This doesn’t include Ember Data, as we are still back on 3.12.
Most changes are deprecation updates, linting fixes, and dependencies. It can
be read commit-by-commit, though many of them are mechanical and skimmable.
For the new linting exclusions, I’ve added them to the Tech Debt list.
The decrease in test count is because linting is no longer included in ember test.
There’s a new deprecation warning in the logs that can be fixed by updating Ember
Power Select but when I tried that it caused it to render incorrectly, so I decided to
ignore it for now and address it separately.
My suggestion is that this table isn’t sufficiently useful to
keep around with the combinatoric explosion of other lifecycle
phases. The logic was that someone might wonder “why isn’t my
main task starting?” and this table would show that the prestart
tasks hadn’t yet completed. One might wonder the same about
any task that has prerequisites, so should a poststart task have
a table that shows main tasks? And so on.
Since the route hierarchy guarantees that one has already passed
through a template that shows the lifecycle chart before one
can reach the template where this table is displayed, I believe
this table is redundant. It also conveys information in a more
abstract way than the chart, which is dense and more easily
understood, to me.
This includes fixes for newer template lint rules that came along with
updating that dependency, which was necessary to be able to use
the no-curly-component-invocation rule. It also updates some curly
invocations that I missed in #8075.
This is mostly a direct application of the ember-angle-brackets-codemod.
I manually restored newlines in multi-line component invocations, usually
preserving file line length except for now-non-positional link-to @route.
I needed to rename task to taskState in some cases to avoid Ember
Concurrency naming conflicts.
This partially addresses #7799.
Task state filesystems are contained within a subdirectory of their
parent allocation, so almost everything that existed for browsing task
state filesystems was applicable to browsing allocations, just without
the task name prepended to the path. I aimed to push this differential
handling into as few contained places as possible.
The tests also have significant overlap, so this includes an extracted
behavior to run the same tests for allocations and task states.
Closes#7197#7199
Note: Test coverage is limited to adapter and serializer unit tests. All
acceptance tests have been stubbed and all features have been manually
tested end-to-end.
This represents Phase 1 of #6993 which is the core workflow of CSI in
the UI. It includes a couple new pages for viewing all external volumes
as well as the allocations associated with each. It also updates
existing volume related views on job and allocation pages to handle both
Host Volumes and CSI Volumes.
This connects Xterm.js to a Nomad exec websocket so people
can interact on clients via live sessions. There are buttons on
job, allocation, task group, and task detail pages that open a
popup that lets them edit their shell command and start a
session.
More is to come, as recorded in issues.
When sorting by size, directories are sorted by name, as size
isn’t displayed.
This includes a change to the positioning of sort arrows for all tables,
moving them closer to the text, because in some cases, the arrows
for right-aligned columns were ambiguously positioned.
This uses ember-page-title to add dynamic page titles throughout the
route hierarchy. When there’s more than one region, the current
current region is added before the final entry of “- Nomad”.