Thanks to @cibernox’s isActive clarification in
cibernox/ember-power-select#1374, this replaces the use
of a hacked Power Select API with a deliberate blurring
of the trigger element, which is equivalent to setting
the element to inactive.
The CSS I added in #8249 to make the search be properly
centred also made the logo unclickable as it was hidden
behind the centred element! This makes the logo stay
above the search container.
This updates the look of the search control, adds a hint about the slash
shortcut, adds highlighting of fuzzy search results, and addresses a few
edge case UX failures. It moves to using a fork of Ember Power Select
to handle an edge case where pressing escape would put the control
in an undesirable active-but-not-open state.
Sometimes a job would be created with a running deployment which made
the increment button disabled.
While I was finding the root cause, I also changed the waitUntil pattern
to match the StepperInput technique which is more resilient to code
changes.
Adding keys tells Ember to rerender matching entries instead of
destroying and recreating.
Without this key, every time the allocation collection changes, every
allocation row gets destroyed and recreated.
This happens a lot, since each allocation needs to be reloaded which
dirties the collection.
Since allocation rows fetch stats on init, each of these many many
renders results in a stats request.
By using key and rerendering matching records, this all goes away. Since
the rows aren't being destroyed and recreated, the init stats request
isn't being made overnumerously.
This introduces a DataCaches service so recently-updated collections don’t need
to be requeried within a minute, or based on the current route. It only searches
jobs and nodes. There are known bugs that will be addressed in upcoming PRs.
This was a disturbing discovery. Requests in watch loops would recycle
AbortControllers meaning once any request was aborted, all requests
forever after were skipped. I noticed it with deployments and job
summary on the job detail page.
I suspect this regression occurred when jQuery was removed. This needs
test coverage still to make sure it doesn't happen again.