Summary: Ref T13276. Ref T13513. All readers and writers were removed more than a year ago; clean up the last remnants of this table.
Test Plan: Grepped for table references, found none.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13513, T13276
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21281
Summary:
Ref T13513. Syntax highlighting is potentially expensive, and the changeset rendering pipeline can cache it. However, the cache is currently keyed ONLY by Differential changeset ID.
Destroy the existing cache and rebuild it with a more standard cache key so it can be used in a more ad-hoc way by inline suggestion snippets.
Test Plan: Used Darkconsole, saw cache hits and no more inline syntax highlighting for changesets with many inlines.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13513
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21280
Summary: Ref T13513. This plans for "currently editing", character range comments, code suggestions, document engine tracking. And absolutely nothing else.
Test Plan:
- Ran `bin/storage upgrade -f`, got a clean upgrade.
- Created and submitted some inline comments; nothing exploded.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13513
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21184
Summary:
Ref T13455. Add container-level storage for persistent view state, and persist "Highlight As..." inside it.
The storage generates a "PhabricatorChangesetViewState" configuration object as an output.
When preferences are expressed on a diff and that diff is later attached to a revision, we attempt to copy the preferences.
The internal storage tracks per-changeset settings, but currently always uses "last update wins" to apply the settings in the UI.
Test Plan:
- Viewed revisions, changed highlighting, reloaded. Saw highlighting stick in revision view and standalone view.
- Viewed commits, changed highlighting, reloaded. Saw highlighting stick.
- Created a diff, changed highlighting, turned it into a revision, saw highlighting persist.
Subscribers: jmeador, PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13455
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21137
Summary:
Fixes T13510. This migration currently fails because it tries to affect the "paste" database, but when it runs this database will be named "pastebin".
Since the cost of fixing it in place or moving it past the rename migration both seem relatively high (and the cost of throwing it away is plausibly zero) just throw it for now.
Test Plan: Looked at file, saw no more code that can execute.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13510
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21132
Summary:
Ref PHI1292. Enable fulltext searchs in paste. Maybe this should only index a snippet instead of the entire content?
Also updates table names in `PhabricatorPasteQuery`.
Test Plan: Created some pastes, indexed them, searched for them.
Reviewers: amckinley
Subscribers: codeblock, Korvin, PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20650
Summary:
See <https://discourse.phabricator-community.org/t/storage-upgrade-error/3748>.
It is broadly unsafe for migrations to use "save()". If the object gains new fields later, the query will include "SET newField = X", which will fail against the old schema which is in the process of being upgraded.
Instead, migrations must issue raw SQL against the schema as it is expected to exist at the time the migration executes.
Migrations have followed this rule for a long time, but this ~6 year old migration was overlooked. Update it to issue a raw query to perform the policy update.
Test Plan: This is somewhat flimsy since rebuilding a genuine reproduction case is messy, but used "bin/storage --apply ..." to at least get the new query to execute against modern Phabricator without issues.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21124
Summary:
Depends on D21018. Ref T13493. Ref T6703. The "ExternalAccount" table has a unique key on `<accountType, accountDomain, accountID>` but this no longer matches our model of reality and changes in this sequence end writes to `accountID`.
Remove this key.
Then, remove all readers of `accountType` and `accountDomain` (and all nontrivial writers) because none of these callsites are well-aligned with plans in T6703.
This change has no user-facing impact today: all the rules about linking/unlinking/etc remain unchanged, because other rules currently prevent creation of more than one provider with a given "accountType".
Test Plan:
- Linked an OAuth1 account (JIRA).
- Linked an OAuth2 account (Asana).
- Used `bin/auth refresh` to cycle OAuth tokens.
- Grepped for affected symbols.
- Published an Asana update.
- Published a JIRA link.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13493, T6703
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21019
Summary: Depends on D21016. Ref T13493. This copies existing external account "accountID" values into the "ExternalAccountIdentifier" table, preparing for an authority switch.
Test Plan: Ran migration several times, looked at the data that came out of it, saw sensible results. Logged out / in with external accounts.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13493
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21017
Summary:
Depends on D21010. Ref T13493. External accounts may have multiple different unique identifiers, most often when v1 of the API makes a questionable choice (and provies a mutable, non-unique, or PII identifier) and v2 of the API uses an immutable, unique, random identifier.
Allow Phabricator to store multiple identifiers per external account.
Test Plan: Storage only, see followup changes.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13493
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21011
Summary:
Ref T13444. To interact meaningfully with "DestructionEngine", objects need a PHID. The "UserEmail" object currently does not have one (or a real "Query").
Provide basic PHID support so "DestructionEngine" can interact with the object more powerfully.
Test Plan:
- Ran migrations, checked data in database, saw sensible PHIDs assigned.
- Added a new email address to my account, saw it get a PHID.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13444
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20913
Summary:
Ref T13444. You can currently explicitly unassign an identity (useful if the matching algorithm is misfiring). However, this populates the "currentEffectiveUserPHID" with the "unassigned()" token, which mostly makes things more difficult.
When an identity is explicitly unassigned, convert that into an explicit `null` in the effective user PHID.
Then, realign "assigned" / "effective" language a bit. Previously, `withAssigneePHIDs(...)` actualy queried effective users, which was misleading. Finally, bulk up the list view a little bit to make testing slightly easier.
Test Plan:
- Unassigned an identity, ran migration, saw `currentEffectiveUserPHID` become `NULL` for the identity.
- Unassigned a fresh identity, saw NULL.
- Queried for various identities under the modified constraints.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13444
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20908
Summary:
Ref T13444. Currently, identities for a particular email address are queried with "LIKE" against a binary column, which makes the query case-sensitive.
- Extract the email address into a separate "sort255" column.
- Add a key for it.
- Make the query a standard "IN (%Ls)" query.
- Deal with weird cases where an email address is 10000 bytes long or full of binary junk.
Test Plan:
- Ran migration, inspected database for general sanity.
- Ran query script in T13444, saw it return the same hits for "git@" and "GIT@".
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13444
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20907
Summary:
Fixes T13435. If you move Phabricator or copy data from one environment to another, the repository URI index currently still references the old URI, since it writes the URI as a plain string. This may make "arc which" and similar workflows have difficulty identifying repositories.
Instead, store the "phabricator.base-uri" domain and the "diffusion.ssh-host" domain as tokens, so lookups continue to work correctly even after these values change.
Test Plan:
- Added unit tests to cover the normalization.
- Ran migration, ran daemons, inspected `repository_uriindex` table, saw a mixture of sensible tokens (for local domains) and static domains (like "github.com").
- Ran this thing:
```
$ echo '{"remoteURIs": ["ssh://git@local.phacility.com/diffusion/P"]}' | ./bin/conduit call --method repository.query --trace --input -
Reading input from stdin...
>>> [2] (+0) <conduit> repository.query()
>>> [3] (+3) <connect> local_repository
<<< [3] (+3) <connect> 555 us
>>> [4] (+5) <query> SELECT `r`.* FROM `repository` `r` LEFT JOIN `local_repository`.`repository_uriindex` uri ON r.phid = uri.repositoryPHID WHERE (uri.repositoryURI IN ('<base-uri>/diffusion/P')) GROUP BY `r`.phid ORDER BY `r`.`id` DESC LIMIT 101
<<< [4] (+5) <query> 596 us
<<< [2] (+6) <conduit> 6,108 us
{
"result": [
{
"id": "1",
"name": "Phabricator",
"phid": "PHID-REPO-2psrynlauicce7d3q7g2",
"callsign": "P",
"monogram": "rP",
"vcs": "git",
"uri": "http://local.phacility.com/source/phabricator/",
"remoteURI": "https://github.com/phacility/phabricator.git",
"description": "asdf",
"isActive": true,
"isHosted": false,
"isImporting": false,
"encoding": "UTF-8",
"staging": {
"supported": true,
"prefix": "phabricator",
"uri": null
}
}
]
}
```
Note the `WHERE` clause in the query normalizes the URI into "<base-uri>", and the lookup succeeds.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13435
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20872
Summary:
Fixes T13284. See that task for substantial discussion. There are currently two cases where we'll skip over commits which we should publish:
- if a branch is not permanent, then later made permanent; or
- in some cases, the first time we examine branches in a repository.
In both cases, this error is one-shot and things work correctly going forward. The root cause is conflation between the states "this ref currently permanent" and "this ref was permanent the last time we updated refs".
Separate these pieces of state and cover all these cases. Also introduce a "--rebuild" flag to fix the state of bad commits.
Test Plan:
See T13284 for the three major cases:
- initial import;
- push changes to a nonpermanent branch, update, then make it permanent;
- push chanegs to a nonpermanent branch, update, push more changes, then make it permanent.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13284
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20829
Summary:
Fixes T13408. Currently, when a package (or other object) appears in a field (rather than an action), it is not indexed.
Instead: index fields too, not just actions.
Test Plan:
- Wrote a rule like "[ Affected packages include ] ...".
- Updated the search index.
- Saw rule appear on "Affected By Herald Rules" on the package detail page.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13408
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20795
Summary:
Depends on D20732. Ref T13366. This generally makes the "Merchant" UI look and work like the "Payment Account" UI.
This is mostly simpler since the permissions have largely been sorted out already and there's less going on here and less weirdness around view/edit policies.
Test Plan: Browsed all Merchant functions as a merchant member and non-member.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13366
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20733
Summary:
Depends on D20720. Ref T13366.
- Use modern policies and policy interfaces.
- Use new merchant authority cache.
- Add (some) transactions.
- Move MFA from pre-upgrade-gate to post-one-shot-check.
- Simplify the autopay workflow.
- Use the "reloading arrows" icon for subscriptions more consistently.
Test Plan: As a merchant-authority and account-authority, viewed, edited, and changed autopay for subscriptions.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13366
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20721
Summary:
Depends on D20718. Ref T13366. Ref T13367.
- Phortune payment methods currently do not use transactions; update them.
- Give them a proper view page with a transaction log.
- Add an "Add Payment Method" button which always works.
- Show which subscriptions a payment method is associated with.
- Get rid of the "Active" status indicator since we now treat "disabled" as "removed", to align with user expectation/intent.
- Swap out of some of the super weird div-form-button UI into the new "big, clickable" UI for choice dialogs among a small number of options on a single dimension.
Test Plan:
- As a mechant-authority and account-authority, created payment methods from carts, subscriptions, and accounts. Edited and viewed payment methods.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13367, T13366
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20719
Summary:
Depends on D20713. Ref T13366. When a payment account establishes a relationship with a merchant by creating a cart or subscription, create an edge to give the merchant access to view the payment account.
Also, migrate all existing subscriptions and carts to write these edges.
This aims at straightening out Phortune permissions, which are currently a bit wonky on a couple of dimensions. See T13366 for detailed discussion.
Test Plan:
- Created and edited carts/subscriptions, saw edges write.
- Ran migrations, saw edges write.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13366
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20715
Summary: Depends on D20697. Ref T8389. Add support for adding "billing@enterprise.com" and similar to Phortune accounts.
Test Plan: Added and edited email addresses for a payment account.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T8389
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20713
Summary:
See D20650. Long ago, this got added as "pastebin", but that's the name of another product/company, not a generic term for paste storage.
Rename the database to `phabricator_paste`.
(An alternate version of this patch would rename `phabricator_search` to `phabricator_bing`, `phabricator_countdown` to `phabricator_spacex`, `phabricator_pholio` to `phabricator_adobe_photoshop`, etc.)
Test Plan:
- Grepped for `pastebin`, now only found references in old patches.
- Applied patches.
- Browsed around Paste in the UI without encountering issues.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20661
Summary:
Ref T13305. See that task for discussion.
This old migration may indirectly cause search index worker tasks to queue by loading handles. They'll fail since we later added `dateCreated` to the worker task table.
Use `needHandles(false)` (since we don't use them) to disable loading handles and avoid the problem.
Test Plan:
- Ran `bin/storage upgrade -f` on an older instance (late 2016) and hit this issue.
- Applied the patch, got a clean migration to modernity.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13305
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20570
Summary: Ref T11741. See PHI1276. After the switch to "Ferret", this table has no remaining readers or writers.
Test Plan:
- Ran `bin/storage upgrade -f`, no warnings.
- Grepped for class name, table name, `stemmedCorpus` column; got no relevant hits.
- Did a fulltext search.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T11741
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20549
Summary:
This hasn't been updated in a bit more than a year (last updated in D18594) and we've accumulated a fair number of SQL patches. Update it.
This is mostly automatic (with `bin/storage quickstart`), except:
- Manual edit to one migration for a missed callsite to `DashboardInstall`.
- Replaced two InnoDB tables that still have FULLTEXT indexes with MyISAM (see rP6cedd4a95cfc).
This is not really possible to review and more for reference than examination. `bin/storage quickstart` has historically worked correctly.
Test Plan: I have great faith that `bin/storage quickstart` is a script which creates a big `.sql` file.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20480
Summary:
Ref T13279. I think I'm going to fling some stuff at the wall for a bit here and hope most of it sticks, so this series of changes may not be terribly cohesive or focused. Here:
The range of the chart is locked to "[0, 105% of max]". This is trying to make a pleasing extra margin above the maximum value, but currently just breaks charts with negative values. Later:
- I'll probably let users customize this.
- We should likely select 0 as the automatic minimum for charts with no negative values.
- For charts with positive values, it would be nice to automatically pick a pleasantly round number (25, 100, 1000) as a maximum by default.
We don't have any storage for charts yet. Add some. This works like queries, where every possible configuration gets a short URL slug. Nothing writes or reads this yet.
Rename `fn()` to `css_function()`. This builds CSS functions for D3. The JS is likely to get substantial structural rewrites later on, `fn()` was just particularly offensive.
Test Plan: Viewed a fact series with negative values. Ran `bin/storage upgrade`.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: yelirekim, PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13279
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20438
Summary:
Depends on D20412. See PHI1147.
- Index the targets of "Add Reviewer", "Add Blocking Reviewer", "Add Auditor", "Add Subscriber", and "Remove Subscriber" Herald rules. My major goal is to get Owners packages. This will also hit projects/users, but we just don't read those edges (for now, at least).
- Add a "Related Herald Rules" panel to Owners Package pages.
- Add a migration to reindex Herald rules for the recent build plan stuff and this, now that such a migration is easy to write.
Test Plan:
Ran migration, verified all rules reindexed.
{F6372695}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20413
Summary:
Depends on D20411. Ref T13272. Dashboards and panels have new indexes (Ferret and usage edges) that need a rebuild.
For large datasets like commits we have the "activity" flow in T11932, but realistically these rebuilds won't take more than a few minutes on any realistic install so we should be able to just queue them up as migrations.
Let migrations insert a job to basically run `bin/search index --type SomeObjectType`, then do that for dashboards and panels.
(I'll do Herald rules in a followup too, but I want to tweak one indexing thing there.)
Test Plan: Ran the migration, ran `bin/phd debug task`, saw everything get indexed with no manual intervention.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20412
Summary:
Depends on D20410. Ref T13272. Dashboards/Panels currently use older "ngram" indexing, which is a less-powerful precursor to Ferret. Throw away the ngram index and provide a Ferret index instead. Also:
- Remove the NUX state, which links to the wrong place now and doesn't seem terribly important.
- Add project tags to the search result list.
- Make the "No Tags" tag a little less conspicious.
Test Plan:
- Indexed dashboards and panels.
- Searched for dashboards and panels via SearchEngine using Ferret "query" field.
- Searched for panels via "Add Existing Panel" datasource typeahead.
- Searched for dashboards via "Add Menu Item > Dashboard" on a ProfileMenu via typeahead.
- Viewed dashboard NUX state (no special state, but no more bad link to "/create/").
- Viewed dashboard list, saw project tags.
- Viewed dashboards with no project tags ("No Tags" is now displayed but less visible).
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20411
Summary: Depends on D20409. Ref T13272. Before "ProfileMenu", dashboards were installed on specific objects using this table. Installs are now handled via ProfileMenu and this table no longer has any meaningful readers. Remove references to the table and destroy it.
Test Plan: Grepped for `DashboardInstall`.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20410
Summary:
Ref T13272. See PHI945. Currently, dashboards tend to break when they have duplicate panels. Partly, this is because all the edit operations operate on a "panelPHID", so there's no way to say "remove the copy of panel X at the bottom of the right-hand column", since the operation is `remove(phid)` and that doesn't point at a specific copy of that panel.
In theory, the code is supposed to prevent duplicate panels, but (a) it doesn't always do this successfully and (b) there's no real reason you can't put duplicate panels on a dashboard if you want. There may even be good reason to do this if you have a "random cat picture" panel or something. Even if you aren't doing this on purpose, it's probably better to let you do it and then fix your mistake by removing the panel you don't want than to prevent the operation entirely.
To simplify this whole mess, I want to just support putting the same panel into multiple places on a dashboard. As a first step, change the storage format so each instance of a panel has a unique "panelKey".
Since each instance of each panel now has its own object, this will also let us give particular instances of panels things like "automatic refresh time" (T5514) or "custom name for this panel on this dashboard" later, if we want. Not clear these are valuable but having this capability can't hurt.
Test Plan:
- `var_dump()`'d the migration, looked at all the results.
- Ran the migration.
NOTE: This breaks dashboards on its own since none of the other code has been changed yet, see followups.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20405
Summary:
Ref T13275. Add portals to the search index so that:
- they show up in fulltext global search; and
- the typeahead actually uses an index.
Also make them taggable with projects as an organizational aid.
Test Plan: Indexed portals with `bin/serach index`, searched for a portal with "Query", with fulltext search in main menu, with typehead on "Install Dashboard...", changed the name of a portal and searched again to check that the index updates properly.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13275
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20389
Summary:
Ref T13275. Today, you can build a custom page on the home page, on project pages, and in your favorites menu.
PHI374 would approximately like to build a completely standalone custom page, and this generally seems like a reasonable capability which we should support, and which should be easy to support if the "custom menu" stuff is built right.
In the near future, I'm planning to shore up some of the outstanding issues with profile menus and then build charts (which will have a big dashboard/panel component), so adding Portals now should let me double up on a lot of the testing and maybe make some of it a bit easier.
Test Plan:
Viewed the list of portals, created a new portal. Everything is currently a pure skeleton with no unique behavior.
Here's a glorious portal page:
{F6321846}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13275
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20348
Summary:
Ref T5474. In 99% of cases, a separate "archived/active" status for triggers probably doesn't make much sense: there's not much reason to ever disable/archive a trigger explcitly, and the archival rule is really just "is this trigger used by anything?".
(The one reason I can think of to disable a trigger manually is because you want to put something in a column and skip trigger rules, but you can already do this from the task detail page anyway, and disabling the trigger globally is a bad way to accomplish this if it's in use by other columns.)
Instead of adding a separate "status", just track how many columns a trigger is used by and consider it "inactive" if it is not used by any active columns.
Test Plan: This is slightly hard to test exhaustively since you can't share a trigger across multiple columns right now, but: rebuild indexes, poked around the trigger list and trigger details, added/removed triggers.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T5474
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20308
Summary:
Depends on D20278. Ref T5474. This change creates some new empty objects that do nothing, and some new views for looking at those objects. There's no actual useful behavior yet.
The "Edit" controller is custom instead of being driven by "EditEngine" because I expect it to be a Herald-style "add new rules" UI, and EditEngine isn't a clean match for those today (although maybe I'll try to move it over).
The general idea here is:
- Triggers are "real" objects with a real PHID.
- Each trigger has a name and a collection of rules, like "Change status to: X" or "Play sound: Y".
- Each column may be bound to a trigger.
- Multiple columns may share the same trigger.
- Later UI refinements will make the cases around "copy trigger" vs "reference the same trigger" vs "create a new ad-hoc trigger" more clear.
- Triggers have their own edit policy.
- Triggers are always world-visible, like Herald rules.
Test Plan: Poked around, created some empty trigger objects, and nothing exploded. This doesn't actually do anything useful yet since triggers can't have any rule behavior and columns can't actually be bound to triggers.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T5474
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20279
Summary:
Ref T13249. See PHI1115. I initially wanted to make `bin/policy unlock --owner <user> H123` work to transfer ownership of a Herald rule, although I'm no longer really sure this makes much sense.
In any case, this makes things a little better and more modern.
I removed the storage table for rule comments. Adding comments to Herald rules doesn't work and probably doesn't make much sense.
Test Plan: Created and edited Herald rules, grepped for all the transaction type constants.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13249
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20258
Summary:
Depends on D20219. Ref T13258. Ref T11415. Installs sometimes have long-running builds or unimportant builds which they may not want to hold up drafts, affect buildable status, or warn during `arc land`.
Some builds have side effects (like deployment or merging) and are not idempotent. They can cause problems if restarted.
In other cases, builds are isolated and idempotent and generally safe, and it's okay for marketing interns to restart them.
To address these cases, add "Behaviors" to Build Plans:
- Hold Drafts: Controls how the build affects revision promotion from "Draft".
- Warn on Land: Controls the "arc land" warning.
- Affects Buildable: Controls whether we care about this build when figuring out if a buildable passed or failed overall.
- Restartable: Controls whether this build may restart or not.
- Runnable: Allows you to weaken the requirements to run the build if you're confident it's safe to run it on arbitrary old versions of things.
NOTE: This only implements UI, none of these options actually do anything yet.
Test Plan:
Mostly poked around the UI. I'll actually implement these behaviors next, and vet them more thoroughly.
{F6244828}
{F6244830}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13258, T11415
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20220
Summary:
See T13253. After D20200 (which changed the task schema) these migrations no longer run, since the PHP code will expect a column to exist that won't exist until a `20190220.` migration runs.
We don't need these migrations, since anyone upgrading through September 2017 gets a "rebuild search indexes" activity anyway (see T11932). Just no-op them.
Test Plan: Grepped for `queueDocumentForIndexing()` in `autopatches/`, removed all of it.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20243
Summary:
Ref T5401. Depends on D20201. Add timestamps to worker tasks to track task creation, and pass that through to archive tasks. This lets us measure the total time the task spent in the queue, not just the duration it was actually running.
Also displays this information in the daemon status console; see screenshot: {F6225726}
Test Plan:
Stopped daemons, ran `bin/search index --all --background` to create lots of tasks, restarted daemons, observed expected values for `dateCreated` and `epochArchived` in the archive worker table.
Also tested the changes to `unarchiveTask` by forcing a search task to permanently fail and then `bin/worker retry`ing it.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin, epriestley, PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T5401
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20200
Summary:
Depends on D20179. Ref T13088. See PHI351. See PHI1018. In various cases, unit tests names are 19 paths mashed together.
This is probably not an ideal name, and the test harness should probably pick a better name, but if users are fine with it and don't want to do the work to summarize on their own, accept them. We may summarize with "..." in some cases depending on how this fares in the UI.
The actual implementation is a separate "strings" table which is just `<hash-of-string, full-string>`. The unit message table can end up being mostly strings, so this should reduce storage requirements a bit.
For now, I'm not forcing a migration: new writes use the new table, existing rows retain the data. I plan to provide a migration tool, recommend migration, then force migration eventually.
Prior to that, I'm likely to move at least some other columns to use this table (e.g., lint names), since we have a lot of similar data (arbitrarily long user string constants that we are unlikely to need to search or filter).
Test Plan: {F6213819}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13088
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20180
Summary:
Ref T13253. Fixes T6615. See that task for discussion.
- Remove three keys which serve no real purpose: `dataID` doesn't do anything for us, and the two `leaseOwner` keys are unused.
- Rename `leaseOwner_2` to `key_owner`.
- Fix an issue where `dataID` was nullable in the active table and non-nullable in the archive table.
In practice, //all// workers have data, so all workers have a `dataID`: if they didn't, we'd already fatal when trying to move tasks to the archive table. Just clean this up for consistency, and remove the ancient codepath which imagined tasks with no data.
Test Plan:
- Ran `bin/storage upgrade`, inspected tables.
- Ran `bin/phd debug taskmaster`, worked through a bunch of tasks with no problems.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13253, T6615
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20175
Summary:
Depends on D20111. Ref T6703. Currently, each ExternalAccount row is tied to a provider by `providerType` + `providerDomain`. This effectively prevents multiple providers of the same type, since, e.g., two LDAP providers may be on different ports on the same domain. The `domain` also isn't really a useful idea anyway because you can move which hostname an LDAP server is on, and LDAP actually uses the value `self` in all cases. Yeah, yikes.
Instead, just bind each account to a particular provider. Then we can have an LDAP "alice" on seven different servers on different ports on the same machine and they can all move around and we'll still have a consistent, cohesive view of the world.
(On its own, this creates some issues with the link/unlink/refresh flows. Those will be updated in followups, and doing this change in a way with no intermediate breaks would require fixing them to use IDs to reference providerType/providerDomain, then fixing this, then undoing the first fix most of the way.)
Test Plan: Ran migrations, sanity-checked database. See followup changes for more comprehensive testing.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T6703
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20112
Summary:
Ref T13244. See PHI1055. (Earlier, see D20091 and PHI1047.) Previously, we expanded the Owners package autoreview rules from "Yes/No" to several "Review (Blocking) If Non-Owner Author Not Subscribed via Package" kinds of rules. The sky didn't fall and this feature didn't turn into "Herald-in-Owners", so I'm comfortable doing something similar to the "Audit" rules.
PHI1055 is a request for a way to configure slightly different audit behavior, and expanding the options seems like a good approach to satisfy the use case.
Prepare to add more options by moving everything into a class that defines all the behavior of different states, and converting the "0/1" boolean column to a text column.
Test Plan:
- Created several packages, some with and some without auditing.
- Inspected database for: package state; and associated transactions.
- Ran the migrations.
- Inspected database to confirm that state and transactions migrated correctly.
- Reviewed transaction logs.
- Created and edited packages and audit state.
- Viewed the "Package List" element in Diffusion.
- Pulled package information with `owners.search`, got sensible results.
- Edited package audit status with `owners.edit`.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13244
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20124
Summary:
Depends on D20107. Ref T6703. Legalpad currently inserts "email" records into the external account table, but they're never used for anything and nothing else references them.
They also aren't necessary for anything important to work, and the only effect they have is making the UI say "External Account" instead of "None" under the "Account" column. In particular, the signatures still record the actual email address.
Stop doing this, remove all the references, and destroy all the rows.
(Long ago, Maniphest may also have done this, but no longer does. Nuance/Gatekeeper use a more modern and more suitable "ExternalObject" thing that I initially started adapting here before realizing that Legalpad doesn't actually care about this data.)
Test Plan: Signed documents with an email address, saw signature reflected properly in UI. Grepped for other callsites.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T6703
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20108
Summary:
Depends on D20041. See PHI1046. If you do this:
- Create a parent project called "Crab" in Space 1.
- Create a milestone called "Left Claw".
- Shift "Crab" to Space 2.
- Create a milestone called "Right Claw".
...you currently end up with "Left Claw" in the wrong `spacePHID` in the database. At the application level it's in the correct space, but when we `WHERE ... AND spacePHID IN (...)` we can incorrectly filter it out.
Test Plan:
- Did the above setup.
- Saved "Crab", saw the space fix itself.
- Put things back in the broken state.
- Ran the migration script, saw things fix themselves again.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: aeiser, PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20063
Summary:
Ref T13242. See PHI1039. Maniphest subtypes generally seem to be working well. I designed them as a general capability that might be extended to other `EditEngine` objects later, and PHI1039 describes a situation where extending subtypes to projects would give us some reasonable tools.
(Some installs also already use icons/colors as a sort of lightweight version of subtypes, so I believe this is generally useful capability.)
Some of this is a little bit copy-pasted and could probably be shared, but I'd like to wait a bit longer before merging it. For example, both configs have exactly the same structure right now, but Projects should possibly have some different flags (for example: to disable creating subprojects / milestones).
This implementation is pretty basic for now: notably, subprojects/milestones don't get the nice "choose from among subtype forms" treatment that tasks do. If this ends up being part of a solution to PHI1039, I'd plan to fill that in later on.
Test Plan: Defined multiple subtypes, created subtype forms, created projects with appropriate subtypes. Filtered them by subtype. Saw subtype information on list/detail views.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13242
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20040
Summary:
Depends on D20010. Ref T920. Allow users to designate which contact number is "primary": the number we'll actually send stuff to.
Since this interacts in weird ways with "disable", just do a "when any number is touched, put all of the user's rows into the right state" sort of thing.
Test Plan:
- Added numbers, made numbers primary, disabled a primary number, un-disabled a number with no primaries. Got sensible behavior in all cases.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T920
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20011
Summary:
Ref T920. To send you SMS messages, we need to know your phone number.
This adds bare-bone basics (transactions, storage, editor, etc).
From here:
**Disabling Numbers**: I'll let you disable numbers in an upcoming diff.
**Primary Number**: I think I'm just going to let you pick a number as "primary", similar to how email works. We could imagine a world where you have one "MFA" number and one "notifications" number, but this seems unlikely-ish?
**Publishing Numbers (Profile / API)**: At some point, we could let you say that a number is public / "show on my profile" and provide API access / directory features. Not planning to touch this for now.
**Non-Phone Numbers**: Eventually this could be a list of other similar contact mechanisms (APNS/GCM devices, Whatsapp numbers, ICQ number, twitter handle so MFA can slide into your DM's?). Not planning to touch this for now, but the path should be straightforward when we get there. This is why it's called "Contact Number", not "Phone Number".
**MFA-Required + SMS**: Right now, if the only MFA provider is SMS and MFA is required on the install, you can't actually get into Settings to add a contact number to configure SMS. I'll look at the best way to deal with this in an upcoming diff -- likely, giving you partial access to more of Setings before you get thorugh the MFA gate. Conceptually, it seems reasonable to let you adjust some other settings, like "Language" and "Accessibility", before you set up MFA, so if the "you need to add MFA" portal was more like a partial Settings screen, maybe that's pretty reasonable.
**Verifying Numbers**: We'll probably need to tackle this eventually, but I'm not planning to worry about it for now.
Test Plan: {F6137174}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: avivey, PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T920
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19988
Summary:
Ref T13222. Users configure "Factor Configs", which say "I have an entry on my phone for TOTP secret key XYZ".
Currently, these point at raw implementations -- always "TOTP" in practice.
To support configuring available MFA types (like "no MFA") and adding MFA types that need some options set (like "Duo", which needs API keys), bind "Factor Configs" to a "Factor Provider" instead.
In the future, several "Factors" will be available (TOTP, SMS, Duo, Postal Mail, ...). Administrators configure zero or more "MFA Providers" they want to use (e.g., "Duo" + here's my API key). Then users can add configs for these providers (e.g., "here's my Duo account").
Upshot:
- Factor: a PHP subclass, implements the technical details of a type of MFA factor (TOTP, SMS, Duo, etc).
- FactorProvider: a storage object, owned by administrators, configuration of a Factor that says "this should be available on this install", plus provides API keys, a human-readable name, etc.
- FactorConfig: a storage object, owned by a user, says "I have a factor for provider X on my phone/whatever with secret key Q / my duo account is X / my address is Y".
Couple of things not covered here:
- Statuses for providers ("Disabled", "Deprecated") don't do anything yet, but you can't edit them anyway.
- Some `bin/auth` tools need to be updated.
- When no providers are configured, the MFA panel should probably vanish.
- Documentation.
Test Plan:
- Ran migration with providers, saw configs point at the first provider.
- Ran migration without providers, saw a provider created and configs pointed at it.
- Added/removed factors and providers. Passed MFA gates. Spot-checked database for general sanity.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13222
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19975
Summary:
Ref T13222. Long ago, we had a Config option (`welcome.html`) to let you dump HTML onto the login screen, but this was relatively hard to use and not good from a security perspective.
In some cases this was obsoleted by Dashboards, but there's at least some remaining set of use cases for actual login instructions on the login screen. For example, WMF has some guidance on //which// SSO mechanism to use based on what types of account you have. On `secure`, users assume they can register by clicking "Log In With GitHub" or whatever, and it might reduce frustration to tell them upfront that registration is closed.
Some other types of auth messaging could also either use customization or defaults (e.g., the invite/welcome/approve mail).
We could do this with a bunch of Config options, but I'd generally like to move to a world where there's less stuff in Config and more configuration is contextual. I think it tends to be easier to use, and we get a lot of fringe benefits (granular permissions, API, normal transaction logs, more abililty to customize workflows and provide contextual help/hints, etc). Here, for example, we can provide a remarkup preview, which would be trickier with Config.
This does not actually do anything yet.
Test Plan: {F6137541}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13222
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19992