> In the future, this should all be moved to each individual repository now, which will mean we can finally get rid of this service.
This PR moves reconciliation to 'each individual repository'. I stopped short of getting rid of the service, but its so small now we pretty much don't need it. I'd rather wait until I look at the equivalent DataSink service and see if we can get rid of both equivalent services together (this also currently dependant on work soon to be merged)
Reconciliation of models (basically doing the extra work to clean up the ember-data store and bring our frontend 'truth' into line with the actual backend truth) when blocking/long-polling on different views/filters of data is slightly more complicated due to figuring out what should be cleaned up and what should be left in the store. This is especially apparent for KVs.
I built in a such a way to hopefully make sure it will all make sense for the future. I also checked that this all worked nicely with all our models, even KV which has never supported blocking queries. I left all that work in so that if we want to enable blocking queries/live updates for KV it now just involves deleting a couple of lines of code.
There is a tonne of old stuff that we can clean up here now (our 'fake headers' that we pass around) and I've added that to my list of thing for a 'Big Cleanup PR' that will remove lots of code that we no longer require.
* 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 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
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.
* ui: Upgrade ember-data models to use native classes/decorators
* ui: Update remaining ember-data imports
* ui: Move ember-data Adapters to use native classes
* ui: Upgrade serializers to native classes/decorators
* ui: remove meta from roles, they never had it to start with
* ui: Add the most basic workspace root in /ui
* We already have a LICENSE file in the repository root
* Change directory path in build scripts ui-v2 -> ui
* Make yarn install flags configurable from elsewhere
* Minimal workspace root makefile
* Call the new docker specific target
* Update yarn in the docker build image
* Reconfigure the netlify target and move to the higher makefile
* Move ui-v2 -> ui/packages/consul-ui
* Change repo root to refleect new folder structure
* Temporarily don't hoist consul-api-double
* Fixup CI configuration
* Fixup lint errors
* Fixup Netlify target