- Resolves #8748 The webhooks system as is works really well for full blown enterprise webhooks managed via a UI. It does not work for more "chill guy" webhook tools that just send notifications sometimes. ## Changes 🏗️ - feat(blocks): Add Compass transcription trigger block - feat(backend): Amend webhooks system to support manual-set-up webhooks - Make event filter input optional on webhook-triggered nodes - Make credentials optional on webhook-triggered nodes - Add code path to re-use existing manual webhook on graph update - Add `ManualWebhookManagerBase` - feat(frontend): Add UI to pass webhook URL to user on manual-set-up webhook blocks  - fix(backend): Strip webhook info from node objects for graph export - refactor(backend): Rename `backend.integrations.webhooks.base` to `._base` --------- Co-authored-by: Reinier van der Leer <pwuts@agpt.co> Co-authored-by: Zamil Majdy <zamil.majdy@agpt.co>
This is the frontend for AutoGPT's next generation
Getting Started
Run the following installation once.
npm install
# or
yarn install
# or
pnpm install
# or
bun install
Next, run the development server:
npm run dev
# or
yarn dev
# or
pnpm dev
# or
bun dev
Open http://localhost:3000 with your browser to see the result.
You can start editing the page by modifying app/page.tsx. The page auto-updates as you edit the file.
For subsequent runs, you do not have to npm install again. Simply do npm run dev.
If the project is updated via git, you will need to npm install after each update.
This project uses next/font to automatically optimize and load Inter, a custom Google Font.
Deploy
TODO
Storybook
Storybook is a powerful development environment for UI components. It allows you to build UI components in isolation, making it easier to develop, test, and document your components independently from your main application.
Purpose in the Development Process
- Component Development: Develop and test UI components in isolation.
- Visual Testing: Easily spot visual regressions.
- Documentation: Automatically document components and their props.
- Collaboration: Share components with your team or stakeholders for feedback.
How to Use Storybook
-
Start Storybook: Run the following command to start the Storybook development server:
npm run storybookThis will start Storybook on port 6006. Open http://localhost:6006 in your browser to view your component library.
-
Build Storybook: To build a static version of Storybook for deployment, use:
npm run build-storybook -
Running Storybook Tests: Storybook tests can be run using:
npm run test-storybookFor CI environments, use:
npm run test-storybook:ci -
Writing Stories: Create
.stories.tsxfiles alongside your components to define different states and variations of your components.
By integrating Storybook into our development workflow, we can streamline UI development, improve component reusability, and maintain a consistent design system across the project.