# Contributing to N1 Core Thank you for contributing!! N1 core is the foundation our community uses to build email extensions with the modern web. You currently need an early invitation code to get setup on N1. Sign up [here](https://invite.nylas.com) to request one. Drop us a line saying you'd like to contribute to N1 core and we'll get you set up immediately. # Pull requests We require all authors sign our [Contributor License Agreement](https://www.nylas.com/cla.html) when submitting pull requests. (It's similar to other projects, like NodeJS or Meteor.) # Getting Started **Important! To build N1, you need to use Node 0.10.x. You can use [nvm](https://github.com/creationix/nvm) to run Node 0.10.x alongside your existing version.** Once you have an invitation code: git clone https://github.com/nylas/N1.git cd N1 script/bootstrap Read the [getting started guides](http://nylas.com/N1/docs/). # Running N1 Core ./N1.sh --dev Once the app boots, you'll be prompted to enter your early invitation code and email credentials. Our early invitation codes are designed control access to our production mail sync engine while we roll out N1. However, the sync engine is [open source](https://github.com/nylas/sync-engine) and you can set it up yourself to begin using N1 immediately. Follow instructions on the [sync engine](https://github.com/nylas/sync-engine) repository. # Testing N1 Core ./N1.sh --test This will run the full suite of automated unit tests. We use [Jasmine 1.3](http://jasmine.github.io/1.3/introduction.html). It runs all tests inside of the `/spec` folder and all tests inside of `/internal_packages/**/spec` # Building Once you've checked out N1 and run `script/bootstrap`, you can create a packaged version of the application by running `script/build`. Note that the builds available at [https://nylas.com/N1](https://nylas.com/N1) include licensed fonts, sounds, and other improvements. If you're just looking to run N1, you should download it there! # Running Against Open Source Sync Engine N1 needs to fetch mail from a running instance of the [Nylas Sync Engine](https://github.com/nylas/sync-engine). The Sync Engine is what abstracts away IMAP, POP, and SMTP to serve your email on any provider through a modern, RESTful API. By default the N1 source points to our hosted version of the sync-engine; however, the Sync Engine is open source and you can run it yourself. 1. Go to https://github.com/nylas/sync-engine for instructions on how to get the Sync Engine running on a Vagrant virtual machine. 1. Open up `src/flux/nylas-api.coffee` and change the `@APIRoot` variable to point to your Sync Engine instance. 1. After you've linked accounts to the Sync Engine, populate your `~/.nylas/config.cson` as follows. You can get a list of connected accounts and their attributes from the /accounts endpoint (ex. `http://localhost:5555/accounts`): "*": nylas: accounts: [ { server_id: "{ACCOUNT_ID_1}" object: "account" account_id: "{ACCOUNT_ID_1}" name: "{YOUR NAME}" provider: "{PROVIDER_NAME}" email_address: "{YOUR_EMAIL_ADDRESS}" organization_unit: "{folder or label}" id: "{ACCOUNT_ID_1}" } { server_id: "{ACCOUNT_ID_2}" object: "account" account_id: "{ACCOUNT_ID_2}" name: "{YOUR_NAME}" provider: "{PROVIDER_NAME}" email_address: "{YOUR_EMAIL_ADDRESS}" organization_unit: "{folder or label}" id: "{ACCOUNT_ID_2}" } ] accountTokens: {ACCOUNT_ID_1}: "{ACCOUNT_ID_1}" {ACCOUNT_ID_2}: "{ACCOUNT_ID_2}"