1. EventSources now pass themselves thorugh to the run function as a
second argument. This enables the use of arrow functions along with the
EventSources API
`(configuration, source) => source.close()`. Order of arguments could
potentially be switched at a later date.
2. BlockingEventSources now let you pass an 'event' through at
instantation time. If you do this, the event will immediately be dispatched
once the EventSource is opened. The usecase for this is for 'unfreezing' cached
BlockingEvents. This makes it easier to provide a cache for
BlockingEventSources by caching its data rather than the entire
BlockingEventSource itself.
```
new BlockingEventSource(
(config, source) => { /* something */ },
{
cursor: 1024, // this would also come from a cache
currentEvent: getFromSomeSortOfCache(eventSourceId) //this is the new bit
}
);
// more realistically
new BlockingEventSource(
(config, source) => { return data.findSomething(slug, config) },
getFromSomeSortOfCache(eventSourceId)
);
```
Makes listening to multiple events on one target slightly easier.
Adding events can be rolled up into passing through an object, and the
returned remove function removes all of the handlers in the object
For example:
```
//this.listen...
const remove = listeners.add(
{
'message': handler,
'error': handler
}
);
remove(); // removes all listeners in the object
```
The entire API for listeners is now becoming slightly overloaded, so
potentially we'd use this API always and remove the ability to use a
string/function pair.
You can potentially close an EventSource before its first tick by
immediately setting the readyState to a non-open state. Therefore it
never opens.
Calling `open` will then open it.
'Open' fits better than 'reopen' when taking the above into account
EventSources will wait for 1 tick before 'opening'. There is always the
chance that the EventSource is '.close()'ed before that tick. We
therefore check the 'readyState' before opening the EventSource
* ui: Allow text selection of clickable elements and their contents
This commit disables a click on mousedown be removing the `href`
attribute and moving it to a `data-href` attribute. On mouseup it will
only move it back if there is no selection. This means that an anchor
will only be followed on click _if_ there is no selection.
This fixes the fact that whenever you select some copy within a
clickable element it immediately throws you into the linked page when
you release your mouse.
Further notes:
We use the `isCollapsed` property here which 'seems' to be classed as
'experimental' in one place where I researched it:
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Selection/isCollapsed
Although in others it makes no mention of this 'experimental' e.g:
- https://webplatform.github.io/docs/dom/Selection/isCollapsed/
- https://w3c.github.io/selection-api/#dom-selection-iscollapsed
I may have gone a little overboard in feature detection for this, but I
conscious of that fact that if `isCollapsed` doesn't exist at some point
in the future (something that seems unlikely). The code here will have
no effect on the UI. But I'd specifically like a second pair of eyes on
that.
* ui: Don't break right click, detects a secondary click on mousedown
* ui: Put anchor selection capability behind an ENV var
1. Adds a Listeners class, which lets us...
2. Add Listeners recursively. So you can
createListeners().add(createListeners())
3. Also add the ability to `.add` as a plain function
This moves the entire idea more towards a generic teardown utility
Adds support for ACL Roles and Service Identities CRUD, along with necessary changes to Tokens, and the CSS improvements required.
Also includes refinements/improvements for easier testing of deeply nested components.
1. ember-data adapter/serializer/model triplet for Roles
2. repository, form/validations and searching filter for Roles
3. Moves potentially, repeated, or soon to to repeated functionality
into a mixin (mainly for 'many policy' relationships)
4. A few styling tweaks for little edge cases around roles
5. Router additions, Route, Controller and templates for Roles
Also see:
* UI: ACL Roles cont. plus Service Identities (#5661 and #5720)
...also:
Temporarily overwrites native setTimeout and setInterval for e2e/acceptance
testing similar to how XHR is overwritten for e2e/acceptance testing.
This makes the blocking query acceptance tests run faster until we add a
better burstable rate limiter for blocking queries.
More recommendations for blocking queries clients was added here:
https://github.com/hashicorp/consul/pull/5358
This commit mainly adds cursor/index validation/correction based on
these recommendations (plus tests)
The recommendations also suggest that clients should include rate
limiting. Because of this, we've moved the throttling out of Consul UI
specific code and into Blocking Query specific code. Currently the 'rate
limiting' in this commit only adds a sleep to every iteration of the
loop, which is not the recommended approach, but the code here organizes
the throttling functionality into something we can work with later to
provide something more apt.
- Maintain http headers as JSON-API meta for all API requests (#4946)
- Add EventSource ready for implementing blocking queries
- EventSource project implementation to enable blocking queries for service and node listings (#5267)
- Add setting to enable/disable blocking queries (#5352)
Move all the dom-things to use the dom service in tabular-collection, feedback-dialog, list-collection and node show. Move get-component-factory into utils/dom and use dom.root() in a few more places
This includes an additional `dom.components` method which gives you a
list of components matching the selector instead of just one.
This does several things to make improving the search experience easier
moving forwards:
1. Separate searching off from filtering. 'Searching' can be thought of
as specifically 'text searching' whilst filtering is more of a
boolean/flag search.
2. Decouple the actual searching functionality to almost pure,
isolated / unit testable units and unit test. (I still import embers get
which, once I upgrade to 3.5, I shouldn't need)
3. Searching rules are now configurable from the outside, i.e. not
wrapped in Controllers or Components.
4. General searching itself now can use an asynchronous approach based on
events. This prepares for future possibilities of handing off the
searching to a web worker or elsewhere, which should aid in large scale
searching and prepares the way for other searching methods.
5. Adds the possibility of have multiple searches in one
template/route/page.
Additionally, this adds a WithSearching mixin to aid linking the
searching to ember in an ember-like way in a single place. Plus a
WithListeners mixin to aid with cleaning up of event listeners on
Controller/Component destruction.
Post-initial work I slightly changed the API of create listeners:
Returning the handler from a `remover` means you can re-add it again if you
want to, this avoids having to save a reference to the handler elsewhere
to do the same.
The `remove` method itself now returns an array of handlers, again you
might want to use these again or something, and its also more useful
then just returning an empty array.
The more I look at this the more I doubt that you'll ever use `remove`
to remove individual handlers, you may aswell just use the `remover`
returned from add. I've added some comments to reflect this, but they'll
likely be removed once I'm absolutely sure of this.
I also added some comments for WithSearching to explain possible further
work re: moving `searchParams` so it can be `hung` off the
controller object