* chore: run prettier on hbs files
* ui: ensure to pass a real job object to task-group link
* chore: add changelog entry
* chore: prettify template
* ui: template helper for formatting jobId in LinkTo component
* ui: handle async relationship
* ui: pass in job id to model arg instead of job model
* update test for serialized namespace
* ui: defend against null in tests
* ui: prettified template added whitespace
* ui: rollback ember-data to 3.24 because watcher return undefined on abort
* ui: use format-job-helper instead of job model via alloc
* ui: fix whitespace in template caused by prettier using template helper
* ui: update test for new namespace
* ui: revert prettier change
Co-authored-by: Luiz Aoqui <luiz@hashicorp.com>
* Unknown status for allocations accounted for
* Canary string removed
* Test cleanup
* Generate unknown in mirage
* aacidentally oovervoowled
* Update ui/app/components/allocation-status-bar.js
Co-authored-by: Derek Strickland <1111455+DerekStrickland@users.noreply.github.com>
* Disconnected state on job status in client
* Renaming Disconnected to Unknown in the job-status-in-client
* Unknown accounted for on job rows filtering and testsfix
* Adding lostAllocs as a computed dependency
* Unknown client status within acceptance test
* Swatches updated and PR comments addressed
* Unknown and disconnected added to test fixtures
Co-authored-by: Derek Strickland <1111455+DerekStrickland@users.noreply.github.com>
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
Various page objects had breadcrumbs and breadcrumbFor within them, this
moves those to the existing Layout page object that contains shared page objects.
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 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.
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.
This builds on API changes in #6017 and #6021 to conditionally turn off the
“Run Job” button based on the current token’s capabilities, or the capabilities
of the anonymous policy if no token is present.
If you try to visit the job-run route directly, it redirects to the job list.
I unintentionally introduced a flapping test in #6817. The
draining status of the node will be randomly chosen and
that flag takes precedence over eligibility. This forces
the draining flag to be false rather than random so the
test should no longer flap.
See here for an example failure:
https://circleci.com/gh/hashicorp/nomad/26368
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 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”.
Since one allocation is preempted, the alloc factory creates a new alloc
that wasn't guaranteed to be running. When it is the first alloc row in
the table, then the alloc row detail test fails because non-running
allocs don't have metrics. The fix was to manually update all the alloc
clientStatuses.