* ui: add parameterized dispatch interface
This commit adds a new interface for dispatching parameteried jobs, if
the user has the right permissions. The UI can be accessed by viewing a
parameterized job and clicking on the "Dispatch Job" button located in
the "Job Launches" section.
* fix failing lint test
* clean up dispatch and remove meta
This commit cleans up a few things that had typos and
inconsistent naming. In line with this, the custom
`meta` view was removed in favor of using the
included `AttributesTable`.
* ui: encode dispatch job payload and start adding tests
* ui: remove unused test imports
* ui: redesign job dispatch form
* ui: initial acceptance tests for dispatch job
* ui: generate parameterized job children with correct id format
* ui: fix job dispatch breadcrumb link
* ui: refactor job dispatch component into glimmer component and add form validation
* ui: remove unused CSS class
* ui: align job dispatch button
* ui: handle namespace-specific requests on job dispatch
* ui: rename payloadMissing to payloadHasError
* ui: don't re-fetch job spec on dispatch job
* ui: keep overview tab selected on job dispatch page
* ui: fix task and task-group linting
* ui: URL encode job id on dispatch job tests
* ui: fix error when job meta is null
* ui: handle job dispatch from adapter
* ui: add more tests for dispatch job page
* ui: add "job dispatch" capability check
* ui: update job dispatch from code review
Co-authored-by: Luiz Aoqui <luiz@hashicorp.com>
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.
Since some chart elements need to be rendered in the svg and others need
to be outside, we need some form of conditional yielding. This is the
cleanest implementation of this pattern and it will also ship with ember
in 3.25.
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 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.
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.
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.
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.
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 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!
The presence of Storybook’s preview-head.html file in the repository
is a constant annoyance: it’s only needed for Storybook and it changes
all the time, producing a lot of Git noise. By making it a separate
step to have the Ember CLI server running before starting Storybook,
we no longer need to have preview-head in the repository. It needed to
be present because there was a race condition where it was sometimes
not generated in time for the Storybook parallel startup.