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.
This closes#8744 and #9826.
It necessitated some customisation options for TwoStepButton. One is inlineText, which puts the confirmation text in the same line as the buttons. Also, there was a single-use configuration option named isInfoAction that I removed in favour of passing a set of class configuration options like this:
@classes={{hash
idleButton="is-warning"
confirmationMessage="inherit-color"
cancelButton="is-danger is-important"
confirmButton="is-warning"}}
The region will naturally be appended to URLs via
token.authorizedRequest but agent members includes all servers across
all regions so relying on the application-level region isn't good
enough.
On very small clusters, the node count heuristic is impractical and
leads to confusion. By additionally requiring 10+ sibling allocs, the
lines will be shown more often.
This adds:
* a script for building and deploying the Ember UI and Storybook to
Vercel
* configuration for that deployment
* a header link to the UI to link to Storybook when built with
STORYBOOK_LINK=true
It also removes a file used to configure Netlify redirects.
The Netlify setup had two “sites”: nomad-storybook and nomad-ui. I
attempted to replicate that here but ran into some platform limitations
with Vercel: two “projects” cannot share the same root directory without
also sharing the same vercel.json that lets us specify configuration
such as the rewrite needed to handle deep linking into the Ember UI. I
tried having Storybook use /ui/storybook as the root directory (and
adding a symbolically-linked package.json to bypass Vercel’s refusal
to build without it) but that produced broken Storybook deployments.
This instead combines the two projects into one
(nomad-storybook-and-ui), defaults to forwarding / to /ui/, and
adds the header link to the UI to navigate to Storybook.
Rather than have a complex build script in the Vercel configuration UI,
this delegates to a script in the repository.
This continues iteration on the DAS UI by adding the ability to directly
navigate to a recommendation summary by (namespaced) slug and a copy
button for the direct navigation link.
It includes a change to CopyButton allowing it to take a block that’s
rendered within the button.
It also changes some instances of multi-relationship traversal to use
in-summary attributes, such as summary.jobNamespace instead of
summary.job.namespace.name.
Now all data loading happens in the TopoViz component as well as
computation of resource proportions.
Allocation selection state is also managed centrally uses a dedicated
structure indexed by group key (job id and task group name). This way
allocations don't need to be scanned at the node level, which is O(n) at
the best (assuming no ember overhead on recomputes).
- Plot all datacenters
- For each datacenter, plot all nodes
- For each node, plot all allocations by memory and cpu
- For empty nodes, highlight the emptiness
- When hovering over allocations, give them visual focus
Displays all scale events in the form of an annotated line chart. When
annotations are clicked, the timestamp, message, and meta propeties for
the event are displayed below the chart.
This introduces ember-a11y-testing to acceptance tests via a helper
wrapper that allows us to globally ignore rules that we can address
separately. It also adds fixes for the aXe rules that were failing.
This closes#8422, another bug facilitated by the difficulty
of automated testing when opening another window. Thanks to
@notnoop for narrowing this down.
This updates to Ember 3.16 but leaves Ember Data at 3.12 so we don’t need
to use the model fragments beta. It can be reviewed on a commit-by-commit
basis: blueprint updates, fixes for test failures, and the removal of
now-deprecated partials.
It’s not a true update to Octane as that would involve turning on template-only
components by default, which breaks various things. We can accomplish that
separately and then add the edition setting to package.json.
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.
- Click label to focus input
- Focusing input selects value
- Entering an invalid value reverts selection
- Entering a fractional number floors the value
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.
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.
Manual interventions:
• decorators on the same line for service and controller
injections and most computed property macros
• preserving import order when possible, both per-line
and intra-line
• moving new imports to the bottom
• removal of classic decorator for trivial cases
• conversion of init to constructor when appropriate
This is extracted from #8094, where I have run into some snags. Since
these ESLint fixes aren’t actually connected to the Ember 3.16 update
but involve changes to many files, we might as well address them
separately. Where possible I fixed the problems but in cases where
a fix seemed too involved, I added per-line or -file exceptions.
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.
Going off of the error message being "Forbidden" was brittle to begin
with and no longer works with Fetch due to the error message coming from
jquery underpinnings that were unobserved by Ember Data's attempted
recreation.
Changing namespaces can be done anywhere in the app even though many
Nomad resources aren't namespace-sensitive (e.g., clients, plugins).
A user changing namespaces is an intent to reset context, "now I want
to begin a task that relates to Namespace X". Where that task begins
used to always be the Jobs list, since it was the only namespace
sensitive resource. Now with CSI Volumes, "square 1" is Volumes if the
namespace is changed from a storage page.
There was a missing edge case where a job is pending. I took the moment
to also refactor the code to use async/await which cleaned up the
promise chaining.
This would happen because a no connection error happens after the second request fails, but
that's because it's assumed the second request is to a server node. However, if a user clicks
stderr fast enough, the first and second requests are both to the client node. This changes
the logic to check if the request is to the server before deeming log streaming a total failure.
Typically a failover means that the client can't be reached. However, if
the client does eventually return after the timeout period, the log will
stream indefinitely. This fixes that using an API that wasn't broadly
available at the time this was first written.
This closes#7454. It makes use of the existing watchable tools to
allow the exec popup sidebar to be live-updating. It also adds
alphabetic sorting of task groups and tasks.
This closes#7476. The decomposition of computed properties
is necessary to avoid nested aggregate dependent keys; the
previous dependent key of `taskGroup` will be inadequate
when the sidebar becomes live-updating.
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.
I originally planned to add component documentation, but as this dragged on and I found that JSDoc-to-Markdown sometimes needed hand-tuning, I decided to skip it and focus on replicating what was already present in Freestyle. Adding documentation is a finite task that can be revisited in the future.
My goal was to migrate everything from Freestyle with as few changes as possible. Some adaptations that I found necessary:
• the DelayedArray and DelayedTruth utilities that delay component rendering until slightly after initial render because without them:
◦ charts were rendering with zero width
◦ the JSON viewer was rendering with empty content
• Storybook in Ember renders components in a routerless/controllerless context by default, so some component stories needed changes:
◦ table pagination/sorting stories access to query params, which necessitates some reaching into Ember internals to start routing and dynamically generate a Storybook route/controller to render components into
◦ some stories have a faux controller as part of their Storybook context that hosts setInterval-linked dynamic computed properties
• some jiggery-pokery with anchor tags
◦ inert href='#' had to become href='javascript:;
◦ links that are actually meant to navigate need target='_parent' so they don’t navigate inside the Storybook iframe
Maybe some of these could be addressed by fixes in ember-cli-storybook but I’m wary of digging around in there any more than I already have, as I’ve lost a lot of time to Storybook confusion and frustrations already 😞
The STORYBOOK=true environment variable tweaks some environment settings to get things working as expected in the Storybook context.
I chose to:
• use angle bracket invocation within stories rather than have to migrate them soon after having moved to Storybook
• keep Freestyle around for now for its palette and typeface components
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.
This is mostly deprecation fixes and blueprint changes. There
are some dependency updates too; the changes to Ember
Basic Dropdown necessitated changing it to angle bracket
component invocation. The conversion of the rest of the
templates will happen separately.
The new streaming-file component takes an arbitrary logger component
along with some mode flags and handles things like polling, DOM updates,
and scroll position.
Since DOM code is in a run.next, it's possible that between the DOM
code being queued and running the element is destroyed. So the DOM
code needs to guard against this using the isDestroyed API.