This closes#10513, thanks to @bastelfreak for the report.
GET /status/leader returns an IPv6 host with square brackets
around the IP address as expected, but the rpcAddr property
on the agent model does not.
This fixes rpcAddr, updates the Mirage /status/leader mock
to properly format an IPv6 host, and changes the agent
factory to sometimes produce IPv6 addresses.
I added a formatHost utility function to centralise the
conditional square bracket-wrapping that would have
otherwise been further scattered around.
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 is the first step in #10268. If a maximum is not specified, the
task group sum uses the memory number instead. The maximum is only
shown when it’s higher than the memory sum.
This updates the UI to use the new fuzzy search API. It’s a drop-in
replacement so the / shortcut to jump to search is preserved, and
results can be cycled through and chosen via arrow keys and the
enter key.
It doesn’t use everything returned by the API:
* deployments and evaluations: these match by id, doesn’t seem like
people would know those or benefit from quick navigation to them
* namespaces: doesn’t seem useful as they currently function
* scaling policies
* tasks: the response doesn’t include an allocation id, which means they
can’t be navigated to in the UI without an additional query
* CSI volumes: aren’t actually returned by the API
Since there’s no API to check the server configuration and know whether
the feature has been disabled, this adds another query in
route:application#beforeModel that acts as feature detection: if the
attempt to query fails (500), the global search field is hidden.
Upon having added another query on load, I realised that beforeModel was
being triggered any time service:router#transitionTo was being called,
which happens upon navigating to a search result, for instance, because
of refreshModel being present on the region query parameter. This PR
adds a check for transition.queryParamsOnly and skips rerunning the
onload queries (token permissions check, license check, fuzzy search
feature detection).
Implementation notes:
* there are changes to unrelated tests to ignore the on-load feature
detection query
* some lifecycle-related guards against undefined were required to
address failures when navigating to an allocation
* the minimum search length of 2 characters is hard-coded as there’s
currently no way to determine min_term_length in the UI
This adds a Revert two-step button to the JobVersions component for
not-current versions, which redirects to the overview on success. It
checks the job version before and after reversion to mitigate the edge
case where reverting to an otherwise-identical version has no effect, as
discussed in #10337.
It uses existing facilities for handling other errors and disabling the
button when permissions are lacking.
This followup to #10066 adds a step to clear the one-time token
from the URL after the application has loaded. The delay is
required for it to actually clear, but only when the OTT is present
to avoid slowing down the entire test suite.
This adds UI support for receiving the one-time token passed via query parameter, as in #10134
and related PRs, and exchanging it for its corresponding secret ID. When this works, it’s mostly
invisible, with a brief flash of the OTT onscreen.
The authentication failure message now suggests the -authenticate flag.
When OTT exchange fails, it shows a whole-page error.
This includes a known UX shortcoming in that the OTT will not disappear from the URL when an
identifier is specified on the command line, like nomad ui -authenticate jobname. The goal is to
address that shortcoming in a forthcoming pull request.
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.
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 fixes a flaky test, as seen in this failure:
https://app.circleci.com/pipelines/github/hashicorp/nomad/14726/workflows/f4ae0bf2-0699-4d18-b55e-5221aafe393c/jobs/137128
One part of the test involves toggling off all memory recommendations
and then accepting, but it’s not possible to accept when there are
no CPU recommendations to begin with, which can happen because
there’s a 10% chance of not creating a corresponding recommendation
in the task factory. Since two tasks are created for this module, it’s
only a 1% chance of no CPU task, but that means 1% flakiness!
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"}}
This closes#7459.
While emoji don’t actually need escaping, expanding the
expression that enumerates all task name characters that
don’t need escaping to include emoji is prohibitive, since
it’s a discontinuous range. The emoji-regex project has
such an expression and it’s 12kB.
This fixes the regular expression to property escape emoji
as a single character instead of as its component bytes.
Thanks to @DingoEatingFuzz for the suggestion.
This closes#9966. It was looking at the query parameters
for the namespace and region, but allocation (and task!)
routes don’t have a namespace query parameter. Since the URL
generator requires the job for all calls, it makes sense to
extract the namespace and region from the job instead.
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 fixes a couple bugs
1. Overreporting resources reserved due to counting terminal allocs
2. Overreporting unique client placements due to uniquing on object refs
instead of on client ID.
Various page objects had breadcrumbs and breadcrumbFor within them, this
moves those to the existing Layout page object that contains shared page objects.
Instead of creating recommendations for all the jobs used
across these tests, this creates a specific job with
a higher group count, which reduces the likelihood
of having no recommendations to 0.0001%.
It was incorrect to assume that each task group would always
have recommendations, since there’s a 1% chance that a task
won’t have a recommendation. (10% chance for CPU and memory.)
This uses the number of groups with recommendations instead.
This builds on filtering to allow the optimize page to show recommendations
for the active namespace vs all namespaces. If turning off the toggle causes
the summary from the active card to become excluded from the filtered list,
the active summary changes, as with the facets.
It also includes a fix for this bug:
https://github.com/hashicorp/nomad/pull/9294#pullrequestreview-527748994
The API is missing values for `ReadAllocs` and `WriteAllocs` fields, resulting
in allocation claims not being populated in the web UI. These fields mirror
the fields in `nomad/structs.CSIVolume`. Returning a separate list of stubs
for read and write would be ideal, but this can't be done without either
bloating the API response with repeated full `Allocation` data, or causing a
panic in previous versions of the CLI.
The `nomad/structs` fields are persisted with nil values and are populated
during RPC, so we'll do the same in the HTTP API and populate the `ReadAllocs`
and `WriteAllocs` fields with a map of allocation IDs, but with null
values. The web UI will then create its `ReadAllocations` and
`WriteAllocations` fields by mapping from those IDs to the values in
`Allocations`, instead of flattening the map into a list.
Plugin health for controllers should show "Node Only" in the UI only when both
conditions are true: controllers are not required, and no controllers have
registered themselves (0 expected controllers). This accounts for "monolith"
plugins which might register as both controllers and nodes but not necessarily
have `ControllerRequired = true` because they don't implement the Controller
RPC endpoints we need (this requirement was added in #7844)
This changeset includes the following fixes:
* Update the Plugins tab of the UI so that monolith plugins don't show "Node
Only" once they've registered.
* Add the missing "Node Only" logic to the Volumes tab of the UI.
This is mostly copied from the jobs list. One uncertainty
is what to do when changing a facet causes the currently-
active card to be excluded from the filtered list 🤔
Without this, visiting any job detail page on Nomad OSS would crash with
an error like this:
Error: Ember Data Request GET
/v1/recommendations?job=ping%F0%9F%A5%B3&namespace=default returned a
404 Payload (text/xml)
The problem was twofold.
1. The recommendation ability didn’t include anything about checking
whether the feature was present. This adds a request to
/v1/operator/license on application load to determine which features are
present and store them in the system service. The ability now looks for
'Dynamic Application Sizing' in that feature list.
2. Second, I didn’t check permissions at all in the job-fetching or job
detail templates.
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.
Before, we'd show a helpful error message when a task isn't running
instead of erroring in a generic way. Turns out when an alloc is
terminal but reachable, the filesystem is left behind so we were hiding
it.
Now it is always shown and in the event that something errors, it'll
either be generic, or--more commonly--a 404 of the allocation.
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 continues #8455 by adding accessibility audits to component integration
tests and fixing associated errors. It adds audits to existing tests rather than
adding separate ones to facilitate auditing the various permutations a
component’s rendering can go through.
It also adds linting to ensure audits happen in component tests. This
necessitated consolidating test files that were scattered.
This extracts some common API-idiosyncracy-handling patterns from model serialisers into properties that are processed by the application serialiser:
* arrayNullOverrides converts a null property value to an empty array
* mapToArray converts a map to an array of maps, using the original map keys as Name properties on the array maps
* separateNanos splits nanosecond-containing timestamps into millisecond timestamps and separate nanosecond properties
This makes use of the PR I recently had merged to eslint-plugin-ember-a11y-testing
to add linting that ensures an accessibility audit is called at least once per acceptance
test file. When I have added linting for component tests, it can apply there too.
I added exclusions for the filesystem browser tests, which are covered by behaviors/fs
and for the search test which will involve significant overrides to Ember Power Select
default templates.
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.
Thanks to @notnoop for this UX improvement suggestion.
The allocation’s task group is always known, so it
might as well be preselected in the sidebar when the
exec window opens. Also, if the task group only has
one task, might as well preselect it too.
This updates the Ember edition setting to Octane, which I removed from #8319
because it required the template-only Glimmer components setting to be turned
on, which this does. These changes to templates accommodate that setting.
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.
- 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.
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.
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.
These are based on the source code for selectChoose. I would have liked
to have used selectChoose, but the implementation has two await
settled()s in it which prevented me from writing the tests I needed to
write.
These new extension helpers separate selectChoose into two pieces so
logic can be placed between the two async actions.
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.
This updates Xterm.js to 4.6.0, which includes support for reverse-wraparound
mode, so we no longer need to use a vendored dependency, which closes#7461.
The interface for accessing the buffer that’s used for test assertions changed.
With the dependency now accessed conventionally, we can have it load only when
it’s needed by an exec popup window, which closes#7516. That saves us
≈60kb compressed in the dependency bundle!
Adding this settled makes this test pass now that Ember Data is using
fetch instead of jquery. The test was presumably always incorrect but
never flaked.
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.
This is part of #7834’s jQuery removal goal. It addresses a couple of jQuery-related deprecation warnings and also uses “native events mode” for ember-cli-page-object, which is needed so it doesn’t have to use jQuery via the Ember global.
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#7456. It hides the terminal when the job is dead and
displays an error when trying to open an exec session for a task
that isn’t running. There’s a skipped test for the latter behaviour
that I’ll have to come back for.
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.
Most tests bypass setting the token via the UI, instead choosing
to set it in localStorage directly, because the acceptance tests
for the token UI are sufficient to exercise that part of the UI,
so this speeds up the test a bit.
This is a minimal implementation that closes#7463. It doesn’t include
true support for moving around within the command to edit using arrow
keys because it gets too complex when managing wrapping at the edge of
the terminal. Instead, arrow keys are ignored. It also ignores ^A and
^E, which are cursor manipulations that pose similar problems to arrow
keys. It does support ^U, which deletes the entire command.
It also allows a command to be pasted, which was previously unsupported.
This is accomplished by migrating from Xterm.js’s onKey handler to
onData, which is recommended here:
https://github.com/xtermjs/xterm.js/issues/2673#issuecomment-574897733
onData is a higher-level handler that issues events with the final
interpreted data instead of the individual key events. That means the
processing in this PR has changed from inspecting DOM key events to
inspecting their ASCII equivalents, which I’ve extracted into a utility
dictionary for use in tests and implementation.
One consequence of ignoring most control characters is that if you paste
a string that includes a control character, that character will be
stripped. It’s somewhat strange for compound sequences like arrow keys;
if you run copy('/bin/b' + '\x1b[D' + 'ash') in a Javascript console and
paste what’s on the clipboard, you get "/bin/b[Dash". That’s because
the left arrow key, as in that centre portion of the string,
is represented by the escape character and a coded sequence. Stripping
the control character leaves the coded sequence as part of the paste.
That seems like an acceptable compromise vs either ignoring any pasted
string with control characters (confusing UX) or trying to interpret and
strip all such compound control sequences (difficult to be exhaustive).
When a node has no host volumes, the API response will
have a null value for the HostVolumes attribute, which
in turn becomes a null value instead of an empty array
in the store. This protects against that, ensuring host
volumes is always an array.
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.