* feat(webhooks): multi region webhook resolver * feat(webhooks): multi region webhook cleanup * fix(webhooks): DI fixes * feat(activitystream): region aware save activity * feat(accessrequests): multi region * feat(cli): allow multi region project and commit download * feat(postgres): make docker postgres 0 day multi region ready * feat(cli): allow multi region project and commit download properly * fix(cross-server-sync): di fix * feat(activitystream): non region aware activities, they are not project data * fix(webhooks): triggers need to be included * feat(stream/projectCreate): activity save is not needed any more, its all event based * feat(multiRegion): get all registered db clients * fix(regions): test equal in any order * fix(projectDownload): need to await
Using CLI
You can run it like so from the server package's root directory: ./bin/cli
Use the --help argument to get more info about each command.
Example for running migrations: ./bin/cli db migrate latest
Creating new commands
CLI is defined using yargs.We use it to define hierarchical trees of commands which allows for better organization both for command definition and for using the CLI.
All commands are created in the commands directory. Commands should be defined using command modules.
Any top-level modules under commands will be assumed to be command modules. If you want to define a child command for a top-level command, then configure the top-level command to look for further child commands using .commandDir().
Then put those child command modules in a subdirectory that is named after the top level command. So if the top level command is "db", then all of its child commands should be put inside a "db" subfolder.
Example commands dir:
- commands
- db
- migrate.js
- db.js
In this case, db.js is the command module for the top-level db command. And then inside the db folder there's a command module migrate.js for the migrate child command of db.
This results in 2 commands - db and db migrate.