* 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
* ui: Logout button
This commit adds an easier way to logout of the UI using a logout button
Notes:
- Added a Logout button to the main navigation when you are logged in,
meaning you have easy access to a way to log out of the UI.
- Changed all wording to use 'Log in/out' vocabulary instad of 'stop
using'.
- The logout button opens a panel to show you your current ACL
token and a logout button in order to logout.
- When using legacy ACLs we don't show the current ACL token as legacy
ACLs tokens only have secret values, whereas the new ACLs use a
non-secret ID plus a secret ID (that we don't show).
- We also added a new `<EmptyState />` component to use for all our
empty states. We currently only use this for the ACLs disabled screen to
provide more outgoing links to more readind material/documentation to
help you to understand and enable ACLs.
- The `<DataSink />` component is the sibling to our `<DataSource />`
component and whilst is much simpler (as it doesn't require polling
support), its tries to use the same code patterns for consistencies
sake.
- We had a fun problem with ember-data's `store.unloadAll` here, and in
the end went with `store.init` to empty the ember-data store instead due
to timing issues.
- We've tried to use already existing patterns in the Consul UI here
such as our preexisting `feedback` service, although these are likely to
change in the future. The thinking here is to add this feature with as
little change as possible.
Overall this is a precursor to a much larger piece of work centered on
auth in the UI. We figured this was a feature complete piece of work as
it is and thought it was worthwhile to PR as a feature on its own, which
also means the larger piece of work will be a smaller scoped PR also.
We noticed that this relative positioning is not even applied when the CSS is
compiled/compressed. When looking via Web Inspector this style/selector
doesn't even appear even though it is in the CSS source.
This !important reduces the amount of selectors for this style rule,
which fixes the error, so potentially this isn't a specificity thing.
* ui: Change action-group to use new popup-menu component in intentions
* ui: Slight amends to aria-menu to prevent scrolling
* ui: Begin to use aria-menu/popover-menu for other elements
* Use a simpler, hackier method to fix up zIndexing
* ui: Implement new confirmation dialogs in other list views (#7080)
This includes another amend to the popover-menu in order to allow
mutiple confirmations/subpanels in the same popover menu.
The functionality added here to allow this is likely to change in the
future.
This includes an update of our CSS npm module. The majority of this is
just moving files from one folder to another.
1. %breadrumbs: As well as moving we've added 'milestone' breadcrumbs
2. %checkbox-group: Moved
3. %radio-group: Moved
4. %sliding-toggle: Moved (used to be called just %toggle)
5. %form-elements: Moved and added a new %inline-alert for form field
messaging (see Structure design system)
6. %action-group is now a composition of %menu-panel, %toggle-button,
plus edits to existing style to bring the %action-groups inline with the
dropdowns from Structure). %action-group also includes a composed
%confirmation-alert that is yet to be include. This will be compiled out
until we integrate it.
We've also removed some of our old icon placeholders as the above
work seased to use some of them.
Now we done this I'd say all in all over half of our CSS components now
use the CSS npm module.
The CSS specific to Consul UI also uses much of this CSS module by way
of helper placeholders such as our %frames.