c62b974222
When using namespaces, the 'default' namespace is a little special in that we wanted the option for all our URLs to stay the same when using namespaces if you are using the default namespace, with the option of also being able to explicitly specify `~default` as a namespace. In other words both `ui/services/service-name` and `ui/~default/services/service-name` show the same thing. This means that if you switch between OSS and Enterprise, all of your URLs stay the same, but you can still specifically link to the default namespace itself. Our routing configuration is duplicated in order to achieve this: ``` - :dc - :service - :kv - :edit - :nspace - :dc - :service - :kv - :edit ``` Secondly, ember routing resolves/matches routes in the order that you specify them, unless, its seems, when using wildcard routes, like we do in the KV area. When not using the wildcard routes the above routing configuration resolves/matches a `/dc-1/kv/service` to the `dc.kv.edit` route correctly (dc:dc-1, kv:services), that route having been configured in a higher priority than the nspace routes. However when configured with wildcards (required in the KV area), note the asterisk below: ``` - :dc :service - :kv - *edit - :nspace - :dc - :service - :kv - *edit ``` Given something like `/dc-1/kv/services` the router instead matches the `nspace.dc.service` (nspace:dc-1, dc:kv, service:services) route first even though the `dc.kv.edit` route should still match first. Changing the `dc.kv.edit` route back to use a non-wildcard route (:edit instead of *edit), returns the router to match the routes in the correct order. In order to work around this, we catch any incorrectly matched routes (those being directed to the nspace Route but not having a `~` character in the nspace parameter), and then recalculate the correct route name and parameters. Lastly we use this recalculated route to direct the user/app to the correct route. This route recalcation requires walking up the route to gather up all of the required route parameters, and although this feels like something that could already exist in ember, it doesn't seem to. We had already done a lot of this work a while ago when implementing our `href-mut` helper. This commit therefore repurposes that work slighlty and externalizes it outside of the helper itself into a more usable util so we can import it where we need it. Tests have been added before refactoring it down to make the code easier to follow. |
||
---|---|---|
.. | ||
app | ||
blueprints | ||
config | ||
lib | ||
node-tests/config | ||
public | ||
tests | ||
.dev.eslintrc.js | ||
.editorconfig | ||
.ember-cli | ||
.eslintignore | ||
.eslintrc.js | ||
.gitignore | ||
.nvmrc | ||
.prettierrc | ||
.template-lintrc.js | ||
.watchmanconfig | ||
_redirects | ||
ember-cli-build.js | ||
GNUmakefile | ||
package.json | ||
README.md | ||
testem.js | ||
yarn.lock |
consul-ui
Prerequisites
You will need the following things properly installed on your computer.
- Git
- Node.js (with npm)
- yarn
- Ember CLI
- Google Chrome
Installation
git clone https://github.com/hashicorp/consul.git
this repositorycd ui-v2
yarn install
All tooling scripts below primarily use make
which in turn call node package scripts.
Running / Development
The source code comes with a small development mode that runs enough of the consul API as a set of mocks/fixtures to be able to run the UI without having to run consul.
make start
oryarn start
to start the ember app- Visit your app at http://localhost:4200.
To enable ACLs using the mock API, use Web Inspector to set a cookie as follows:
CONSUL_ACLS_ENABLE=1
This will enable the ACLs login page, to which you can login with any ACL token/secret.
You can also use a number of other cookie key/values to set various things whilst developing the UI, such as (but not limited to):
CONSUL_SERVICE_COUNT=1000
CONSUL_NODE_CODE=1000
// etc etc
See ./node_modules/@hashicorp/consul-api-double
for more details.
If you wish to run the UI code against a running consul instance, uncomment the proxy
line in .ember-cli
to point ember-cli to your consul instance.
You can also run the UI against a normal Consul installation.
make start-consul
or yarn run start:consul
will use the CONSUL_HTTP_ADDR
environment variable to locate the Consul installation. If that it not set
start-consul
will use http://localhost:8500
.
Example usage:
CONSUL_HTTP_ADDR=http://10.0.0.1:8500 make start-consul
Code Generators
Make use of the many generators for code, try ember help generate
for more details
Running Tests
Please note: You do not need to run make start-api
/yarn run start:api
to run the tests, but the same mock consul API is used.
make test
oryarn run test
make test-view
oryarn run test:view
to view the tests running in Chrome
Linting
make lint
currently runs linting on the majority of js files and hbs files (using ember-template-lint
).
See .eslintrc.js
and .eslintignore
for specific configuration.
Building
make build
builds the UI for production usage (env=production)make build-ci
builds the UI for CI/test usage (env=test)
Static files are built into ./dist
Running Tests in Parallel
Alternatively, ember-exam
can be used to split the tests across multiple browser instances for faster results. Most options are the same as ember test
. To see a full list of options, run ember exam --help
.
Note: The EMBER_EXAM_PARALLEL
environment variable must be set to override the default parallel
value of 1
browser instance in testem.js.
To quickly run the tests across 4 parallel browser instances:
make test-parallel
To run manually:
$ EMBER_EXAM_PARALLEL=true ./node_modules/.bin/ember exam --split <num> --parallel
More ways to split tests can be found in the ember-exam README.md.