This creates a dedicated test suite for integration tests. All of them
can be run independently, and there is no order dependency - previously,
all integration tests needed the installer test to run first, and they
would fail if installation failed.
Now, the developer will have to set up a Flarum database to be used by
these tests. A setup script to make this simple will be added in the
next commit.
Small tradeoff: the installer is NOT tested in our test suite anymore,
only implicitly through the setup script. If we decide that this is a
problem, we can still set up separate, dedicated installer tests which
should probably test the web installer.
We are still testing the installation logic, but not testing the
actual CLI task. I would love to do that, but IMO we first need to
find a way to do this fully from the outside, by invoking and
talking to the installer through the shell.
Because acceptance tests are easier to do when fully decoupled from
the application. (After all, they are intended to save us from
breaking things when changing code; and we cannot prove that when
we change the tests at the same time.)
It might be easier to start with acceptance tests for the web
installer, though.
* fixed not being able to use master token because id column no longer holds key
* added flexibility of user_id column
* added tests to confirm the api keys actually work as intended
This lets us register the former during installation, where the
latter is not yet registered.
That, in turn, means we can finally re-enable the StartSession
middleware in the installer app, which we need to log in the new
admin user when installation is complete.
* added CreatePostControllerTest
* added DeleteDiscussionControllerTest
* added ListDiscussionControllerTest
* added TokenControllerTest
* minor improvement to policy, no need for Carbon object there, added ShowDiscussionControllerTest
* added showDiscussionControllerTest but cant make Guests view the discussion created by a user
* viewing for guests tested, we might need factories
* part one of adding tests, updating core
* Apply fixes from StyleCI
[ci skip] [skip ci]
* we need xdebug for code coverage, and hhvm was already removed
* forgot about the sidecar for mysql completely 🤦
* gitignore removed this installed json we need to fake that we have extensions
* using reguarded closure
This seems to be pretty standard. Can just run `vendor/bin/phpunit` without any arguments. Removes the need for `composer test` (which is not ideal anyway as it removes colours from the output).
- Reorganised all namespaces and class names for consistency and structure. Following PSR bylaws (Abstract prefix, Interface/Trait suffix).
- Move models into root of Core, because writing `use Flarum\Core\Discussion` is nice. Namespace the rest by type. (Namespacing by entity was too arbitrary.)
- Moved some non-domain stuff out of Core: Database, Formatter, Settings.
- Renamed config table and all references to "settings" for consistency.
- Remove Core class and add url()/isInstalled()/inDebugMode() as instance methods of Foundation\Application.
- Cleanup, docblocking, etc.
- Improvements to HTTP architecture
- API and forum/admin Actions are now actually all the same thing (simple PSR-7 Request handlers), renamed to Controllers.
- Upgrade to tobscure/json-api 0.2 branch.
- Where possible, moved generic functionality to tobscure/json-api (e.g. pagination links). I'm quite happy with the backend balance now re: #262
- Improvements to other architecture
- Use Illuminate's Auth\Access\Gate interface/implementation instead of our old Locked trait. We still use events to actually determine the permissions though. Our Policy classes are actually glorified event subscribers.
- Extract model validation into Core\Validator classes.
- Make post visibility permission stuff much more efficient and DRY.
- Renamed Flarum\Event classes for consistency. ref #246
- `Configure` prefix for events dedicated to configuring an object.
- `Get` prefix for events whose listeners should return something.
- `Prepare` prefix when a variable is passed by reference so it can be modified.
- `Scope` prefix when a query builder is passed.
- Miscellaneous improvements/bug-fixes. I'm easily distracted!
- Increase default height of post composer.
- Improve post stream redraw flickering in Safari by keying loading post placeholders with their IDs. ref #451
- Use a PHP JavaScript minification library for minifying TextFormatter's JavaScript, instead of ClosureCompilerService (can't rely on external service!)
- Use UrlGenerator properly in various places. closes#123
- Make Api\Client return Response object. closes#128
- Allow extensions to specify custom icon images.
- Allow external API/admin URLs to be optionally specified in config.php. If the value or "url" is an array, we look for the corresponding path inside. Otherwise, we append the path to the base URL, using the corresponding value in "paths" if present. closes#244
New stuff:
- Signup + email confirmation.
- Updated authentication strategy with remember cookies. closes#5
- New search system with some example gambits! This is cool - check out
the source. Fulltext drivers will be implemented as decorators
overriding the EloquentPostRepository’s findByContent method.
- Lay down the foundation for bootstrapping the Ember app.
- Update Web layer’s asset manager to properly publish CSS/JS files.
- Console commands to run installation migrations and seeds.
Refactoring:
- New structure: move models, repositories, commands, and events into
their own namespaces, rather than grouping by entity.
- All events are classes.
- Use L5 middleware and command bus implementations.
- Clearer use of repositories and the Active Record pattern.
Repositories are used only for retrieval of ActiveRecord objects, and
then save/delete operations are called directly on those ActiveRecords.
This way, we don’t over-abstract at the cost of Eloquent magic, but
testing is still easy.
- Refactor of Web layer so that it uses the Actions routing
architecture.
- “Actor” concept instead of depending on Laravel’s Auth.
- General cleanup!
Laravel’s remember_token is tied to the session/cookies, which we don’t
need as the API is stateless. It makes much more sense to use our own
token mechanism.