qlik instance to:

  • set the reload script into configured Qlik app
  • reload app (the reload is performed from Qlik instance itself)
  • check for syntax errors while developing without the need to save the whole app (the syntax check is performed against temporary session app)
  • download Qlik app(s) with or without data

Installation

npm install -g qlbuilder

Once the global package is installed you can use qlbuilder command from any folder

How to use?

(To list all commands run qlbuilder --help)

Run one of the following commands from CMD/PowerShell

  • qlbuilder create [name] - create the initial folders and files in the current folder. name is used as root folder name

    • -t --task (optional) - supplying this argument will create VSCode specific files inside .vscode folder as well. The tasks.json file describe all tasks that can be ran with qlbuilder. Change the environment name in settings.json file and use VSCode to start the tasks. (tasks.json can be left as it is. No need for editing there)
    • -s --script (optional) - the creation process will copy the script files from the specified template folder using Templates
    • -c --config (optional) - the creation process will copy the template yml from the template folder as config.yml into the current folder using Templates
  • qlbuilder build

    • builds the full load script from /src/*.qvs files. The produced script is saved in dist folder (LoadScript.qvs)
  • qlbuilder checkscript [env]

    • builds the script (from /src/*.qvs files)
    • connects to Qlik and checks the script for syntax errors - env is the environment name from config.yml. The check is performed against temporary session app.
  • qlbuilder reload [env]

    • connects to Qlik and reload the app - env is the environment name from config.yml. Once the reload has started qlbuilder will display the progress in the same console.
    • -ro, --reload-output <LOCATION> - after the app is reload (with or without errors) the reload log will be saved in <LOCATION> folder. The reload log file name will be in appId_timestamp.txt format.
    • -roo, --reload-output-overwrite <LOCATION> - similar functionality to --reload-output but the file name will be appId.txt. With this option only the last reload log will be kept.
  • qlbuilder setscript [env]

    • builds the script (from /src/*.qvs files)
    • connects to Qlik and checks the script for syntax errors - env is the environment name from config.yml
    • sets the new script
    • saves the app
  • qlbuilder getscript [env] - (the opposite of setscript) get the remote script, splits it into tabs and save the files inside scr folder. config.yml should present to indicate from which env/app to extract the script

    • -y - optional flag. The getscript command will always ask for confirmation before overwrite the files into src folder. Passing -y will skip this confirmation and will directly execute getscript command.

    Steps:

    • connects to Qlik and get the script from desired app - env is the environment name from config.yml
    • split the script into tabs/files
    • saves the qvs files into src folder
  • qlbuilder watch [env] - enters in watch mode. The default behavior is to build and check the script syntax on any *.qvs file inside src folder. Can accept three additional flags:

    • -r - reloads the script on any qvs file change
    • -s - sets the script (and save the app) on any qvs file change
    • -d - disable the auto check for syntax errors. By default the script will check for syntax errors on each save (connects to QS and checks the script for errors against session/temp app)

    Inside watch mode the console is active and the developer can perform additional actions. Just type one of the letters/commands below in the console to trigger them:

    • s or set - build, syntax check and set script
    • r or rl - build and set the script, reload the app and save. If any syntax error (during the build and set) the reload is not triggered
    • c or clr - clear console
    • e or err - check for syntax errors (useful only if the watch mode is started with -d argument)
    • ? - print these commands
    • x - exit
  • qlBuilder section [sub-command] - main commands for interactive section operations

    • add - adds new script section at specified position
    • remove - remove one or many script sections. Once the sections/files are removed the rest of the files are re-numbered (see renumber operation)
    • move - move specific script section up/down. After the file is moved (in reality the file is actually renamed) the files are re-numbered
    • renumber - ideally all files are prefixed with an index (1--, 2--, 3-- etc.) if section/file is deleted/renamed manually this index can appear "broken". Executing renumber command will re-index the files so the prefix will be continous
  • qlbuilder download [env] - download the specified Qlik app. Optional parameter to include or exclude the data in the exported app/file

    • -p or --path (mandatory) - path to the folder where the qvf will be downloaded
    • -nd or --nodata - optional parameter indicating if the exported app should include the data or not. Default is true
  • qlbuilder templates - list all available script and config templates -c --create (optional) - creates empty templates folder structure (if it doesn't exists) using Templates

  • qlbuilder vscode - creates the .vscode folder (inside the current folder) with the tasks.json and settings.json files. Please check the create command description above for more info

  • qlBuilder appDetails [env] - display info about the configured app

  • qlBuilder createApp [env] - creates brand new (empty) app on the specified environment. Updates config.yml appId for the environment

config.yml

The create command will create few folders and config.yml file. The config file is pre-populated with example values. This file specifies Qlik environments (dev, test, prod etc.)

The config file is in yaml format. The config below defines one environment (desktop) and the connection to it is made on localhost:4848 and the app that we will target there is qlbuilder Test.qvf

- name: desktop
  host: localhost:4848
  secure: false
  appId: C:\Users\MyUserName\Documents\Qlik\Sense\Apps\qlbuilder Test.qvf

(Take a look at the example above for how to specify otherApps. Used for setting the same script to additional apps)

For QSE with certificates the config will be:

- name: prod
  host: 192.168.0.100:4747 # IP/FQDN of QS engine (central node)
  appId: 12345678-1234-1234-1234-12345678901 # app ID
  authentication:
    type: certificates

For QSE with JWT the config will be:

- name: jwt
  host: 192.168.0.100/virtual-proxy-prefix # IP/FQDN with of the virtual proxy (see below)
  appId: 12345678-1234-1234-1234-12345678901a # app ID
  authentication:
    type: jwt
    sessionHeaderName: X-Qlik-Session-jwt # (optional) see below

When working with jwt port is not required. If JWТ is not the main method for authentication then the Virtual Proxy prefix need to be provided. For more information how to set this please check this
Qlik Support article

For QSE with Windows/Form the config will be:

- name: uat
  host: 192.168.0.100/virtual-proxy-prefix # IP/FQDN with of the virtual proxy (if needed)
  appId: 12345678-1234-1234-1234-12345678901a # app ID
  authentication:
    type: winform
    sessionHeaderName: X-Qlik-Session-Win # (optional) see below

For Qlik Saas with Windows/Form the config will be:

- name: saas
  host: tenant-name.eu.qlikcloud.com
  appId: 12345678-1234-1234-1234-12345678901a # app ID
  authentication:
    type: saas

By default qlbuilder will try and connect through https/wss. If the environment is QS Desktop or the communication is done via http/ws then secure: false need to be added to the environment configuration

sessionHeaderName - each Virtual Proxy should have a unique session cookie header name. The default value is X-Qlik-Session. If the default VP is used then this config value is not needed. qlBuilder will show warning message and will try to connect to Qlik with the default value.

Environment variables and home config

For security reasons (mainly to avoid commit users and password) qlbuilder expects some environment variables to be set before start. The content of the variables can be pre-set using .qlbuilder.yml config file in the user home folder (see below)

Environment variables

  • Windows

    • QLIK_USER - in format DOMAIN\username
    • QLIK_PASSWORD

    To set env variables:

    • in CMD - set QLIK_USER=DOMAIN\UserName
    • in PowerShell - $env:QLIK_PASSWORD="my_password"
  • JWT requires one environment variable to be set

    • QLIK_TOKEN - the content of the jwt token
  • Cert

    • QLIK_CERTS- the folder location where the certificates are stored. The script will search for 3 certificates - root.pem, client_key.pem and client.pem
    • QLIK_USER - username in format DOMAIN\UserName
  • Saas

    • QLIK_TOKEN - the API key, generated from the user settings panel

Home config

.qlbuilder.yml config file - this file should be placed in your home folder (c:\users\my-username). The file contains the credentials for the Qlik environments. The name of the environments should match the ones in the local config.yml

dev:
  QLIK_USER: DOMAIN\my-dev-user
  QLIK_PASSWORD: my-dev-password
prod:
  QLIK_USER: DOMAIN\my-prod-user
  QLIK_PASSWORD: my-prod-password
dev_jwt:
  QLIK_TOKEN: eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9.eyJzdWIiOiIxMjM0NTY3ODkwIiw...
prod_cert:
  QLIK_CERTS: c:\path\to\cert\folder
  QLIK_USER: DOMAIN\UserName

The environment name is used as an command argument (so try not to have spaces in the environment names)

Naming script files

At the moment (it will probably change in near future) the script is build by reading the qvs files in src folder by alphabetical order. The files should have the following naming convention:

number--name.qvs

To ensure alphabetical order the files should start with number followed by separator (--) and name. The name will be used as a tab name when setting the script in Qlik.

For example having the following files:

1--Variables.qvs
2--DBLoad.qvs
3--Transformation.qvs
4--StoreData.qvs
5--DropTables

Will result in the following tabs in Qlik

Tab View

Extra

Having the script files as local files allows to put them in version control. This will put the src, dist and config.yml files in the repository.

In some cases the Prod environment app can be without the original (full) script and just includes (via REST API call) the final load script (the one in dist folder) from Git's master branch. This way, technically, there is no need to touch the Prod app in case of an script change ... this is just an idea how to benefit from this approach.

Templates

New projects can be initialized with predefined scripts and/or configs. In order to do this qlBuilder will search for templates in C:\<USER>\qlbuilder_templates folder. By default this folder (and its sub-folders) do not exists and can be created either manually or with:

qlBuilder templates create

There are two types of templates - config and script. Check the sections below for more information. Both Script and config template arguments are optional and if used can be provided independently to each other or both at the same time.

Config

Under qlbuilder_templates folder create a folder named config. The config folder is where the config templates will be stored. Each template config should be valid qlBuilder config (yml file). There are no limitations on what the template file name should be (as long as is a valid file name).

For example: if there are 3 config template files: dev_config.yml, uat_config.yml and test.yml. Each template can be invoked with the following commands:

qlBuilder create my-project-name -c dev_config
qlBuilder create my-project-name -c uat_config
qlBuilder create my-project-name -c test

As seen when specifying config in the command the file extension (.yml) is omitted.

Note Only files with yml extension are valid config templates

Script

Under qlbuilder_templates folder create a folder named script. This folder will contain the folders with the script templates. Each template folder will contain the qvs script files that will be copied across when create command is used (if -s argument is provided). The script files should be prefixed (1--xxx, 2-xxx, 3--xxx etc).

For example: if there are 3 config template folders: dev-env, uat-env and test. Each template can be invoked with the following commands:

qlBuilder create my-project-name -s dev_env
qlBuilder create my-project-name -s uat_env
qlBuilder create my-project-name -s test

Note Only files with qvs extension will be copied to the result folder

Roadmap

Have a look at the issues labeled as an enhancement


If you have any issues, comments, suggestions etc please use the GitHub issue tracker

/qlbuilder/

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