Parsing html, modifying it, and then serializing had some negative side-effects (namely, it was losing html entity escaping in some cases)
Drops jsdom dependency
Ember-cli has built-in error pages when there is a build error. Previously these were not being used in Discourse because our custom proxy middleware was too early in the stack. This commit reorders things so that the "broccoli-watcher" middleware runs before our custom proxy. It also disables the `historySupportMiddleware`, which doesn't make sense in our 'always proxy' setup.
Previously, the app HTML served by the Ember-CLI proxy was generated based on a 'bootstrap json' payload generated by Rails. This inevitably leads to differences between the Rails HTML and the Ember-CLI HTML.
This commit overhauls our proxying strategy. Now, we totally ignore the ember-cli `index.html` file. Instead, we take the full HTML from Rails and surgically replace script URLs based on a `data-discourse-entrypoint` attribute. This should be faster (only one request to Rails), more robust, and less confusing for developers.
Currently, `window.I18n` is defined in an old school hand written
script, inlined into locale/*.js by the Rails asset pipeline, and
then the global variable is shimmed into a pseudo AMD module later
in `module-shims.js`.
This approach has some problems – for one thing, when we add a new
V2 addon (e.g. in #23859), Embroider/Webpack is stricter about its
dependencies and won't let you `import from "I18n";` when `"I18n"`
isn't listed as one of its `dependencies` or `peerDependencies`.
This moves `I18n` into a real package – `discourse-i18n`. (I was
originally planning to keep the `I18n` name since it's a private
package anyway, but NPM packages are supposed to have lower case
names and that may cause problems with other tools.)
This package defines and exports a regular class, but also defines
the default global instance for backwards compatibility. We should
use the exported class in tests to make one-off instances without
mutating the global instance and having to clean it up after the
test run. However, I did not attempt that refactor in this PR.
Since `discourse-i18n` is now included by the app, the locale
scripts needs to be loaded after the app chunks. Since no "real"
work happens until later on when we kick things off in the boot
script, the order in which the script tags appear shouldn't be a
problem. Alternatively, we can rework the locale bundles to be more
lazy like everything else, and require/import them into the app.
I avoided renaming the imports in this commit since that would be
quite noisy and drowns out the actual changes here. Instead, I used
a Webpack alias to redirect the current `"I18n"` import to the new
package for the time being. In a separate commit later on, I'll
rename all the imports in oneshot and remove the alias. As always,
plugins and the legacy bundles (admin/wizard) still relies on the
runtime AMD shims regardless.
For the most part, I avoided refactoring the actual I18n code too
much other than making it a class, and some light stuff like `var`
into `let`.
However, now that it is in a reasonable format to work with (no
longer inside the global script context!) it may also be a good
opportunity to refactor and make clear what is intended to be
public API vs internal implementation details.
Speaking of, I took the librety to make `PLACEHOLDER`, `SEPARATOR`
and `I18nMissingInterpolationArgument` actual constants since it
seemed pretty clear to me those were just previously stashed on to
the `I18n` global to avoid polluting the global namespace, rather
than something we expect the consumers to set/replace.
The custom html elements we were using for bootstraping were causing Embroider to end the `<head>` tag and immediately start `<body>`. As a result most of `<meta>` tags ended up in the `<body>`.
That mean (among possibly other issues) that the app did not have CSRF token set properly on launch (in the development env)
We were proxying all `/assets/*` requests through to the origin. In local development that was fine, because Rails was able to serve files from the `dist/` directory. But when proxying to a remote origin, we want the local ember-cli to serve its own JS assets
Motivation: aligning us with JS/Ember practices (runtime deps in `dependencies`, build/dev-time deps in `devDependencies`)
1. Move deps to devDeps where applicable (rule of thumb: it's a devDep unless it's required at runtime by the rails app or it's imported in the addon's code)
2. Remove unused dependencies and add missing ones (in addons)
3. Remove empty `repository` fields
4. Move `engines` and `ember` fields to the bottom
1. ember proxy stuff still isn't in a great shape, live-reload doesn't work yet, uploads made w/o subfolder won't work, custom fonts don't work, service worker doesn't work. But otherwise it's fine :P
2. I don't know why `HTTP_IF_MODIFIED_SINCE` can be an empty string. Don't have time to investigate, and fast_blank makes this fix an easy solution ;)
What does this change do?
This commit the client to override the navigation menu setting
configured by the site temporarily based on the value of the
`navigation_menu` query param. The new query param replaces the old
`enable_sidebar` query param.
Why do we need this change?
The motivation here is to allow theme maintainers to quickly preview
what the site will look like with the various navigation menu site
setting.
This was previously disabled because of incompatibility with the ember-cli proxy. This commit fixes that incompatibility, and restores the development behaviour to match production.
There were three issues at play:
1. Our bootstrap-js addon handles the forwarding of most requests in the ember-cli proxy. This is not built to handle streaming responses. Solution: skip our custom request processing for `/message-bus/*` and use ember-cli's default `http-proxy`.
2. The request/response size-limiting middleware (`rawMiddleware`) would apply even to unhandled paths, causing request and response bodies to be buffered. Solution: skip it for any paths which are not handled by our custom addon.
3. Expressjs servers will buffer/compress responses. Solution: add `Cache-Control: no-transform` to message-bus responses. For now I've done this in development only, but it may be useful to add it to message-bus's default headers in future
The `Set-Cookie` header is an exceptional case where multiple values are allowed, and should not be joined into a single header. Because of its browser-focussed origins (where set-cookie is not visible), `fetch()` does not have a clean API for this. Instead we have to access the `raw()` data.
This fixes various authentication-related issues when developing via the Ember CLI proxy.
Bumps [jsdom](https://github.com/jsdom/jsdom) from 20.0.2 to 20.0.3.
<details>
<summary>Release notes</summary>
<p><em>Sourced from <a
href="https://github.com/jsdom/jsdom/releases">jsdom's
releases</a>.</em></p>
<blockquote>
<h2>Version 20.0.3</h2>
<ul>
<li>Updated dependencies, notably <code>w3c-xmlserializer</code>, which
fixes using <code>DOMParser</code> on XML documents containing
emoji.</li>
</ul>
</blockquote>
</details>
<details>
<summary>Changelog</summary>
<p><em>Sourced from <a
href="https://github.com/jsdom/jsdom/blob/master/Changelog.md">jsdom's
changelog</a>.</em></p>
<blockquote>
<h2>20.0.3</h2>
<ul>
<li>Updated dependencies, notably <code>w3c-xmlserializer</code>, which
fixes using <code>DOMParser</code> on XML documents containing
emoji.</li>
</ul>
</blockquote>
</details>
<details>
<summary>Commits</summary>
<ul>
<li><a
href="22f7c3c518"><code>22f7c3c</code></a>
Version 20.0.3</li>
<li><a
href="c540630669"><code>c540630</code></a>
Update dependencies and dev dependencies</li>
<li><a
href="cdf07a1f0e"><code>cdf07a1</code></a>
Slight tweaks to GitHub Actions</li>
<li><a
href="bd77578169"><code>bd77578</code></a>
Try to make the issue template clearer</li>
<li>See full diff in <a
href="https://github.com/jsdom/jsdom/compare/20.0.2...20.0.3">compare
view</a></li>
</ul>
</details>
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node-fetch is now a ES module, so it has to either imported with `import/from` syntax (which can't be used in addon's index.js) or using the dynamic `import()`