This rethinks namespaces as a filter on list pages rather than a global setting.
The biggest net-new feature here is being able to select All (*) to list all jobs
or CSI volumes across namespaces.
This closes#10146.
Because of cibernox/ember-power-select#1203, which documents
the current impossibility of attaching test selectors to a
PowerSelect invocation, this uses test selectors on parent
containers instead, occasionally adding wrappers when needed.
I chose to leave the existing test selectors in the hopes that
we can return to using them eventually, but I could easily
remove them if it seems like extra noise now.
Presumably for the same reason, @class no longer works, so
this adjusts the scoping of global search CSS to preserve the style
of the search control.
I also included an update to the latest version of
ember-test-selectors, since we were far behind and I tried
that before finding the aforelinked issue.
Finally, this replaces ember-cli-uglify with ember-cli-terser to address
production build failures as described at ember-cli/ember-cli#9290.
Various page objects had breadcrumbs and breadcrumbFor within them, this
moves those to the existing Layout page object that contains shared page objects.
There are two changes here, and some caveats/commentary:
1. The “State“ table column was actually sorting only by status. The state was not an actual property, just something calculated in each client row, as a product of status, isEligible, and isDraining. This PR adds isDraining as a component of compositeState so it can be used for sorting.
2. The Sortable mixin declares dependent keys that cause the sort to be live-updating, but only if the members of the array change, such as if a new client is added, but not if any of the sortable properties change. This PR adds a SortableFactory function that generates a mixin whose listSorted computed property includes dependent keys for the sortable properties, so the table will live-update if any of the sortable properties change, not just the array members. There’s a warning if you use SortableFactory without dependent keys and via the original Sortable interface, so we can eventually migrate away from it.
The draining, eligibility, and status fields now all show under a combined
state column. Draining takes precedence, then (in)eligibility; if neither of
those is true, the status displays.