1. `test/run-qunit.js` wasn't eslinted (I'm not adding it to the CI workflow for now, just fixed the issues)
2. "…" utf character isn't rendered correctly in Jenkins, replaced with three dots
3. Don't try to lint `tmp` when doing `eslint .` in the root dir
This is now the default in newer node versions. The code that fails is a
workaround for another error :'(
This also upgrades `chrome-launcher` which helpers with debugging.
This is `console.log`'d to the browser console. run-qunit will print this to stdout. testem will not, so a custom reporter is implemented to print this message.
The `--enable-precise-memory-info` is added so that chrome provides high-resolution memory information. This API is not supported by firefox. The logic will degrade gracefully.
The purpose of this is to allow us to catch regressions for a feature we've built recently that allows theme tests to run in production. We recently had a regression that we didn't notice for days, so to prevent that from happening again we'll use this in our internal CI pipelines.
There are 2 changes in this PR:
1) Add a new environment variable called `DISCOURSE_SKIP_CSS_WATCHER` to disable our stylesheet watcher, and make the `qunit:test` rake task set this variable on the Unicorn/Rails server it spins up to disable our stylesheet watcher when running the tests because it doesn't really need it.
2) Print more Chrome logs (such as network/security errors) to the console.
Over the years we accrued many spelling mistakes in the code base.
This PR attempts to fix spelling mistakes and typos in all areas of the code that are extremely safe to change
- comments
- test descriptions
- other low risk areas
By default our QUnit test runner starts automatically. This is normally
fine but for our `run-qunit.js` script we add a bunch of QUnit events
using `eval` and sometimes those events were added after the tests
already started/finished resulting in a hang.
This adds a new parameter that will cause QUnit not to run
automatically, which the runner uses, then triggers a `start()` when it
knows it's ready.
runAllTests is an async function, so the try/catch block does not help. The function always returns a promise, so we need to use `.catch` to handle errors. Previously, raised errors were ignored, and the process continued running until it timed out.