I moved sourcecred/example-git{,hub} to the @sourcecred-test org.
This commit fixes the build given that move.
I've realized that in #1233 I in-advertently made some Git tests that
depend on a snapshot un-updateable. I'm going to compound on that slight
technical debt by skipping the tests that depended on that snapshot. I
recognize and accept that I'll need to pay this down when I resuscitate
the git plugin.
Test plan: `yarn test --full`.
This commit swaps usage over to the new implementation of `cli/load`
(the one that wraps `api/load`) and makes changes throughout the project
to accomodate that we now track instances by Project rather than by
RepoId.
Test plan: Unit tests updated; run `yarn test --full`. Also, for safety:
actually load a project (by whole org, why not) and verify that the
frontend still works.
This fixes a build error in test_build_static_site.t.
It's been masked by a lot of ENOMEM issues I've been having in the full
build, so a few failures had actually had a chance to accrue:
- Fixes an issue wherein loading the sourcecred/example-git repo would
error (on failure to normalize scores, because there was no user
activity). Fixed it pretty crudely by adding an issue to that
repository.
- Fixes an issue where a deprecation warning caused the
build_static_site build to fail. We now permit that particular warning.
- Updates the example load snapshot.
Test plan: `yarn test --full` passes once again.
Summary:
Our registry was defined to simply be a list of IDs. This is
insufficiently flexible; we want to be able to annotate these IDs with,
e.g., last-updated times (#989). This commit wraps the entries in a
simple object, updating clients appropriately.
Test Plan:
- Run `node ./bin/sourcecred.js load sourcecred/example-github` with a
repository registry in the old format, and note that it errors
appropriately.
- Run `yarn build` with a repository registry in the old format, and
note that it errors (“Compat mismatch”).
- Delete the old registry and re-run the `load` command. Note that it
runs successfully and outputs a registry. Run `yarn build`; note
that this works.
- Load data for two repositories. Run `yarn start`. Note that the list
of prototypes still works, and that you can navigate to and render
attributions for individual project pages.
- Verify that `yarn test --full` passes.
wchargin-branch: repo-id-registry-metadata
We added a configurable cred feedback url on the theory that we would
create a separate discourse post to collect feedback for each project in
particular.
We've now realized that no one is using this, so it's just vestigial
complexity now. So I'm removing the logic for configuring the feedback
url on a per-project basis.
Instead, we will always link to a Google form for collecting feedback.
Test plan: `yarn test --full` passes, and I manually checked the links.
Summary:
We want to remove the repository selector dropdown on the cred explorer
homepage and instead render a separate web page for each project. To do
this, we need to know which pages to render statically. We choose to
ingest this information from the state of the repository registry at
build time.
This commit adds an environment variable `REPO_REGISTRY` whose contents
are the stringified version of the repository registry, or `null` if
SourceCred has been built for the backend. This variable is defined with
Webpack’s `DefinePlugin`, so any code bundled by Webpack can refer to it
via `process.env.REPO_REGISTRY` both on the server and in the browser.
Paired with @wchargin.
Test Plan:
Sharness tests modified; running `yarn test --full` suffices.
Summary:
Lots of tests need the output of `yarn backend`. Before this commit,
they tended to create it themselves. This was slow and wasteful, and
also could in principle have race conditions (though in practice usually
tended not to).
This commit updates tests to respect a `SOURCECRED_BIN` environment
variable indicating the path to an existing directory of backend
applications.
Closes#765.
Test Plan:
Running `yarn test --full` passes.
Prepending `echo run >>/tmp/log &&` to the `backend` script in
`package.json` and running `yarn test --full` results in a log file
containing only one line, indicating that the script really is run only
once.
wchargin-branch: deduplicate-backend
Summary:
This patch fixes a particularly sneaky bug. Our test script contains a
literal backtick inside single quotes. This is generally not a problem,
because backticks inside single quotes do nothing. But the contents of
the single quotes are interpreted as Bash by our test runner, and at
that time the single quotes are expanded to a command substitution.
Therefore, `grep` is invoked as if writing
grep -e "warning: running $(yarn backend)"
at the CLI. This will actually invoke `yarn backend`!
The magnificent aspect of this bug is that it both makes the test script
slower by about ten seconds _and_ completely and silently defeats the
assertion in which it’s contained. The output of `yarn backend` contains
several blank lines. Therefore, one of the literal patterns to `grep`
contains a blank line. This causes `grep` to match _every_ line in the
error file, regardless of whether it is one of the intended messages.
This patch is the 666th PR to SourceCred. In my opinion, it deserves
this dubious honor.
Test Plan:
Note that `yarn test --full` works, but fails if one of the expected
error message patterns is deleted or munged.
Confirm the behavior by prepending `echo backend >>/tmp/log &&` to the
`yarn backend` script in `package.json`, noting that the resulting log
file contains four lines before this patch and two lines after it.
(Don’t forget to delete/clear the log file before invocations.)
Confirm the behavior of `grep` by writing:
```shell
$ printf 'things went wrong!\n' >err
$ printf 'wat\n\nwot\n' >patterns
$ grep -vF -e "okay" -e "warn: `cat patterns`" err; echo $?
1
$ printf 'wat\nwot\n' >patterns # no empty line
$ grep -vF -e "okay" -e "warn: `cat patterns`" err; echo $?
things went wrong!
0
```
wchargin-branch: fix-build-test-quoting
Summary:
This change should have happened in #768. However, I didn’t catch it
then because `yarn test --full` passes even before this commit, despite
the expected error being clearly wrong! It turns out that a very sneaky
bug conspires with this one to result in the test passing no matter what
kinds of warnings `yarn backend` may output. This bug is fixed in #772.
Test Plan:
Observe that the error message is now correct by comparing against the
source in `config/RemoveBuildDirectoryPlugin.js`. Then, apply #772 and
note that `yarn test --full` still passes, but does not pass when #772
is applied and this change is reverted.
wchargin-branch: fix-expected-error-message
Summary:
In #715, I used Bash arrays for convenience. Our tests should run under
POSIX `sh` (as on Travis and standard GNU/Linux). This patch
reimplements the check using only POSIX features.
Fixes#752.
Test Plan:
As is, `yarn test --full` passes on GNU/Linux and macOS(+GNU coreutils).
Change the glob from `main.*.js` to `*.js` and note that running the
test emits an error:
```
fatal: multiple main bundles found:
build_output/output_NO_REPOS/static/js/main.6307f660.js
build_output/output_NO_REPOS/static/js/ssr.e92af807.js
```
Change the glob from `main.*.js` to `nope.*.js` and note that running
the test emits an error:
```
fatal: no main bundle found
```
Revert the glob to normal and note that all tests run and pass.
(To run tests, `./test_build_static_site.t --chain-lint --long -v` from
the `sharness/` directory.)
wchargin-branch: posix-bundle-check
Test Plan:
Running `./test_build_static_site.t --long -v` no longer detects the
feedback URL as unsafe. (Prior to this commit, it emitted a message to
this effect.) The build is still broken on Linux for other reasons, but
works on macOS or any other system where `sh` resolves to Bash.
As a regression test, the “potentially unsafe argument” warning has been
made to actually fail the test case. To verify this, remove `:` from the
list of `unusual_chars`, run the test, and note that it fails outright.
wchargin-branch: shell-safe-colon
Summary:
We store the relational view in `view.json.gz` instead of `view.json`,
taking advantage of the isomorphic `pako` library for gzip encoding and
decoding.
Sample space savings (note that post bodies are included; i.e., #747 has
not been applied):
SAVE OLD (B) NEW (B) REPO
89.7% 25326 2617 sourcecred/example-github
82.9% 3257576 555948 sourcecred/sourcecred
85.2% 11287621 1665884 ipfs/js-ipfs
88.0% 20953425 2520358 gitcoinco/web
84.4% 38196825 5951459 ipfs/go-ipfs
84.9% 205770642 31101452 tensorflow/tensorflow
<details>
<summary>Script to generate space savings output</summary>
```shell
savings() {
printf '% 7s % 11s % 11s %s\n' 'SAVE' 'OLD (B)' 'NEW (B)' 'REPO'
for repo; do
file="${SOURCECRED_DIRECTORY}/data/${repo}/github/view.json.gz"
if ! [ -f "${file}" ]; then
printf >&2 'warn: no such file %s\n' "${file}"
continue
fi
script="$(sed -e 's/^ *//' <<EOF
repo = '${repo}'
pre_size = $(<"${file}" gzip -dc | wc -c)
post_size = $(<"${file}" wc -c)
percentage = '%0.1f%%' % (100 * (1 - post_size / pre_size))
p = '% 7s % 11d % 11d %s' % (percentage, pre_size, post_size, repo)
print(p)
EOF
)"
python3 -c "${script}"
done
}
```
</details>
Closes#750.
Test Plan:
Comparing the raw old version with the decompressed new version shows
that they are identical:
```
$ <~/tmp/sourcecred/data/sourcecred/example-github/github/view.json \
> shasum -a 256 -
63853b9d3f918274aafacf5198787e18185a61b9c95faf640a1e61f5d11fa19f -
$ <~/tmp/sourcecred/data/sourcecred/example-github/github/view.json.gz \
> gzip -dc | shasum -a 256
63853b9d3f918274aafacf5198787e18185a61b9c95faf640a1e61f5d11fa19f -
```
Additionally, `yarn test --full` passes, and `yarn start` still loads
data and runs PageRank properly.
wchargin-branch: gzip-relational-view
Summary:
We can now set, at build time, a URL to be displayed at the top of the
prototype, encouraging users to provide feedback. If the URL is not
provided, it defaults to the appropriate topic on the SourceCred
Discourse instance.
The result looks like this:
![Screenshot of the feedback URL in the prototype][screenshot]
[screenshot]: https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/4317806/44814824-a238b380-ab92-11e8-88c8-dfbae27ca496.png
Test Plan:
Unit tests added to `yarn sharness-full` and `yarn unit`.
You can run `yarn start` to see the message with the default URL, or
`SOURCECRED_FEEDBACK_URL=http://example.com/ yarn start` to specify a
custom URL.
wchargin-branch: feedback-url
Summary:
The current version of the build script has the safe but annoying
property that the target directory must be an existing, empty directory.
It seems reasonable and convenient to allow the build script to create
the directory with `mkdir -p`. It still fails if the directory is not
empty or is a file.
Test Plan:
Unit tests updated; run `yarn sharness-full`.
wchargin-branch: build-mkdir-p
Thanks to #642, it should now be safe to disable the Git plugin, reaping
the benefits described in #628, without causing the cred explorer to
crash (#631).
Test plan:
- `yarn travis --full` passes
- The full cred explorer works:
- Running PageRank does not crash the explorer
- Expanding a pull request does not crash the explorer
- (After clearing state) the weight config doesn't show Git weights
- The filter doesn't show Git nodes
Summary:
In addition to the obvious benefit of having a favicon, this gets rid of
a 404 Not Found error on our home page, tremendously boosting our hacker
cred.
Test Plan:
The favicon is displayed in both `yarn start` and the static site (as a
result of the build script). The added build test fails before this
change.
wchargin-branch: add-favicon
This reverts commit 8c70f03122.
Context: This introduced a serious bug (#631), so we're reverting it to
get the codebase back in a working state. Meanwhile, I'll develop a
principled solution.
Test plan:
I rebuilt the backend, re-loaded a graph, and loaded it in the frontend.
PageRank, the cred explorer, and the weight config all work. Opening a
pull request does not trigger a crash.
See #627 for context.
Removing the Git plugin results in an enormous performance improvement.
In my testing on `metamask/metamask-extension`: before this change, load
took 23s, and PageRank took >9 mins and then crashed. After this change,
load+PageRank took 5s combined.
Test plan: All unit tests pass; loading new data from the CLI works; and
I poked around the UI to make sure there were no spurious references to
the Git plugin.
Note: This does not break backcompat, there's no need to regenerate any
already-loaded data.
Summary:
The `node ./bin/sourcecred.js load` command invokes plugin code by
providing an output directory into which the plugin may store data.
As of this patch, it also provides a cache directory that the plugin may
use to store data that will not be available at runtime. For instance,
the Git plugin might choose to clone the repository herein, or the
GitHub plugin may choose to store partial GraphQL query results to deal
with interruptions. The contract is that the cache directory may be
removed at any time and that the plugin should continue to operate
normally.
Test Plan:
The build script has been updated and tested. Reverting the change to
the build script causes the newly added test to fail. (Each plugin has a
cache directory, though the cache directories are empty for now.)
wchargin-branch: create-plugin-cache
Summary:
Currently, we create the static site and deploy it all at once in
`scripts/deploy.sh`. This commit creates a new script that only builds
the static site. This has the advantage that it is easier/less scary to
change that script (because it can be tested without worrying about
deploying to a local test target), and that we can write automated tests
for it.
Test Plan:
Run `yarn sharness`; note that it completes very quickly. Then, in a
shell with your GitHub token exported, run `yarn sharness-full`. Expect
all tests to pass.
For a sanity check, you can run:
```shell
outdir="$(mktemp -d --suffix .sourcecred-site)"
./scripts/build_static_site.sh --target "${outdir}" \
--cname sourcecred.io \
--repo sourcecred/example-git \
--repo sourcecred/example-github \
;
(cd "${outdir}" && python -m SimpleHTTPServer)
```
and ensure that <http://localhost:8000/> is as expected.
One test case that is not covered is the following: _if_ the actual app
somehow tries to emit a `CNAME` file at root, _and_ our script’s logic
to catch this is broken, then we will not catch this failure. I’ve
tested the logic manually by adding `>"${cname_file}"` after definition
of that variable, but I don’t see a good way to test it automatically,
without adding flags like `--but-actually-emit-cname-too` to the build.
The compound probability of this happening is sufficiently low that this
doesn’t bother me.
wchargin-branch: build-static-site-script