Our DataSource came in very iteratively, when we first started using it we specifically tried not to use it for things that would require portions of the @src="" attribute to be URL encoded (so things like service names couldn't be used, but dc etc would be fine). We then gradually added an easy way to url encode the @src="" attributes with a uri helper and began to use the DataSource component more and more. This meant that some DataSource usage continued to be used without our uri helper.
Recently we hit #10901 which was a direct result of us not encoding @src values/URIs (I didn't realise this was one of the places that required URL encoding) and not going back over things to finish things off once we had implemented our uri helper, resulting in ~half of the codebase using it and ~half of it not.
Now that almost all of the UI uses our DataSource component, this PR makes it even harder to not use the uri helper, by wrapping the string that it requires in a private URI class/object, that is then expected/asserted within the DataSource component/service. This means that as a result of this PR you cannot pass a plain string to the DataSource component without seeing an error in your JS console, which in turn means you have to use the uri helper, and it's very very hard to not URL encode any dynamic/user provided values, which otherwise could lead to bugs/errors similar to the one mentioned above.
The error that you see when you don't use the uri helper is currently a 'soft' dev time only error, but like our other functionality that produces a soft error when you mistakenly pass an undefined value to a uri, at some point soon we will make these hard failing "do not do this" errors.
Both of these 'soft error' DX features have been used this to great effect to implement our Admin Partition feature and these kind of things will minimize the amount of these types of bugs moving forwards in a preventative rather than curative manner. Hopefully these are the some of the kinds of things that get added to our codebase that prevent a multitude of problems and therefore are often never noticed/appreciated.
Additionally here we moved the remaining non-uri using DataSources to use uri (that were now super easy to find), and also fixed up a place where I noticed (due to the soft errors) where we were sometimes passing undefined values to a uri call.
The work here also led me to find another couple of non-important 'bugs' that I've PRed already separately, one of which is yet to be merged (#11105), hence the currently failing tests here. I'll rebase that once that PR is in and the tests here should then pass 🤞
Lastly, I didn't go the whole hog here to make DataSink also be this strict with its uri usage, there is a tiny bit more work on DataSink as a result of recently work, so I may (or may not) make DataSink equally as strict as part of that work in a separate PR.
This PR adds a check to policy, role and namespace list pages to make sure the user has can write those things before offering to create them via a button. (The create page/form would then be a read-only form)
* ui: Don't show the CRD menu for read-only intentions
The UI bug here manifests itself only when a user/token is configured to have read-only access to intentions. Instead of only letting folks click to see a read only page of the intention, we would show an additional message saying that the intention was read-only due to it being 'Managed by [a kubernetes] CRD'. Whilst the intention was still read only, this extra message was still confusing for users.
This PR fixes up the conditional logic and further moves the logic to use ember-can - looking at the history of the files in question, this bug snuck itself in partly due to it being 'permission-y type stuff' previous to using ember-can and when something being editable or not was nothing to do with ACLs. Then we moved to start using ember-can without completely realising what IsEditable previously meant. So overall the code here is a tiny bit clearer/cleaner by adding a proper can view CRD intention instead of overloading the idea of 'editability'.
* ui: Gracefully recover from non-existent DC errors
This PR fixes what happens in the UI if you try to navigate to a non-existing DC.
When we received a 500 error from an API response due to a non-existent DC, previously we would show a 404 error, which is what we were trying to convey. But in the spirit of the UI being a 'thin client', its probably best to just show the 500 error from the API response, which may help folks to debug any issues better.
* Automatically set the CONSUL_DATACENTER_LOCAL env var for testing
* ui: Ignore response from API for KV permissions
Currently there is no way for us to use our HTTP authorization API
endpoint to tell us whether a user has access to any KVs (including the
case where a user may not have access to the root KV store, but do have
access to a sub item)
This is a little weird still as in the above case the user would click
on this link and still get a 403 for the root, and then have to manually
type in the URL for the KV they do have access to.
Despite this we think this change makes sense as at least something about KV is
visible in the main navigation.
Once we have the ability to know if any KVs are accessible, we can add
this guard back in.
We'd initially just removed the logic around the button, but then
noticed there may be further related KV issues due to the nested nature
of KVs so we finally decided on simply ignoring the responses from the
HTTP API, essentially reverting the KV area back to being a thin client.
This means when things are revisited in the backend we can undo this
easily change in one place.
* Move acceptance tests to use ACLs perms instead of KV ones
This PR supersedes #10706 and fixes#10686 whilst making sure that saving intentions continues to work.
The original fix in #10706 ignored the change action configured for the change event on the menus, meaning that the selected source/destination namespace could not be set by the user when editing/creating intentions. This, coupled with the fact that using the later intention exact endpoint for API requests endpoint means that you could not use wildcard namespaces for saving intentions.
All in all this meant that intentions could no longer be saved using the UI (whilst using ENT)
This PR reverts #10706 to fix the intention saving issue, and adds a fix for the original visual issue of nspaces doubling up in the menu once clicked. This meant repeating the existing functionality for nspaces aswell as services. It did seem strange to me that the original issue was only apparent for the nspace menus and not the service menus which should all function exactly the same way.
There is potentially more to come here partly related to what the exact functionality should be, but I'm working with other folks to figure out what the best way forwards is longer term. In the meantime this brings us back to the original functionality with the visual issue fixed.
Squashed commits:
* Revert "ui: Fix dropdown option duplications (#10706)"
This reverts commit eb5512fb74.
* ui: Ensure additional nspaces are added to the unique list of nspaces
* Add some acceptance tests
* Add Partition to all our models
* Add partitions into our serializers/fingerprinting
* Make some amends to a few adapters ready for partitions
* Amend blueprints to avoid linting error
* Update all our repositories to include partitions, also
Remove enabled/disable nspace repo and just use a nspace with
conditionals
* Ensure nspace and parition parameters always return '' no matter what
* Ensure data-sink finds the model properly
This will later be replaced by a @dataSink decorator but we are find
kicking that can down the road a little more
* Add all the new partition data layer
* Add a way to set the title of the page from inside the route
and make it accessibile via a route announcer
* Make the Consul Route the default/basic one
* Tweak nspace and partition abilities not to check the length
* Thread partition through all the components that need it
* Some ACL tweaks
* Move the entire app to use partitions
* Delete all the tests we no longer need
* Update some Unit tests to use partition
* Fix up KV title tests
* Fix up a few more acceptance tests
* Fixup and temporarily ignore some acceptance tests
* Stop using ember-cli-page-objects fillable as it doesn't seem to work
* Fix lint error
* Remove old ACL related test
* Add a tick after filling out forms
* Fix token warning modal
* Found some more places where we need a partition var
* Fixup some more acceptance tests
* Tokens still needs a repo service for CRUD
* Remove acceptance tests we no longer need
* Fixup and "FIXME ignore" a few tests
* Remove an s
* Disable blocking queries for KV to revert to previous release for now
* Fixup adapter tests to follow async/function resolving interface
* Fixup all the serializer integration tests
* Fixup service/repo integration tests
* Fixup deleting acceptance test
* Fixup some ent tests
* Make sure nspaces passes the dc through for when thats important
* ...aaaand acceptance nspaces with the extra dc param
This PR mainly adds partition to our HTTP adapter. Additionally and perhaps most importantly, we've also taken the opportunity to move our 'conditional namespaces' deeper into the app.
The reason for doing this was, we like that namespaces should be thought of as required instead of conditional, 'special' things and would like the same thinking to be applied to partitions.
Now, instead of using code throughout the app throughout the adapters to add/remove namespaces or partitions depending on whether they are enabled or not. As a UI engineer you just pretend that namespaces and partitions are always enabled, and we remove them for you deeper in the app, out of the way of you forgetting to treat these properties as a special case.
Notes:
Added a PartitionAbility while we were there (not used as yet)
Started to remove the CONSTANT variables we had just for property names. I prefer that our adapters are as readable and straightforwards as possible, it just looks like HTTP.
We'll probably remove our formatDatacenter method we use also at some point, it was mainly too make it look the same as our previous formatNspace, but now we don't have that, it instead now looks different!
We enable parsing of partition in the UIs URL, but this is feature flagged so still does nothing just yet.
All of the test changes were related to the fact that we were treating client.url as a function rather than a method, and now that we reference this in client.url (etc) it needs binding to client.
This commit fixes a problem where parent Failovers where not showing (subset children were fine).
Seems to have been introduced with a move/glimmer upgrade here #9154 so I'm adding a 1.9.x backport.
During #9617 we added a list view only for AuthMethods, but not a detail view. We did add the Adapter/Serializer that collected/reshaped data for a detail view.
The test for this serializer was skipped here, but I'm not sure why.
We then added #9845 which began to use this AuthMethod Serializer, but we didn't go back to finish up the skipped test here either.
This PR unskips this test and finishes off the test correctly.
This commit fixes 2 problems with our OIDC flow in the UI, the first is straightforwards, the second is relatively more in depth:
1: A typo (1.10.1 only)
During #10503 we injected our settings service into the our oidc-provider service, there are some comments in the PR as to the whys and wherefores for this change (https://github.com/hashicorp/consul/pull/10503/files#diff-aa2ffda6d0a966ba631c079fa3a5f60a2a1bdc7eed5b3a98ee7b5b682f1cb4c3R28)
Fixing the typo so it was no longer looking for an unknown service (repository/settings > settings)
fixed this.
2: URL encoding (1.9.x, 1.10.x)
TL;DR: /oidc/authorize/provider/with/slashes/code/with/slashes/status/with/slashes should be /oidc/authorize/provider%2Fwith%2Fslashes/code%2Fwith%2Fslashes/status%2Fwith%2Fslashes
When we receive our authorization response back from the OIDC 3rd party, we POST the code and status data from that response back to consul via acallback as part of the OIDC flow. From what I remember back when this feature was originally added, the method is a POST request to avoid folks putting secret-like things into API requests/URLs/query params that are more likely to be visible to the human eye, and POSTing is expected behaviour.
Additionally, in the UI we identify all external resources using unique resource identifiers. Our OIDC flow uses these resources and their identifiers to perform the OIDC flow using a declarative state machine. If any information in these identifiers uses non-URL-safe characters then these characters require URL encoding and we added a helper a while back to specifically help us to do this once we started using this for things that required URL encoding.
The final fix here make sure that we URL encode code and status before using them with one of our unique resource identifiers, just like we do with the majority of other places where we use these identifiers.
Previously when namespaces were enabled, we weren't requesting permission for the actively selected namespace, and instead always checking the permissions for the default namespace.
This commit ensures we request permissions for the actively selected namespace.
This commit adds a bit of string wrangling to avoid the keys in our javascript source file also being transformed. Additionally, whilst looking at this we decided that Maps are a better dictionary than javascript objects, so we moved to use those here also (but this doesn't affect the issue)
Adds 'can access ACLs' which means one of two things
1. When ACLs are disabled I can access the 'please enable ACLs' page
2. When ACLs are enabled, its the same as canRead
When clicking to create a KV within folder name, would would be viewing a form that was a form for creating a KV in the root, which when the user clicked to save, saved the KV in the root.
For the moment at least I've removed the code that strips double slashes, and whilst this isn't ideal, it looks like we've picked up one of those bugs that turns into a 'feature', and completely reworking KV to not rely on the double slashes is not really an option right now.
The default namespace, and the tokens default namespace (or its origin namespace) is slightly more complicated than other things we deal with in the UI, there's plenty of info/docs on this that I've added in this PR.
Previously:
When a namespace was not specified in the URL, we used to default to the default namespace. When you logged in using a token we automatically forward you the namespace URL that your token originates from, so you are then using the namespace for your token by default. You can of course then edit the URL to remove the namespace portion, or perhaps revisit the UI at the root path with you token already set. In these latter cases we would show you information from the default namespace. So if you had no namespace segment/portion in the URL, we would assume default, perform actions against the default namespace and highlight the default namespace in the namespace selector menu. If you wanted to perform actions in your tokens origin namespace you would have to manually select it from the namespace selector menu.
This PR:
Now, when you have no namespace segment/portion in the URL, we use the token's origin namespace instead (and if you don't have a token, we then use the default namespace like it was previously)
Notes/thoughts:
I originally thought we were showing an incorrectly selected namespace in the namespace selector, but it also matched up with what we were doing with the API, so it was in fact correct. The issue was more that we weren't selecting the origin namespace of the token for the user when a namespace segment was omitted from the URL. Seeing as we automatically forward you to the tokens origin namespace when you log in, and we were correctly showing the namespace we were acting on when you had no namespace segment in the URL (in the previous case default), I'm not entirely sure how much of an issue this actually was.
This characteristic of namespace+token+namespace is a little weird and its easy to miss a subtlety or two so I tried to add some documentation in here for future me/someone else (including some in depth code comment around one of the API endpoints where this is very subtle and very hard to miss). I'm not the greatest at words, so would be great to get some edits there if it doesn't seem clear to folks.
The fact that we used to save your previous datacenter and namespace into local storage for reasons also meant the interaction here was slightly more complicated than it needed to be, so whilst we were here we rejigged things slightly to satisfy said reasons still but not use local storage (we try and grab the info from higher up). A lot of the related code here is from before we had our Routlets which I think could probably make all of this a lot less complicated, but I didn't want to do a wholesale replacement in this PR, we can save that for a separate PR on its own at some point.
This commit adds a couple of debug utilities to help us to continue slowly adding i18n support:
- We've added a CONSUL_INTL_DEBUG env/cookie variable to turn off variable interpolation within the t helper so you can see which variables are being interpolated.
- We've added a CONSUL_INTL_LOCALE env/cookie which currently supports two 'pseudo-locales' - la-fk (fake latin) and - (just dashes) either of which will make it easier to see what has not been localized until we can add prettier rules to prevent adding any copy into templates at all. I would guess if we ever translated the app we would use this for looking at things whilst developing also - but as yet I've not adding anything for that here seeing as we don't translate anything.
Both variables are dev-time only and all code for this is removed from the production build.
* ui: Standardize logo naming
According to structure it should always be logo-name not name-logo
* Make sure all our logos use logo-name format
* Upgrade to @hashicorp/structure-icons 1.9.0
* Add `-color` to be consistent with other logos
* Add ms logo back in
* Remove all the old `*-color` icons from before when we got masks
* Add missing files
* Missed glimmer extend name change
* ui: Move all our icons to use CSS custom properties
The good thing about SASS vars is, if you don't use them they get removed from the final build. Whereas with CSS we have no tree-shaking to get rid of unused CSS custom properties. We can mostly work around this and for some things like colors its no big deal if we have some hex-codes in the build that we don't use as hex-codes are relatively small.
We've been slowly but surely moving all of our colors (and other things) to use CSS custom properties instead of SASS vars now that we have them available.
This commit makes use of the 'tree-shaking' abilities of @extend to ensure that we only compile in the icons that we use.
This commit is mostly churn-less as we already use @extend for the majority of our icons, so generally there is zero change here for working on the UI, but I did spot one single place where we were using SASS vars instead of @extend. This now uses the new form (second commit)
Interestingly this reduces our CSS payload by ~2kb to ~53kb (around 25kb of that is these icons)
This commit uses docfy to isolate the individual parts and options and investigates the why you might use certain options and document how you might use certain options.
Originally we used a single %icon-definition CSS component to represent this, but seeing as some of them don't have icons, it didn't seem like the best name. So this PR splits this component into various different ones and then uses the new ones to continue to provide a now deprecated %icon-definition.
The component is currently a CSS only component that assumes a single (or multiple) description lists for its markup component, and provides for multiple different options (including a reversed mode which I'm still not totally sure about, but we don't use this right now anyway).
- %icon-definition
- %horizontal-kv-list
- %csv-list
- %tag-list
- %badge
* Create and use collapsible notices
* Refactor collapsible-notices
* Split up the topology acceptance tests
* Add acceptance tests for tproxy notices
* Add component file
* Adds additional TProxy notices tests
* Adds conditional to only show collapsable if more than 2 notices are present
* Adds changelog
* Refactorting the conditonal for collapsing the notices
* Renaming undefinedIntention to be notDefinedIntention
* Refactor tests
* ui: change coloring of secondary navigation elements
* Remove top border, this was probably from older designs/iterations
* ui: Move app-view styles into components also...
1. Remove dead %app-view-content-error
2. Remove TabNav border overwriting
* Bring into line with our 'project standard' class/attributes pattern
* Add docs for AppView
When the Consul serf health check is failing, this means that the health checks registered with the agent may no longer be correct. Therefore we show a notice to the user when we detect that the serf health check is failing both for the health check listing for nodes and for service instances.
There were a few little things we fixed up whilst we were here:
- We use our @replace decorator to replace an empty Type with serf in the model.
- We noticed that ServiceTags can be null, so we replace that with an empty array.
- We added docs for both our Notice component and the Consul::HealthCheck::List component. Notice now defaults to @type=info.
* Add conditionals to Lock Session list items
* Add changelog
* Show ID in details if there is a name to go in title
* Add copy-button if ID is in the title
* Update TTL conditional
* Update .changelog/10121.txt
Co-authored-by: John Cowen <johncowen@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: John Cowen <johncowen@users.noreply.github.com>
This fixes the spacing bug in nspaces only by only showing Description if the namespace has one, and removing the extra 2 pixel margin of dds for when dts aren't rendered/don't exist.
* ui: Add support for showing partial lists in ListCollection
* Add CSS for partial 'View more' button, and move all CSS to /components
* Enable partial view for intention permissions
* ui: Loader amends/improvements
1. Create a JS compatible template only 'glimmer' component so we can
use it with or without glimmer.
2. Add a set of `rose` colors.
3. Animate the brand loader to keep it centered when the side
navigation appears.
4. Tweak the color of Consul::Loader to use a 'rose' color.
5. Move everything loader related to the `app/components/` folder and
add docs.
* ui: Fix text search for upstream instances
* Clean up predicates for other model types
* Add some docs around DataCollection and searching
* Enable UI Engineering Docs for our preview sites
* Use debug CSS in dev and staging
* Update header logo and inline icon
* Update full logos + layout on loading screen
* Update favicon assets and strategy
- Switches to serve an ico file alongside an SVG file
- Introduces an apple-touch-icon
* Removes unused favicon/meta assets
* Changelog item for ui
* Create component for logo
* Simplify logo component, set brand color
* Fix docs loading state CSS issue
* ui: Add Admin Partition feature flag
This adds a `PartitionEnabled`/`CONSUL_PARTITIONS_ENABLED` feature flag
that can be set during production form the consul binary, or
additionally during development/testing via cookies.
* Add partitions bookmarklet and docs, and all eng docs from main README to the docs instead.
You probably already have the app running once you need these, and it reduces the amount of text/detail in the main README
* Add the env variable section back into the README with actual env vars
* Add inline-code CSS component
* Add %inline-code to all the places where we need it
* Inject selected env variables into the translations file
* Add ingress gateway upstream 'host header' intro text
* Make sure we can use actual correct component casing for titles but still have nice consistent menu item casing in the side nav
We noticed that our mock API would sometimes respond with an empty array
of addresses - which resulted in an empty space in the gateway upstream
listing which looked as though it could be broken.
I checked with backend, and as this will never happen, I made the change
here also so the gateway upstream list is always fully populated with
addresses.
The extra argument meant that the blocking query configuration wasn't
being read properly, and therefore the correct ?index wasn't being sent
with the request.
* Install Duration JS
* Use Duration.js to sortBy reformatted MaxTokenTTL
* Remove @icholy/duration package
* Install parse-duration package
* Use parse-duration in auth-method model
* Add before and after skip links portals
* Move EmptyState and ErrorState to use a @login action/function
* Move page title setting to the Route component
* Add Routes and Outlets everywhere, and use those to access login modal
* Add some aria-labels to the modals
* Docs
* Remove the label/input now we no longer need it, fixup pageobject
* Add basic modal docs
* Switch out old toggle names for ids
* Wrap nspace Route template in a Route component
* type > class
* Add mock data for NamespaceRules
* Create NamespaceTable component and styling
* Add NamespaceRules route and add to model
* Create Namespace Rules tab and implement with flag to only show in ent
* Add emptystate to namespace rules page
* Rename namespace-rules to be nspace-rules
* Rename NamespaceTable to be NspaceList
* Create BindingRule adapter and tests
* Create BindingRule serializer and test
* Create BindingRule model and repository
* Add binding-rules mock data
* Create binding-rules router and call endpoint
* Create Binding rules tab
* Create and use BindingView component
* Create empty state for BindingView
* Remove binding rule requestForQueryRecord endpoint and tests
* Update binding rules selector to be monospaced
* Add bind type tooltip
* Create and Tabular-dl styling component
* Update hr tag global styling
* Rename BindingView to BindingList and refactor
* Add translations for bind types tooltip info
* Remove unused endpoint
* Refactor based on review notes
* Pin ember-changeset-validations and its dependencies to 3.9
Future versions produce a 'validator is not a function' error
* yarn upgrade
* Upgrade the majority of user facing deps that don't required add. change
not upgraded here due to more changes required:
- ember-page-title
- ember-href-to
* Upgrade ember-page-title which no longer requires ember-cli-head
* Upgrade some devtools related dependencies
* Upgrade some non ember-core test utils
* Upgrade js-yaml which required safeLoad > load
* Upgrade some compilation utils
* Yarn install from workspace root
* Add Python-2.0 to compliance checker
* Update Certificate to be monospaced
* Add empty states for claim and list claim mappings
* Update the styling of empty state actions block
* Update mocked PEM certificate format
* ui: Add all tooltips to the default tabbing order in the page
This amends our tooltip modifier to automatically add a tabindex="0" to
all of our tooltips (if they aren't tabbable already).
This means that all tooltips will automatically be
added to the natural tab order of the page. I'm pretty sure we don't
currently require the ability to disable this automatic functionality
but if we do at some point in the future we can add an option to disable
it, meaning all tooltips will be tabbable by default.
* Update list items to be linkable to auth-methods show
* Add general, namespace, and binding sub-routes
* Remove namespace and binding tabs to be done separately
* Update auth-method byId endpoint
* Style the show auth-method kubernetes type
* Finish Kubernetes auth-method type styling
* OIDC and JWT auth-method styling
* Create consul-auth-method-view component
* Add navigation test for auth-methods
* Create Certificate component
* Configure ember-auto-import so we can use a stricter CSP
* Create a fake filesystem using JSON to avoid inline scripts in index
We used to have inline scripts in index.html in order to support embers
filepath fingerprinting and our configurable rootURL.
Instead of using inline scripts we use application/json plus a JSON blob
to create a fake filesystem JSON blob/hash/map to hold all of the
rootURL'ed fingerprinted file paths which we can then retrive later in
non-inline scripts.
We move our inlined polyfills script into the init.js external script,
and we move the CodeMirror syntax highlighting configuration inline
script into the main app itself - into the already existing CodeMirror
initializer (this has been moved so we can lookup a service located
document using ember's DI container)
* Set a strict-ish CSP policy during development
This PR uses the excellent a11y-dialog to implement our modal functionality across the UI.
This package covers all our a11y needs - overlay click and ESC to close, controlling aria-* attributes, focus trap and restore. It's also very small (1.6kb) and has good DOM and JS APIs and also seems to be widely used and well tested.
There is one downside to using this, and that is:
We made use of a very handy characteristic of the relationship between HTML labels and inputs in order to implement our modals previously. Adding a for="id" attribute to a label meant you can control an <input id="id" /> from anywhere else in the page without having to pass javascript objects around. It's just based on using the same string for the for attribute and the id attribute. This allowed us to easily open our login dialog with CSS from anywhere within the UI without having to manage passing around a javascript object/function/method in order to open the dialog.
We've PRed #9813 which includes an approach which would make passing around JS modal object easier to do. But in the meantime we've added a little 'hack' here using an additional <input /> element and a change listener which allows us to keep this label/input characteristic of our old modals. I'd originally thought this would be a temporary amend in order to wait on #9813 but the more I think about it, the more I think its quite a nice thing to keep - so longer term we may/may not keep this.
This PR removes storybook and adds docfy and uses docfy to render our existing README files.
This now means we can keep adding README documentation without committing any specific format or framework. If we eventually move to storybook then fine, or if we just want to remove docfy for whatever reason then fine - we will still have a full set of README files viewable via GitHub.
* Add Routlet service and Route Component
* Add ember-assign-helper (already an indirect dependency)
* Use EventListeners for is-href instead of observing
* Don't include :active in '-intent' styles
* Remove footer and add the Consul version to the Help menu
* Tweak menu text and button styling
* Tweak some coloring and spacing
* Add slightly larger Consul logo
We use a `<DataSource @src={{url}} />` component throughout our UI for when we want to load data from within our components. The URL specified as the `@src` is used to map/lookup what is used in to retrieve data, for example we mostly use our repository methods wrapped with our Promise backed `EventSource` implementation, but DataSource URLs can also be mapped to EventTarget backed `EventSource`s and native `EventSource`s or `WebSockets` if we ever need to use those (for example these are options for potential streaming support with the Consul backend).
The URL to function/method mapping previous to this PR used a very naive humongous `switch` statement which was a temporary 'this is fine for the moment' solution, although we'd always wanted to replace with something more manageable.
Here we add `wayfarer` as a dependency - a very small (1kb), very fast, radix trie based router, and use that to perform the URL to function/method mapping.
This essentially turns every `DataSource` into a very small SPA - change its URL and the view of data changes. When the data itself changes, either the yielded view of data changes or the `onchange` event is fired with the changed data, making the externally sourced view of data completely reactive.
```javascript
// use the new decorator a service somewhere to annotate/decorate
// a method with the URL that can be used to access this method
@dataSource('/:ns/:dc/services')
async findAllByDatacenter(params) {
// get the data
}
// can use with JS in a route somewhere
async model() {
return this.data.source(uri => uri`/${nspace}/${dc}/services`)
}
```
```hbs
{{!-- or just straight in a template using the component --}}
<DataSource @src="/default/dc1/services" @onchange="" />
```
This also uses a new `container` Service to automatically execute/import certain services yet not execute them. This new service also provides a lookup that supports both standard ember DI lookup plus Class based lookup or these specific services. Lastly we also provide another debug function called DataSourceRoutes() which can be called from console which gives you a list of URLs and their mappings.
Here we look for a TESTEM_AUTOLAUNCH environment variable, which can be
set to either Chrome, Firefox or Safari, which will control which
browser to automatically start when running testem tests.
If the variable is set to anything else, then it will not automatically
start a browser in order to run the tests and you will need to visit the
tests manually. e.g.:
TESTEM_AUTOLAUNCH=0 make test-oss-view
Previously we only ever tested in Chrome and therefore there are no
specific settings for Firefox or Safari. If specific settings are
required for these browsers they can be added at a later date.
This commit use the internal authorize endpoint along wiht ember-can to further restrict user access to certain UI features and navigational elements depending on the users ACL token
* Add a way to set the local datacenter
* Amend step so we can positively and negatively look for elements
* Add a data-test selector so we can get to the topology series graph
* Add a couple of tests to verify the series graph shows/doesn't show
* Create mock-api endpoints for auth-methods
* Implement auth-method endpoints and model with tests
* Create route and tab for auth-methods
* Create auth-method list and type components with styles
* Add JWT and OIDC svg logos to codebase
* Add brand translations
* Add SearchBar to Auth Methods
* Add acceptance test for Auth Methods UI
* Skip auth method repo test
* Changes from review notes
* Fixup auth-method modela and mock-data
* Update SearhBar with rebased changes
* Add filterBy source and sortBy max token ttl
* Update to SortBy MethodName
* Update UI acceptance tests
* Update mock data DisplayNames
* Skip repo test
* Fix to breaking serializer test
* Implement auth-method endpoints and model with tests
* Add acceptance test for Auth Methods UI
* Update SearhBar with rebased changes
* Add filterBy source and sortBy max token ttl
* Update to SortBy MethodName
* Update UI acceptance tests
* Update mock data DisplayNames
* Fix to breaking serializer test
* Update class for search
* Add auth-methods link to sidebar
* Fixup PR review notes
* Fixup review notes
* Only show OIDC filter with enterprise
* Update conditionals for MaxTokenTTL & TokenLocality
* Refactor
* Use NodeName not Node for cross checking proxies/instances
* Also copy over the meta data to keep the correct cursor/index
* When we sync checks to the ProxyInstance replace rather than accumulate
There are many places in the API where we receive a property set to
`null` which can then lead to defensive code deeper in the app in order
to guard for this type of thing when usually we are expecting an array
or for the property to be undefined using omitempty on the backend.
Previously we had two places where we would deal with this in the
serializer using our 'remove-null' util (KV and Intentions).
This new decorator lets you declaritively define this type of data using
a decorator @NullValue([]) (which would replce a null value with [].
@NullValue in turn uses a more generic @replace helper, which we
currently don't need but would let you replace any value with another,
not just a null value.
An additional benefit here is that the guard/replacement is executed
lazily when we get the property instead of serializing all the values
when they come in via the API. On super large datasets, where we only
visualize part of the dataset (say in our scroll panes), this feels like
a good improvement on the previous approach.
We've always had this idea of being able to markup up information
semantically without thinking about what it should look like, then
applying our %h* placeholder styles to control what the information
should look like.
Back when we originally made our set of %h* placeholders, we tried to
follow Structure as much as possible, which defined the largest header
(which we thought would have been the h1 style) as a super large 3.5rem.
Therefore we made our set of %h* placeholders the same as Structure
beginning at a huge 3.5 size. We then re-overwrote those sizes only in
Consul specific CSS files thinking that this was due to us existing
before Structure did.
Lately we saw an extra clue in Structure - the extra large 3.5 header was
called 'h0'.
This commit moves all our headers to use a zero based scale, and
additionally uses our 3 digit scale as opposed to 1 digit (h1 vs h100),
similar to our color scales (note we don't use a hypen, which we can
alter later if need be), which means we can insert additional h150 etc
if need be.
Additional we stop styling our headers globally (h1 { @extend %h100; }
). This means there is no reason not to use headers for marking up
content depending on what it is rather than what it should look like,
and as a consequence means we can be more purposeful in ordering h*
tags.
Lastly, we use the new scale over the entire codebase and update a
couple of places where we were using using header tags due to what the
styleing for them looked like rather than what the meaning/order was.
* CSS for moving from a horizontal main menu to a side/vertical one
* Add <App /> Component and rearrange <HashcorpConsul /> to use it
1. HashicorpConsul now uses <App />
2. <App /> is now translated and adds 'skip to main content' functionality
3. Adds ember-in-viewport addon in order to visibly hide main navigation
items in order to take them out of focus/tabbing
4. Slight amends to the dom service while I was there
Adds a 'status' for the filtering/searching in the UI, without this its not super clear that you are filtering a recordset due to the menu selections being hidden once closed. You can also use the pills in this status view to delete individual filters.