TotallyInformation / node-red-contrib-uibuilder

Easily create data-driven web UI's for Node-RED using any (or no) front-end framework.
https://totallyinformation.github.io/node-red-contrib-uibuilder/#/
Apache License 2.0
456 stars 87 forks source link
css dashboard data-driven flow-based-programming html javascript low-code no-code node-red ui web-app web-application webapp website websockets zero-code

Discussion Static Badge NPM Version NPM Total Downloads NPM Downloads per month GitHub last commit GitHub stars GitHub watchers GitHub license Min Node Version Package Quality DeepScan grade CodeQL Open Issues Closed Issues

node-red-contrib-uibuilder

UIBUILDER for Node-RED allows the easy creation of data-driven front-end web applications.

It includes many helper features that can reduce or eliminate the need to write code for building data-driven web applications and user interfaces integrated with Node-RED.

[!NOTE] UIBUILDER triggers a quality warning in the Flows scorecard entry.

"Number of Dependencies" is >6 - this is due to the large number of features in UIBUILDER and is expected. Even so, v7 only has 7 dependencies. 1 more is due to be removed in a future release.

Installation

UIBUILDER is best installed using Node-RED's Palette Manager.

Manual installs and other versions To install manually, from a command line on your Node-RED server: ```bash cd ~/.node-red npm install node-red-contrib-uibuilder ``` To install old versions, provide the major version number: ```bash cd ~/.node-red npm install node-red-contrib-uibuilder@v5 ``` To install development branches, please install from [GitHub](https://github.com/TotallyInformation/node-red-contrib-uibuilder). Branchnames are future version numbers, check GitHub for available branches: ```bash cd ~/.node-red npm install totallyinformation/node-red-contrib-uibuilder#v7.1.0 ``` You will need to restart Node-RED if installing manually.

Updates

The current CHANGELOG contains all of the changes and requirement details for each version.

Older changes can be found in the previous change documents: CHANGELOG-V5, CHANGELOG-V5, CHANGELOG-V3/V4, CHANGELOG-v2, and CHANGELOG-v2.

Getting started

Once installed, The following is a typical simple flow to get going.

  1. Add a uibuilder node. Open its settings and give it a "URL" which is used as the identifying name. Close the settings and click on the Deploy button.
  2. Re-open the uibuilder node's settings and click the "Open" button to see the resulting web page.

You are now ready to edit the front-end html/javascript/css if you wish and to add logic in Node-RED to provide inputs and handle outputs. You can also use UIBUILDER's no-code features to create your UI as well or instead.

Please see the First-timers walkthrough in the documentation and the Introduction Video for more help to get started. Also try out the built-in example flows.

Examples

Within Node-RED, use the hamburger menu. Click Import. Click Examples. Select the node-red-contrib-uibuilder folder and choose an example.

The templates feature in UIBUILDER provides working front-end code of various configurations.

Other examples can be found on the Node-RED Flows site and the UIBUILDER WIKI. Also see the FAQ's and answered questions on the Node-RED Forum.

Documentation and other links

Please refer to the Documentation web site. This can also be accessed from within UIBUILDER nodes even without an Internet connection.

There is a library of "official" video tutorials on YouTube. Other folk have also produced UIBUILDER-related content.

Questions, issues and suggestions

The best place to ask questions or discuss possible enhancements is the Node-RED Forum.

Alternatively, use the GitHub issues log for raising issues or contributing suggestions and enhancements and the GitHub Discussions page for general questions, suggestions, etc.

Other links

Purpose

The purpose of UIBUILDER is to:

Features

The core features of UIBUILDER:

No-code UI's UIBUILDER continues to expand its no-code capabilities. THe `uib-element`, `uib-tag`, and `uib-update` nodes offer no-code methods for creating and updating data-driven web UI's. `uib-element` takes in simple data and outputs configuration data. This can then be sent to the front-end via the `uibuilder` node. Alternatively, it can be saved and the result used in an initial load. Several simple options such as tables and lists are available in UIBUILDER v6.1, additional elements and structures will be made available in future versions. The UIBUILDER front-end client takes the configuration information and dynamically builds HTML elements and inserts them to the web page (or removes/updates as needed). While this is not the most efficient processing approach (since updates are mostly replacing the whole element which could be quite large for things like big tables), it is very efficient from an authoring perspective. So the `uib-update` node provides a more targetted approach to updating and changing specific attributes and "slot" content for elements. The `uib-tag` node then lets you create ANY single HTML element and so covers all the many things that `uib-element` might not (yet) cover. This even works with web components which are vanilla HTML/JavaScript native enhancements to HTML. It is important to note that no front-end, 3rd-party frameworks such as VueJS or REACT are needed for this approach! Everything uses vanilla HTML, JavaScript and CSS under the skin and so is **compatible with current and future web standards**.
Low-code UI's The data that `uib-element` outputs is a format that you can use in your own flows in Node-RED and even in front-end code if desired. It describes a set of HTML UI elements but does not need you to actually write HTML code. The configuration schema is very flexible and even allows you to load configuration data, HTML, scripts, and new ECMA Modules/Components from external files. The schema and the UI creator functions built into the front-end client are specifically designed to work with current and future HTML standards in order to avoid the kinds of issues commonly encountered when using 3rd-party front-end frameworks (e.g. major version changes forcing rewrites of all of your tooling). So ES Modules, ECMA Components, and future ECMA versions should all be supported. The `ui.js` library is now also available for anyone to use in their own projects and works fully stand-alone without UIBUILDER. It is also baked into the `uib-html` node which turns low-code configurations into HTML from within Node-RED.
Future direction UIBUILDER will continue to be independent of front-end frameworks though it will also continue to be as compatible as possible so that any desired framework can be used with it. * It will continue to gain more zero-code pre-built elements. * It will gain improved control over the instance root folder structure and the ability to execute `npm run` scripts defined in the `package.json`. * More videos! ### Longer term focus There remains a desire to build a page-builder feature so that people with no coding skills can build great data-driven web apps. * The documentation quality will continue to improve. * The number of 3rd-party module dependencies will be reduced. Starting with the eventual removal of `fs-extra` in favour of the native promisified fs library. Followed most likely by `arun`. * Once Node.js v18 or 20 is the base, the code is likely to be refactored into multiple sub-packages in a mono-repo.
Feature details and benefits * Designed as an alternative to the Node-RED official Dashboard. Without the overheads and restrictions. * Control everything from the Node-RED admin ui. Edit your front-end resource files, manage front-end packages. No need to access the servers command line. * Manage startup templates. Internal templates for vanilla HTML, Svelte, VueJS (v2 & v3), and VueJS/bootstrap-vue are provided. Load templates from other repositories via _degit_. Makes it easy to share templates that provide a whole app or just deal with boilerplate. * Have as many custom user interfaces as you want. Just 1 node is needed for each entry point. Use link nodes to send data from other parts of your flows. An entry point can be contain multiple web pages. * Has a control interface separate to the message interface. Know when a browser tab connects or disconnects, send cached data, and more. * Provide a stable _client id_ that identifies a specific browser profile until it is restarted. A _tabId_ is provided that identifies a specific browser tab on a client device. * Provide information to Node-RED about the client that is sending a msg so that security and other processing can identify the client, the user, and so on. * Can be a lot lighter in weight and more mobile friendly than the Node-RED official Dashboard. * Use **any** front-end framework you like. Simply install via the built-in library manager. * Use without any front-end framework if you prefer. Keep it light and simple. Try this out with the "Blank" template and the `uib-element` node. * The included front-end libraries (`uibuilder.iife.js`, `uibuilder.esm.js`) provide connectivity to Node-RED and msg event handling along with some helper utility functions. * Write your own HTML, CSS and JavaScript to define the perfect front-end user interface for your needs. Or define it using a JSON config description. * Edit your custom front-end code from within the Node-RED Editor. Auto-reload your clients on changes to the code. Great for rapid development. *Note* that this is designed for quick edits, it is recommended to use your normal web development toolchain for larger edits. * Needs almost no boilerplate in your front-end code in order to work. * Optional index web page listing of available files. * Two detailed admin info web pages are included to help authors understand where everything is and what is available. * Uses Node-RED's own ExpressJS webservers by default. Switch to a custom ExpressJS server if desired. When using a custom server, pages can also include EJB server-side templating. * Has middleware for ExpressJS (for web services) and Socket.IO (for communications, both at initial connection and per-message) so that you can add your own custom features including security. * Can create custom API's for each UIBUILDER instance. * Use the `ui.js` library in your own projects!

Contributing

If you would like to contribute to this node, you can contact Totally Information via GitHub or raise a request in the GitHub issues log.

Pull Requests both for code and documentation are welcomed and the WIKI is open to new entries and corrections (but please let me know if you make a change).

Please refer to the contributing guidelines for more information.

You can also support the development of UIBUILDER by sponsoring the development.

ko-fi

GitHub Sponsorship, PayPal Sponsorship

Sponsors

Developers/Contributors

Many other people have contributed ideas and suggestions, thanks to everyone who does, they are most welcome.

profile for Julian Knight on Stack Exchange, a network of free, community-driven Q&A sites

Please also check out my blog, Much Ado About IT, it has information about all sorts of topics, mainly IT related, including Node-RED.