It's backward compatible so still supports our 3.28 ember-source.
The visible change is finally getting rid of this message:
```
WARNING: Node v18.12.0 is not tested against Ember CLI on your platform. We recommend that you use the most-recent "Active LTS" version of Node.js. See https://git.io/v7S5n for details.
```
---
`@ember/string` dependency is added for future compatibility. See: https://github.com/ember-cli/ember-cli/pull/10125
---
`tests/helpers/index.js` is unused for now, but is a nice pattern. We could move some of our test setup into local `setupApplicationTest/setupRenderingTest/setupTest` helpers.
Co-authored-by: David Taylor <david@taylorhq.com>
When running `yarn install` in a yarn workspace, the lifecycle hooks in the root package.json are not triggered. https://github.com/yarnpkg/yarn/issues/5790
As a workaround, we can additionally run `patch-package` from the `javascripts/discourse/package.json` `postinstall` hook. `patch-package` is idempotent, so it doesn't matter if it is triggered multiple times.
Longer term we intend to move to pnpm, which has built-in patch support.
One of the problems here was coming from the ember-jquery addon. This commit skips the problematic shim from the addon and re-implements in Discourse. This hack will only be required short-term - we'll be totally dropping the ember-jquery integration as part of our upgrade to Ember 4.x.
Removing this shim means we can also remove our `discourse-ensure-deprecation-order` dummy addon which was ensuring that the ember-jquery-triggered deprecation was covered by ember-cli-deprecation-workflow.
By default, Ember uses a babel transformation to strip out calls to `deprecate()` in production builds. Given that Discourse is a development platform for third-party themes/plugins, having deprecation messages visible in production is essential - many themes/plugins do not have comprehensive test-suites, and rely on production feedback to prompt changes. This commit patches Ember to print its deprecation messages to the console in production. In future we intend to improve the visibility of these to hosting providers and/or site admins.
There are two main parts to this commit:
1. Use yarn's 'resolutions' feature to point `babel-plugin-debug-macros` to a discourse-owned fork. This fork prevents `deprecate()` calls from being stripped. Relevant change can be found at https://github.com/discourse/babel-plugin-debug-macros/commit/d179d613bf
2. Introduce a production shim for Ember's deprecation library, including the `registerDeprecationHandler` API. The default implementation is stripped out of production builds via an `if(DEBUG)` wrapper.
Long term we hope that this kind of functionality can be made available in Ember itself via a flag.
When `EMBER_CLI_PLUGIN_ASSETS=1`, plugin application JS will be compiled via Ember CLI. In this mode, the existing `register_asset` API will cause any registered JS files to be made available in `/plugins/{plugin-name}_extra.js`. These 'extra' files will be loaded immediately after the plugin app JS file, so this should not affect functionality.
Plugin compilation in Ember CLI is implemented as an addon, similar to the existing 'admin' addon. We bypass the normal Ember CLI compilation process (which would add the JS to the main app bundle), and reroute the addon Broccoli tree into a separate JS file per-plugin. Previously, Sprockets would add compiled templates directly to `Ember.TEMPLATES`. Under Ember CLI, they are compiled into es6 modules. Some new logic in `discourse-boot.js` takes care of remapping the new module names into the old-style `Ember.TEMPLATES`.
This change has been designed to be a like-for-like replacement of the old plugin compilation system, so we do not expect any breakage. Even so, the environment variable flag will allow us to test this in a range of environments before enabling it by default.
A manual silence implementation is added for the build-time `ember-glimmer.link-to.positional-arguments` deprecation while we work on a better story for plugins.
By default, in CI environments, Ember CLI does not output anything between "building..." and "cleaning up". Depending on configuration and hardware, Discourse asset builds can take upwards of 60s, and so this lack of output can make the build feel 'stuck'.
This commit introduces an addon which checks for CI mode, and then outputs status information periodically. The logic is very similar to Ember CLI's non-CI progress output implementation (https://github.com/ember-cli/ember-cli/blob/04a38fda2c/lib/models/builder.js#L183-L185).
This prevents a storm of deprecation messages in the developer console. We'll be working through and enabling these one-by-one over the coming weeks/months.
A dummy `discourse-ensure-deprecation-order` package is introduced to ensure that deprecation-workflow is loaded before `@ember/jquery`. This ensures that the `@ember/jquery`-triggered deprecation warnings can be silenced correctly
This also introduces a system for silencing CLI warnings.
This encompasses a lot of work done over the last year, much of which
has already been merged into master. This is the final set of changes
required to get Ember CLI running locally for development.
From here on it will be bug fixes / enhancements.
Co-authored-by: Jarek Radosz <jradosz@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: romanrizzi <rizziromanalejandro@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Jarek Radosz <jradosz@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: romanrizzi <rizziromanalejandro@gmail.com>