Please refer to [the Getting Started section of the `README.md`](README.md#getting-started) for a general-purpose guide on getting started. The rest of this document will assume that you've installed all of the prequisites and setup described there.
Our repository uses [Turborepo](https://turborepo.org) for `build` and `test` commands. This tool ensures that all dependencies of a plugin, package, or tool are prepared before running a command. This is done transparently when running these commands. When using `pnpm run {command}` without any options, it will execute that command against every project in the repository. You can view a list of the commands Turborepo supports in [our turbo.json file](turbo.json).
If you are interested in running a `turbo` command against a single plugin, package, or tool, you can do so with the `--filter` flag. This flag supports the `"name"` option in `package.json` files, paths, and globs.
If you would like to read more about the syntax, please check out [the Turborepo filtering documentation](https://turborepo.org/docs/core-concepts/filtering).
Outside of the commands in [our turbo.json file](turbo.json), each plugin, package, and tool may have unique scripts in their `package.json` files. In these cases, you can execute those commands using `pnpm {script}` and the same `--filter` syntax as Turborepo.
The plugins in our repository make use of [the `@wordpress/env` package](https://developer.wordpress.org/block-editor/reference-guides/packages/packages-env/). This supplies convenient commands for creating, destroying, cleaning, and testing WordPress environments.
Each of the [plugins in our repository](plugins) support using this tool to spin up a development environment. Note that rather than having a single top-level environment, each plugin has its own. This is done in order to prevent conflicts between them.
Please check out [the official documentation](https://developer.wordpress.org/block-editor/reference-guides/packages/packages-env/) if you would like to learn more about this tool.
Many unix systems such as Ubuntu will have PHP already installed. Sometimes without the extra packages you need to run WordPress and this will cause you to run into troubles.
Use your package manager to add the extra PHP packages you'll need.