open-consul/ui-v2/app/controllers/dc/services/instance.js

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import Controller from '@ember/controller';
ui: Add tab navigation to the browser history/URLs (#7592) * ui: Add tab navigation to the browser history/URLs This commit changes all our tabbed UI interfaces in the catalog to use actual URL changes rather than only updating the content in the page using CSS. Originally we had decided not to add tab clicks into the browser history for a variety of reasons. As the UI has progressed these tabs are a fairly common pattern we are using and as the UI grows and stabilizes around certain UX patterns we've decided to make these tabs 'URL changing'. Pros: - Deeplinking - Potentially smaller Route files with a more concentrated scope of the contents of a tab rather than the entire page. - Tab clicks now go into your history meaning backwards and forwards buttons take you through the tabs not just the pages. - The majority of our partials are now fully fledged templates (Octane :tada:) Cons: - Tab clicks now go into your history meaning backwards and forwards buttons take you through the tabs not just the pages. (Could be good and bad from a UX perspective) - Many more Route and Controller files (yet as mentioned above each of these have a more reduced scope) - Moving around the contents of these tabs, or changing the visual names of them means updates to the URL structure, which then should potentially entail redirects, therefore what things that seem like straightforwards design reorganizations are now a little more impactful. It was getting to the point that the Pros outweight the Cons Apart from moving some files around we made a few more tiny tweaks to get this all working: - Our freetext-filter component now performs the initial search rather than this happening in the Controller (remove of the search method in the Controllers and the new didInsertElement hook in the component) - All of the <TabNav>'s were changed to use its alternative href approach. - <TabPanel>s usage was mostly removed. This is th thing I dislike the most. I think this needs removing, but I'd also like to remove the HTML it creates. You'll see that every new page is wrappe din the HTML for the old <TabPanel>, this is to continue to use the same HTML structure and id's as before to avoid making further changes to any CSS that might use this and being able to target things during testing. We could have also removed these here, but it would have meant a much larger changeset and can just as easily be done at a later date. - We made a new `tabgroup` page-object component, which is almost identical to the previous `radiogroup` one and injected that instead where needed during testing. * Make sure we pick up indexed routes when nspaces are enabled * Move session invalidation to the child (session) route * Revert back to not using didInsertElement for updating the searching This adds a way for the searchable to remember the last search result instead, which changes less and stick to the previous method of searching.
2020-04-08 09:56:36 +00:00
import { get } from '@ember/object';
UI: Add support for blocking queries on the service instance detail page (#5487) This commit includes several pieces of functionality to enable services to be removed and the page to present information that this has happened but also keep the deleted information on the page. Along with the more usual blocking query based listing. To enable this: 1. Implements `meta` on the model (only available on collections in ember) 2. Adds new `catchable` ComputedProperty alongside a `listen` helper for working with specific errors that can be thrown from EventSources in an ember-like way. Briefly, normal computed properties update when a property changes, EventSources can additionally throw errors so we can catch them and show different visuals based on that. Also: Add support for blocking queries on the service instance detail page 1. Previous we could return undefined when a service instance has no proxy, but this means we have nothing to attach `meta` to. We've changed this to return an almost empty object, so with only a meta property. At first glance there doesn't seem to be any way to provide a proxy object to templates and be able to detect whether it is actually null or not so we instead change some conditional logic in the templates to detect the property we are using to generate the anchor. 2. Made a `pauseUntil` test helper function for steps where we wait for things. This helps for DRYness but also means if we can move away from setInterval to something else later, we can do it in one place 3. Whilst running into point 1 here, we managed to make the blocking queries eternally loop. Whilst this is due to an error in the code and shouldn't ever happen whilst in actual use, we've added an extra check so that we only recur/loop the blocking query if the previous response has a `meta.cursor` Adds support for blocking queries on the node detail page (#5489) 1. Moves data re-shaping for the templates variables into a repository so they are easily covered by blocking queries (into coordinatesRepo) 2. The node API returns a 404 as signal for deregistration, we also close the sessions and coordinates blocking queries when this happens
2019-03-22 17:24:40 +00:00
import { inject as service } from '@ember/service';
import WithEventSource, { listen } from 'consul-ui/mixins/with-event-source';
UI: Add support for blocking queries on the service instance detail page (#5487) This commit includes several pieces of functionality to enable services to be removed and the page to present information that this has happened but also keep the deleted information on the page. Along with the more usual blocking query based listing. To enable this: 1. Implements `meta` on the model (only available on collections in ember) 2. Adds new `catchable` ComputedProperty alongside a `listen` helper for working with specific errors that can be thrown from EventSources in an ember-like way. Briefly, normal computed properties update when a property changes, EventSources can additionally throw errors so we can catch them and show different visuals based on that. Also: Add support for blocking queries on the service instance detail page 1. Previous we could return undefined when a service instance has no proxy, but this means we have nothing to attach `meta` to. We've changed this to return an almost empty object, so with only a meta property. At first glance there doesn't seem to be any way to provide a proxy object to templates and be able to detect whether it is actually null or not so we instead change some conditional logic in the templates to detect the property we are using to generate the anchor. 2. Made a `pauseUntil` test helper function for steps where we wait for things. This helps for DRYness but also means if we can move away from setInterval to something else later, we can do it in one place 3. Whilst running into point 1 here, we managed to make the blocking queries eternally loop. Whilst this is due to an error in the code and shouldn't ever happen whilst in actual use, we've added an extra check so that we only recur/loop the blocking query if the previous response has a `meta.cursor` Adds support for blocking queries on the node detail page (#5489) 1. Moves data re-shaping for the templates variables into a repository so they are easily covered by blocking queries (into coordinatesRepo) 2. The node API returns a 404 as signal for deregistration, we also close the sessions and coordinates blocking queries when this happens
2019-03-22 17:24:40 +00:00
export default Controller.extend(WithEventSource, {
notify: service('flashMessages'),
item: listen('item').catch(function(e) {
if (e.target.readyState === 1) {
// OPEN
if (get(e, 'error.errors.firstObject.status') === '404') {
ui: UI Release Merge (ui-staging merge) (#6527) ## HTTPAdapter (#5637) ## Ember upgrade 2.18 > 3.12 (#6448) ### Proxies can no longer get away with not calling _super This means that we can't use create anymore to define dynamic methods. Therefore we dynamically make 2 extended Proxies on demand, and then create from those. Therefore we can call _super in the init method of the extended Proxies. ### We aren't allowed to reset a service anymore We never actually need to now anyway, this is a remnant of the refactor from browser based confirmations. We fix it as simply as possible here but will revisit and remove the old browser confirm functionality at a later date ### Revert classes to use ES5 style to workaround babel transp. probs Using a mixture of ES6 classes (and hence super) and arrow functions means that when babel transpiles the arrow functions down to ES5, a reference to this is moved before the call to super, hence causing a js error. Furthermore, we the testing environment no longer lets use use apply/call on the constructor. These errors only manifests during testing (only in the testing environment), the application itself runs fine with no problems without this change. Using ES5 style class definitions give us freedom to do all of the above without causing any errors, so we reverted these classes back to ES5 class definitions ### Skip test that seems to have changed due to a change in RSVP timing This test tests a usecase/area of the API that will probably never ever be used, it was more testing out the API. We've skipped the test for now as this doesn't affect the application itself, but left a note to come back here later to investigate further ### Remove enumerableContentDidChange Initial testing looks like we don't need to call this function anymore, the function no longer exists ### Rework Changeset.isSaving to take into account new ember APIs Setting/hanging a computedProperty of an instantiated object no longer works. Move to setting it on the prototype/class definition instead ### Change how we detect whether something requires listening New ember API's have changed how you can detect whether something is a computedProperty or not. It's not immediately clear if its even possible now. Therefore we change how we detect whether something should be listened to or not by just looking for presence of `addEventListener` ### Potentially temporary change of ci test scripts to ensure deps exist All our tooling scripts run through a Makefile (for people familiar with only using those), which then call yarn scripts which can be called independently (for people familar with only using yarn). The Makefile targets always check to make sure all the dependencies are installed before running anything that requires them (building, testing etc). The CI scripts/targets didn't follow this same route and called the yarn scripts directly (usually CI builds a cache of the dependencies first). For some reason this cache isn't doing what it usually does, and it looks as though, in CI, ember isn't installed. This commit makes the CI scripts consistently use the same method as all of the other tooling scripts (Makefile target > Install Deps if required > call yarn script). This should install the dependencies if for some reason the CI cache building doesn't complete/isn't successful. Potentially this commit may be reverted if, the root of the problem is elsewhere, although consistency is always good, so it might be a good idea to leave this commit as is even if we need to debug and fix things elsewhere. ### Make test-parallel consistent with the rest of the tooling scripts As we are here making changes for CI purposes (making test-ci consistent), we spotted that test-parallel is also inconsistent and also the README manual instructions won't work without `ember` installed globally. This commit makes everything consistent and changes the manual instructions to use the local ember instance that gets installed via yarn ### Re-wrangle catchable to fit with new ember 3.12 APIs In the upgrade from ember 3.8 > 3.12 the public interfaces for ComputedProperties have changed slightly. `meta` is no longer a public property of ComputedProperty but of a ComputedDecoratorImpl mixin instead. https://github.com/emberjs/ember.js/blob/7e4ba1096e3c2e3e0dde186d5ca52ff19cb8720a/packages/%40ember/-internals/metal/lib/computed.ts#L725 There seems to be no way, by just using publically available methods, to replicate this behaviour so that we can create our own 'ComputedProperty` factory via injecting the ComputedProperty class as we did previously. https://github.com/hashicorp/consul/blob/3f333bada181aaf6340523ca2268a28d1a7db214/ui-v2/app/utils/computed/factory.js#L1-L18 Instead we dynamically hang our `Catchable` `catch` method off the instantiated ComputedProperty. In doing it like this `ComputedProperty` has already has its `meta` method mixed in so we don't have to manually mix it in ourselves (which doesn't seem possible) This functionality is only used during our work in trying to ensure our EventSource/BlockingQuery work was as 'ember-like' as possible (i.e. using the traditional Route.model hooks and ember-like Controller properties). Our ongoing/upcoming work on a componentized approach to data a.k.a `<DataSource />` means we will be able to remove the majority of the code involved here now that it seems to be under an amount of flux in ember. ### Build bindata_assetfs.go with new UI changes
2019-09-30 13:47:49 +00:00
this.notify.add({
UI: Add support for blocking queries on the service instance detail page (#5487) This commit includes several pieces of functionality to enable services to be removed and the page to present information that this has happened but also keep the deleted information on the page. Along with the more usual blocking query based listing. To enable this: 1. Implements `meta` on the model (only available on collections in ember) 2. Adds new `catchable` ComputedProperty alongside a `listen` helper for working with specific errors that can be thrown from EventSources in an ember-like way. Briefly, normal computed properties update when a property changes, EventSources can additionally throw errors so we can catch them and show different visuals based on that. Also: Add support for blocking queries on the service instance detail page 1. Previous we could return undefined when a service instance has no proxy, but this means we have nothing to attach `meta` to. We've changed this to return an almost empty object, so with only a meta property. At first glance there doesn't seem to be any way to provide a proxy object to templates and be able to detect whether it is actually null or not so we instead change some conditional logic in the templates to detect the property we are using to generate the anchor. 2. Made a `pauseUntil` test helper function for steps where we wait for things. This helps for DRYness but also means if we can move away from setInterval to something else later, we can do it in one place 3. Whilst running into point 1 here, we managed to make the blocking queries eternally loop. Whilst this is due to an error in the code and shouldn't ever happen whilst in actual use, we've added an extra check so that we only recur/loop the blocking query if the previous response has a `meta.cursor` Adds support for blocking queries on the node detail page (#5489) 1. Moves data re-shaping for the templates variables into a repository so they are easily covered by blocking queries (into coordinatesRepo) 2. The node API returns a 404 as signal for deregistration, we also close the sessions and coordinates blocking queries when this happens
2019-03-22 17:24:40 +00:00
destroyOnClick: false,
sticky: true,
type: 'warning',
action: 'update',
});
ui: UI Release Merge (ui-staging merge) (#6527) ## HTTPAdapter (#5637) ## Ember upgrade 2.18 > 3.12 (#6448) ### Proxies can no longer get away with not calling _super This means that we can't use create anymore to define dynamic methods. Therefore we dynamically make 2 extended Proxies on demand, and then create from those. Therefore we can call _super in the init method of the extended Proxies. ### We aren't allowed to reset a service anymore We never actually need to now anyway, this is a remnant of the refactor from browser based confirmations. We fix it as simply as possible here but will revisit and remove the old browser confirm functionality at a later date ### Revert classes to use ES5 style to workaround babel transp. probs Using a mixture of ES6 classes (and hence super) and arrow functions means that when babel transpiles the arrow functions down to ES5, a reference to this is moved before the call to super, hence causing a js error. Furthermore, we the testing environment no longer lets use use apply/call on the constructor. These errors only manifests during testing (only in the testing environment), the application itself runs fine with no problems without this change. Using ES5 style class definitions give us freedom to do all of the above without causing any errors, so we reverted these classes back to ES5 class definitions ### Skip test that seems to have changed due to a change in RSVP timing This test tests a usecase/area of the API that will probably never ever be used, it was more testing out the API. We've skipped the test for now as this doesn't affect the application itself, but left a note to come back here later to investigate further ### Remove enumerableContentDidChange Initial testing looks like we don't need to call this function anymore, the function no longer exists ### Rework Changeset.isSaving to take into account new ember APIs Setting/hanging a computedProperty of an instantiated object no longer works. Move to setting it on the prototype/class definition instead ### Change how we detect whether something requires listening New ember API's have changed how you can detect whether something is a computedProperty or not. It's not immediately clear if its even possible now. Therefore we change how we detect whether something should be listened to or not by just looking for presence of `addEventListener` ### Potentially temporary change of ci test scripts to ensure deps exist All our tooling scripts run through a Makefile (for people familiar with only using those), which then call yarn scripts which can be called independently (for people familar with only using yarn). The Makefile targets always check to make sure all the dependencies are installed before running anything that requires them (building, testing etc). The CI scripts/targets didn't follow this same route and called the yarn scripts directly (usually CI builds a cache of the dependencies first). For some reason this cache isn't doing what it usually does, and it looks as though, in CI, ember isn't installed. This commit makes the CI scripts consistently use the same method as all of the other tooling scripts (Makefile target > Install Deps if required > call yarn script). This should install the dependencies if for some reason the CI cache building doesn't complete/isn't successful. Potentially this commit may be reverted if, the root of the problem is elsewhere, although consistency is always good, so it might be a good idea to leave this commit as is even if we need to debug and fix things elsewhere. ### Make test-parallel consistent with the rest of the tooling scripts As we are here making changes for CI purposes (making test-ci consistent), we spotted that test-parallel is also inconsistent and also the README manual instructions won't work without `ember` installed globally. This commit makes everything consistent and changes the manual instructions to use the local ember instance that gets installed via yarn ### Re-wrangle catchable to fit with new ember 3.12 APIs In the upgrade from ember 3.8 > 3.12 the public interfaces for ComputedProperties have changed slightly. `meta` is no longer a public property of ComputedProperty but of a ComputedDecoratorImpl mixin instead. https://github.com/emberjs/ember.js/blob/7e4ba1096e3c2e3e0dde186d5ca52ff19cb8720a/packages/%40ember/-internals/metal/lib/computed.ts#L725 There seems to be no way, by just using publically available methods, to replicate this behaviour so that we can create our own 'ComputedProperty` factory via injecting the ComputedProperty class as we did previously. https://github.com/hashicorp/consul/blob/3f333bada181aaf6340523ca2268a28d1a7db214/ui-v2/app/utils/computed/factory.js#L1-L18 Instead we dynamically hang our `Catchable` `catch` method off the instantiated ComputedProperty. In doing it like this `ComputedProperty` has already has its `meta` method mixed in so we don't have to manually mix it in ourselves (which doesn't seem possible) This functionality is only used during our work in trying to ensure our EventSource/BlockingQuery work was as 'ember-like' as possible (i.e. using the traditional Route.model hooks and ember-like Controller properties). Our ongoing/upcoming work on a componentized approach to data a.k.a `<DataSource />` means we will be able to remove the majority of the code involved here now that it seems to be under an amount of flux in ember. ### Build bindata_assetfs.go with new UI changes
2019-09-30 13:47:49 +00:00
const proxy = this.proxy;
if (proxy) {
proxy.close();
}
UI: Add support for blocking queries on the service instance detail page (#5487) This commit includes several pieces of functionality to enable services to be removed and the page to present information that this has happened but also keep the deleted information on the page. Along with the more usual blocking query based listing. To enable this: 1. Implements `meta` on the model (only available on collections in ember) 2. Adds new `catchable` ComputedProperty alongside a `listen` helper for working with specific errors that can be thrown from EventSources in an ember-like way. Briefly, normal computed properties update when a property changes, EventSources can additionally throw errors so we can catch them and show different visuals based on that. Also: Add support for blocking queries on the service instance detail page 1. Previous we could return undefined when a service instance has no proxy, but this means we have nothing to attach `meta` to. We've changed this to return an almost empty object, so with only a meta property. At first glance there doesn't seem to be any way to provide a proxy object to templates and be able to detect whether it is actually null or not so we instead change some conditional logic in the templates to detect the property we are using to generate the anchor. 2. Made a `pauseUntil` test helper function for steps where we wait for things. This helps for DRYness but also means if we can move away from setInterval to something else later, we can do it in one place 3. Whilst running into point 1 here, we managed to make the blocking queries eternally loop. Whilst this is due to an error in the code and shouldn't ever happen whilst in actual use, we've added an extra check so that we only recur/loop the blocking query if the previous response has a `meta.cursor` Adds support for blocking queries on the node detail page (#5489) 1. Moves data re-shaping for the templates variables into a repository so they are easily covered by blocking queries (into coordinatesRepo) 2. The node API returns a 404 as signal for deregistration, we also close the sessions and coordinates blocking queries when this happens
2019-03-22 17:24:40 +00:00
}
}
}),
});