This PR adds an Ember-Glimmer/Handlebars transform to drop the documentation copy from the CustomElement component out of the build, therefore it is not bundled into the code either at development time or production build time.
Builds on attach-shadow, adopt-styles and ShadowTemplate, this commit adds ShadowHost and finally CustomElement.
CustomElement is a renderless component to help with the creation of native HTML Custom Elements along with runtime type checking and self-documentation for attributes, slots, cssprops and cssparts. As you will probably see there is a little more work to come here. But in the same breath, everything would be fine to go in as is.
This adds a new component blueprint for all our components. We've been
using README.mdx files for quite some time to document our components
for other engineers. This adds a default file to help new engineers get
started writing useful documentation. These README.mdx file are also
very useful for building out components in isolation from scratch and
and some point will be used to run automated component testing.
* Add %panel CSS component
* Deprecate old menu-panel component
* Various smallish tweaks to disclosure-menu
* Move all menus in the app chrome to use new DisclosureMenu
* Follow up CSS to move all app chrome menus to new components
* Don't prevent default any events from anchors
* Add a tick to click steps
* Delete collapsible notices component and related helper
* Add relative t action/helper to our Route component
* Replace single use CollapsibleNotices with multi-use Disclosure
This commit excludes the health of any service instances from the Node Listing page. This means that if you are viewing the Node listing page you will only see failing nodes if there are any Node Checks failing, Service Instance Health checks are no longer taken into account.
Co-authored-by: Jamie White <jamie@jgwhite.co.uk>
We noticed that the Service Instance listing on both Node and Service views where not taking into account proxy instance health. This fixes that up so that the small health check information in each Service Instance row includes the proxy instances health checks when displaying Service Instance health (afterall if the proxy instance is unhealthy then so is the service instance that it should be proxying)
* Refactor Consul::InstanceChecks with docs
* Add to-hash helper, which will return an object keyed by a prop
* Stop using/relying on ember-data type things, just use a hash lookup
* For the moment add an equivalent "just give me proxies" model prop
* Start stitching things together, this one requires an extra HTTP request
..previously we weren't even requesting proxies instances here
* Finish up the stitching
* Document Consul::ServiceInstance::List while I'm here
* Fix up navigation mocks Name > Service
We need a way to load certain CSS based on the environment you are viewing, i.e. we have debug CSS that we use for our Eng Documentation and various other DX utilities that shouldn't be compiled into our production or test builds.
Previously we would compile two entirely different CSS files (app and debug) and the load one or the other depending on which environment you were in.
This approach just empties out the debug.css file in certain environments (prod/test) which means we can just import that file from app. When in staging/development this imports the contents of debug.css (quite a bit of CSS) whereas when building for production/test this debug.css is emptied out during the build process.
There is a slight little hack in order to have this work, we import _debug.scss which imports the debug.scss file. I couldn't for the life of me figure out how to have broccoli empty out a file during the build process, so instead we essentially copy over debug.scss during dev and create an empty file during prod to _debug.scss.
When using make build to build an artifact for production CSS remains at ~58kb (during dev its a lot bigger than this)
{{class-map}} is used to easily add a list of classes, conditionally, and
have them all formatted nicely ready to be printed in a DOM class attribute.
For ease, as well as using entries, you can also just provide a simple string
without the boolean and that class will always be added.
* ui: Correct some meta info
* Encoder doesn't take an argument whereas decoder does
* Math.trunc looks like the closest to parseInt but using the correct type
* use a dynamic string when setting things on window
- Simplifies how we 'import' our configuration files a little in order to make them more grokable.
- Starts to exclude files based on explicit configuration rather than convention.
- Adds the first instance of us being able to select an implementation (of multiple) of a component at runtime.
The fix here is two fold:
- We shouldn't be providing the DataSource (which loads the data) with an id when we are creating from within a folder (in the buggy code we are providing the parentKey of the new KV you are creating)
- Being able to provide an empty id to the DataSource/KV repository and that repository responding with a newly created object is more towards the "new way of doing forms", therefore the corresponding code to return a newly created ember-data object. As we changed the actual bug in point 1 here, we need to make sure the repository responds with an empty object when the request id is empty.
* Make sure the mocks reflect the requested partition/namespace
* Ensure partition is passed through to the HTTP adapter
* Pass AuthMethod object through to TokenSource in order to use Partition
* Change up docs and add potential improvements for future
* Pass the query partition back onto the response
* Make sure the OIDC callback mock returns a Partition
* Enable OIDC provider mock overwriting during acceptance testing
* Make sure we can enable partitions and SSO post bootup only required
...for now
* Wire up oidc provider mocking
* Add SSO full auth flow acceptance tests
* ui: Don't even ask whether we are authorized for a KV...
...just let the actual API tell us in the response, thin-client style.
* Add some similar commenting for previous PRs related to this problem
* Add some less fake API data
* Rename the models class so as to not be confused with JS Proxies
* Rearrange routlets slightly and add some initial outletFor tests
* Move away from a MeshChecks computed property and just use a helper
* Just use ServiceChecks for healthiness filtering for the moment
* Make TProxy cookie configurable
* Amend exposed paths and upstreams so they know about meta AND proxy
* Slight bit of TaggedAddresses refactor while I was checking for `meta` etc
* Document CONSUL_TPROXY_ENABLE
We recently changed the intentions form to take a full model of a dc rather than just the string identifier (so {Name: 'dc', Primary: true} vs just 'dc' in order to know whether the DC is the primary or not.
Unfortunately, we only did this on the global intentions page not the per service intentions page. This makes it impossible to save an intention from the per service intention page (whilst you can still save intentions from the global intention page as normal).
The fix here pretty much copy/pastes the approach taken in the global intention edit template over to the per service intention edit template.
Tests have been added for creation in the per service intention section, which again are pretty much just copied from the global one, unfortunately this didn't exist previously which would have helped prevent this.
- Move AuthDialog to use a Glimmer Component plus native named blocks/slots.
- Unravel the Auth* contextual components, there wasn't a lot of point having them as contextual components and now the AuthDialog (non-view-specific state machine component) can be used entirely separately from the view-specific components (AuthForm and AuthProfile).
- Move all the ACL related components that are in the main app chrome/navigation (our HashicorpConsul component) in our consul-acls sub package/module (which will eventually be loaded on demand only when ACLs are enabled)