Summary:
Depends on D20273. Fixes T10722. Currently, we don't make it very clear when a card can't be edited. Long ago, some code made a weak attempt to do this (by hiding the "grip" on the card), but later UI changes hid the "grip" unconditionally so that mooted things.
Instead:
- Replace the edit pencil with a red lock.
- Provide cursor hints for grabbable / not grabbable.
- Don't let users pick up cards they can't edit.
Test Plan: On a workboard with a mixture of editable and not-editable cards, hovered over the different cards and was able to figure out which ones I could drag or not drag pretty easily. Picked up cards I could pick up, wasn't able to drag cards I can't edit.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T10722
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20274
Summary:
Depends on D20271. Ref T10333. When a column is empty but a board is grouped (by priority, owner, etc) render the headers properly.
When a column has headers, don't apply the "empty" style even if it has no cards. This style just makes some empty space so you can drag-and-drop more easily, but headers do the same thing.
Test Plan: {F6264611}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T10333
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20272
Summary:
Depends on D20267. Depends on D20268. Ref T10333. Currently, we support "Natural" and "Priority" orders, but a lot of the particulars are pretty hard-coded, including some logic in `ManiphestTask`.
Although it's not clear that we'll ever put other types of objects on workboards, it seems generally bad that you need to modify `ManiphestTask` to get a new ordering.
Pull the ordering logic out into a `ProjectColumnOrder` hierarchy instead, and let each ordering define the things it needs to work (name, icon, what headers look like, how different objects are sorted, and how to apply an edit when you drop an object under a header).
Then move the existing "Natural" and "Priority" orders into this new hierarchy.
This has a minor bug where using the "Edit" workflow to change a card's priority on a priority-ordered board doesn't fully refresh card/header order since the response isn't ordering-aware. I'll fix that in an upcoming change.
Test Plan: Grouped workboards by "Natural" and "Priority", dragged stuff around within and between columns, grepped for all touched symbols.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T10333
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20269
Summary:
Depends on D20266. Boards currently have several `whateverMap<cardPHID => stuff>` properties, but we can just move these all down into a `CardTemplate`, similar to the recently introduced `HeaderTemplate`.
The `CardTemplate` holds all the global information for a card, and then `Card` is specific for a particular copy in a column. Today, each `CardTemplate` has one `Card`, but a `CardTemplate` may have more than one card in the future (when we add subproject columns).
Test Plan: Viewed workboards in different sort orders and dragged stuff around, grepped for all affected symbols.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20267
Summary:
Depends on D20263. Ref T10333. I want to add groups like "Assignee" to workboards. This means you may have several tasks grouped under, say, "Alice".
When you drag the bottom-most task under "Alice" to the top, what does that mean?
Today, the only grouping is "Priority", and it means "change the task's secret/hidden global subpriority". However, this seems to generally be a somewhat-bad answer, and is quite complex. It also doesn't make much sense for an author grouping, since one task can't really be "more assigned" to Alice than another task.
Users likely intend this operation to mean "move it, visually, with no other effects" -- that is, user intent is to shuffle sticky notes around on a board, not edit anything substantive. The meaning is probably something like "this is similar to other nearby tasks" or "maybe this is a good place to start", which we can't really capture with any top-level attribute.
We could extend "subpriority" and give tasks a secret/hidden "sub-assignment strength" and so on, but this seems like a bad road to walk down. We'll also run into trouble later when subproject columns may appear on the board, and a user could want to put a task in different positions on different subprojects, conceivably.
In the "Natural" order view, we already have what is probably a generally better approach for this: a task display order particular to the column, that just remembers where you put the sticky notes.
Move away from "subpriority", and toward a world where we mostly keep sticky notes where you stuck them and move them around only when we have to. With no grouping, we still sort by "natural" order, as before. With priority grouping, we now sort by `<priority, natural>`. When you drag stuff around inside a priority group, we update the natural order.
This means that moving cards around on a "priority" board will also move them around on a "natural" board, at least somewhat. I think this is okay. If it's not intuitive, we could give every ordering its own separate "natural" view, so we remember where you stuck stuff on the "priority" board but that doesn't affect the "Natural" board. But I suspect we won't need to.
Test Plan:
- Viewed and dragged a natural board.
- Viewed and dragged a priority board.
- Dragged within and between groups of 0, 1, and multiple items.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T10333
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20265
Summary:
Ref T13074. Today, in normal task list views in Maniphest (not workboards), you can (sometimes) reorder tasks if the view is priority-sorted.
I suspect no one ever does this, few users know it's supported, and that it was basically rendered obsolete the day we shipped workboards.
This also means that we need to maintain a global "subpriority" for tasks, which distinguishes between different tasks at the same priority level (e.g., "High") and maintains a consistent ordering on workboards.
As we move toward making workboards more flexible (e.g., group by author / owner / custom fields), I'd like to try moving away from "subpriority" and possibly removing it entirely, in favor of "natural order", which basically means "we kind of remember where you put the card and it works a bit like a sticky note".
Currently, the "natural order" and "subpriority" systems are sort of similar but also sort of in conflict, and the "subpriority" system can't really be extended while the "natural order / column position" system can.
The only real reason to have a global "subpriority" is to support the list-view drag-and-drop.
It's possible I'm wrong about this and a bunch of users love this feature, but we can re-evaluate if we get feedback in this vein.
(This just removes UI, the actual subpriority system is still intact and still used on workboards.)
Test Plan: Viewed task lists, was no longer able to drag stuff. Grepped for affected symbols. Dragged stuff in remaining grippable lists, like "Edit Forms" in EditEngine config.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13074
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20263
Summary:
These effects feel like they're possibly overkill, since other CSS rules make the selection reticle behave correctly and the implementation is relatively intuitive.
Or not, either way.
Test Plan: Selected text on either side of a 2-up diff, no more opacity effects.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20264
Summary:
Ref T10333. Ref T8135. Depends on D20247. Allow users to drag-and-drop cards on a priority-sorted workboard under headers, even if the header has no other cards.
As of D20247, headers show up but they aren't really interactive. Now, you can drag cards directly underneath a header (instead of only between other cards). For example, if a column has only one "Wishlist" task, you may drag it under the "High", "Normal", or "Low" priority headers to select a specific priority.
(Some of this code still feels a little rough, but I think it will generalize once other types of sorting are available.)
Test Plan: Dragged cards within and between priority groups, saw appropriate priority edits applied in every case I could come up with.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T10333, T8135
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20248
Summary:
Ref T10333. When workboards are ordered (for example, by priority), add headers to the various groups. Major goals are:
- Allow users to drag-and-drop to set values that no cards currently have: for example, you can change a card priority to "normal" by dragging it under the "normal" header, even if no other cards in the column are currently "Normal".
- Make future orderings more useful, particularly "order by assignee". We don't really have room to put the username on every card and it would create a fair amount of clutter, but we can put usernames in these headers and then reference them with just the profile picture. This also allows you to assign to users who are not currently assigned anything in a given column.
- Make the drag-and-drop behavior more obvious by showing what it will do more clearly (see T8135).
- Make things a little easier to scan in general: because space on cards is limited, some information isn't conveyed very clearly (for example, priority information is currently conveyed //only// through color, which can be hard to pick out visually and is probably not functional for users who need vision accommodations).
- Maybe do "swimlanes": this is pretty much a "swimlanes" UI if we add whitespace at the bottom of each group so that the headers line up across all the columns (e.g., "Normal" is at the same y-axis position in every column as you scroll down the page). Not sold on this being useful, but it's just a UI adjustment if we do want to try it.
NOTE: This only makes these headers work for display.
They aren't yet recognized as targets by the drag list UI, so you can't drag cards into an empty group. I'll tackle that in a followup.
Test Plan: {F6257686}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T10333
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20247
Summary:
Ref T10334. Partly, this just improves visual feedback for all drag operations. After D20242, we can have cases where you (for example) drag a low-priority node to a very tall column on a priority-ordered workboard. In this case, the actual dashed-border-drop-target may not be on screen.
We might make the column scroll or put some kind of hint in the UI in this case, but an easy starting point is just to make the "yes, you're targeting this column" state a bit more clear.
Test Plan: Dragged tasks between columns, saw the border higlight on the target columns. This is very tricky to take a screenshot of.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T10334
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20245
Summary:
Ref T10334. When a workboard is ordered by priority, dragging from column "A" to a particular place in column "B" currently means "move this task to column B, and adjust its priority so that it naturally sorts into the location under my mouse cursor".
Users frequently find this confusing / undesirable.
To begin improving this, make "drag from column A to column B" and "drag from somewhere in column A to somewhere else in column A" into different operations. The first operation, a movement between columns, no longer implies an ordering change. The second action still does.
So if you actually want to change the priority of a task, you drag it within its current column. If you just want to move it to a different column, you drag it between columns.
This creates some possible problems:
- Some users may love the current behavior and just not be very vocal about it. I doubt it, but presumably we'll hear from them if we break it.
- If you actualy want to move + reorder, it's a bit more cumbersome now. We could possibly add something like "shift + drag" for this if there's feedback.
- The new behavior is probably less surprising, but may not be much more obvious. Future changes (for example, in T10335) should help make it more clear.
- When you mouse cursor goes over column B, the card dashed-rectangle preview target thing jumps to the correct position in the column -- but that may not be under your mouse cursor. This feels pretty much fine if the whole column fits on screen. It may not be so great if the column does not fit on screen and the dashed-rectangle-thing has vanished. This is just a UI feedback issue and we could refine this later (scroll/highlight the column).
Test Plan:
- Created several tasks at different priority levels, sorted a board by priority, dragged tasks between columns. Dragging from "A" to "B" no longer causes a priority edit.
- Also, dragged within a column. This still performs priority edits.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T10334
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20242
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:
Ref T13249.
- When a line has only increased in indent depth, don't red-fill highlight the left side of the diff. Since reading a diff //mostly// involves focusing on the right side, indent depth changes are generally visible enough without this extra hint. The extra hint can become distracting in cases where there is a large block of indent depth changes.
- Move the markers slightly to the left, to align them with the gutter.
- Make them slightly opaque so they're a little less prominent.
Test Plan: See screenshots.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13249
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20251
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:
Ref T13259. An install provided feedback that it wasn't obvious you could click the buttons in this UI.
Make it more clear that these are clickable buttons.
Test Plan:
{F6251585}
{F6251586}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13259
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20238
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 D20196. See PHI985. When empty, the "moved/copied" gutter currently renders with the same background color as the rest of the line. This can be misleading because it makes code look more indented than it is, especially if you're unfamiliar with the tool:
{F6225179}
If we remove this misleading coloration, we get a white gap. This is more clear, but looks a little odd:
{F6225181}
Instead, give this gutter a subtle background fill in all casses, to make it more clear that it's a separate gutter region, not a part of the text diff:
{F6225183}
Test Plan: See screenshots. Copied text from a diff, added/removed inlines, etc.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20197
Summary:
Ref T12822. Ref PHI878. This is some leftover code from the old selection behavior that prevented visual selection of the left side of a diff if the user clicked on the right -- basically, a much simpler attack on what ultimately landed in D20191.
I think the change from `th` to `td` "broke" it so it didn't interfere with the other behavior, which is why I didn't have to remove it earlier. It's no longer necessary, in any case.
Test Plan: Grepped for behavior name, selected stuff on both sides of a diff.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T12822
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20196
Summary:
Ref T13161.
- Don't show ">>" when the line indentation changed but the text also changed, this is just "the line changed".
- The indicator seems a little cleaner if we just reuse the existing "bright" colors, which already have colorblind colors anyway.
Test Plan: Got slightly better rendering for some diffs locally.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13161
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20195
Summary:
Ref T12822. Ref T2495. This is the good version of D20193.
Currently, we display various nonprintable characters (ZWS, nonbreaking space, various control characters) as themselves, so they're generally invisible.
In T12822, one user reports that all their engineers frequently type ZWS characters into source somehow? I don't really believe this (??), and this should be fixed in lint.
That said, the only real reason not to show these weird characters in a special way was that it would break copy/paste: if we render ZWS as "🐑", and a user copy-pastes the line including the ZWS, they'll get a sheep.
At least, they would have, until D20191. Now that this whole thing is end-to-end Javascript magic, we can copy whatever we want.
In particular, we can render any character `X` as `<span data-copy-text="Y">X</span>`, and then copy "Y" instead of "X" when the user copies the node. Limitations:
- If users select only "X", they'll get "X" on their clipboard. This seems fine. If you're selecting our ZWS marker *only*, you probably want to copy it?
- If "X" is more than one character long, users will get the full "Y" if they select any part of "X". At least here, this only matters when "X" is several spaces and "Y" is a tab. This also seems fine.
- We have to be kind of careful because this approach involves editing an HTML blob directly. However, we already do that elsewhere and this isn't really too hard to get right.
With those tools in hand:
- Replace "\t" (raw text / what gets copied) with the number of spaces to the next tab stop for display.
- Replace ZWS and NBSP (raw text) with a special marker for display.
- Replace control characters 0x00-0x19 and 0x7F, except for "\t", "\r", and "\n", with the special unicode "control character pictures" reserved for this purpose.
Test Plan:
- Generated and viewed a file like this one:
{F6220422}
- Copied text out of it, got authentic raw original source text instead of displayed text.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T12822, T2495
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20194
Summary:
Ref T12822. Fixes a few things:
- Firefox selection of weird ranges with an inline between the start and end of the range now works correctly.
- "Show More Context" rows now render, highlight, and select properly.
- Prepares for nodes to have copy-text which is different from display-text.
- Don't do anything too fancy in 1-up/unified mode. We don't copy line numbers after the `content: attr(data-n)` change, but that's as far as we go, because trying to do more than that is kind of weird and not terribly intuitive.
Test Plan:
- Selected and copied weird ranges in Firefox.
- Kept an eye on "Show More Context" rows across select and copy operations.
- Generally poked around in Safari/Firefox/Chrome.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T12822
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20192
Summary:
Ref T12822. Ref T13161. By default, when users select text from a diff and copy it to the clipboard, they get both sides of the diff and all the line numbers. This is usually not what they intended to copy.
As of D20188, we use `content: attr(...)` to render line numbers. No browser copies this text, so that fixes line numbers.
We can use "user-select" CSS to visually prevent selection of line numbers and other stuff we don't want to copy. In Firefox and Chrome, "user-select" also applies to copied text, so getting "user-select" on the right nodes is largely good enough to do what we want.
In Safari, "user-select" is only visual, so we always need to crawl the DOM to figure out what text to pull out of it anyway.
In all browsers, we likely want to crawl the DOM anyway because this will let us show one piece of text and copy a different piece of text. We probably want to do this in the future to preserve "\t" tabs, and possibly to let us render certain character codes in one way but copy their original values. For example, we could render "\x07" as "␇".
Finally, we have to figure out which side of the diff we're copying from. The rule here is:
- If you start the selection by clicking somewhere on the left or right side of the diff, that's what you're copying.
- Otherwise, use normal document copy rules.
So the overall flow here is:
- Listen for clicks.
- When the user clicks the left or right side of the diff, store what they clicked.
- When a selection starts, and something is actually selected, check if it was initiated by clicking a diff. If it was, apply a visual effect to get "user-select" where it needs to go and show the user what we think they're doing and what we're going to copy.
- (Then, try to handle a bunch of degenerate cases where you start a selection and then click inside that selection.)
- When a user clicks elsewhere or ends the selection with nothing selected, clear the selection mode.
- When a user copies text, if we have an active selection mode, pull all the selected nodes out of the DOM and filter out the ones we don't want to copy, then stitch the text back together. Although I believe this didn't work well in ~2010, it appears to work well today.
Test Plan: This mostly seems to work in Safari, Chrome, and Firefox. T12822 has some errata. I haven't tested touch events but am satisfied if the touch event story is anything better than "permanently destroys data".
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13161, T12822
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20191
Summary:
Ref T13161. Ref T12822. Today, we use invisible Zero-Width Spaces to try to improve copy/paste behavior from Differential.
After D20188, we no longer need ZWS characters to avoid copying line numbers. Get rid of these secret invisible semantic ZWS characters completely.
This means that both the left-hand and right-hand side of diffs become copyable, which isn't desired. I'll fix that with a hundred thousand lines of Javascript in the next change: this is a step toward everything working better, but doesn't fix everything yet.
Test Plan:
- Grepped for `zws`, `grep -i zero | grep -i width`.
- Copied text out of Differential: got both sides of the diff (not ideal).
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13161, T12822
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20189
Summary:
Ref T13161. Ref T12822. See PHI870. Long ago, the web was simple. You could leave your doors unlocked, you knew all your neighbors, crime hadn't been invented yet, and `<th>3</th>` was a perfectly fine way to render a line number cell containing the number "3".
But times have changed!
- In PHI870, this isn't good for screenreaders. We can't do much about this, so switch to `<td>`.
- In D19349 / T13105 and elsewhere, this `::after { content: attr(data-n); }` approach seems like the least bad general-purpose approach for preventing line numbers from being copied. Although Differential needs even more magic beyond this in the two-up view, this is likely good enough for the one-up view, and is consistent with other views (paste, harbormaster logs, general source display) where this technique is sufficient on its own.
The chance this breaks //something// is pretty much 100%, but we've got a week to figure out what it breaks. I couldn't find any issues immediately.
Test Plan:
- Created, edited, deleted inlines in 1-up and 2-up views.
- Replied, keyboard-navigated, keyboard-replied, drag-selected, poked and prodded everything.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13161, T12822
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20188
Summary:
Depends on D20181. Depends on D20182. Fixes T3498. Ref T13161. My claim, at least, is that D20181 can be tweaked to be good enough to throw away this "feature" completely.
I think this feature was sort of a mistake, where the ease of access to `diff -bw` shaped behavior a very long time ago and then the train just ran a long way down the tracks in the same direction.
Test Plan: Grepped for `whitespace`, deleted almost everything. Poked around the UI a bit. I'm expecting the whitespace changes to get some more iteration this week so I not being hugely pedantic about testing this stuff exhaustively.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13161, T3498
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20185
Summary:
Ref T13161. See PHI723. Our whitespace handling is based on whitespace flags like `diff -bw`, mostly just for historical reasons: long ago, the easiest way to minimize the visual impact of indentation changes was to literally use `diff -bw`.
However, this approach is very coarse and has a lot of problems, like detecting `"ab" -> "a b"` as "only a whitespace change" even though this is always semantic. It also causes problems in YAML, Python, etc. Over time, we've added a lot of stuff to mitigate the downsides to this approach.
We also no longer get any benefits from this approach being simple: we need faithful diffs as the authoritative source, and have to completely rebuild the diff to `diff -bw` it. In the UI, we have a "whitespace mode" flag. We have the "whitespace matters" configuration.
I think ReviewBoard generally has a better approach to indent depth changes than we do (see T13161) where it detects them and renders them in a minimal way with low visual impact. This is ultimately what we want: reduce visual clutter for depth-only changes, but preserve whitespace changes in strings, etc.
Move toward detecting and rendering indent depth changes. Followup work:
- These should get colorblind colors and the design can probably use a little more tweaking.
- The OneUp mode is okay, but could be improved.
- Whitespace mode can now be removed completely.
- I'm trying to handle tabs correctly, but since we currently mangle them into spaces today, it's hard to be sure I actually got it right.
Test Plan: {F6214084}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13161
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20181
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 T13249. See PHI810. We currently show availability dots in some interfaces (timeline, mentions) but not others (typeheads/tokenizers).
They're potentially quite useful in tokenizers, e.g. when assigning tasks to someone or requesting reviews. Show them in more places.
(The actual rendering here isn't terribly clean, and it would be great to try to unify all these various behaviors some day.)
Test Plan:
{F6212044}
{F6212045}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13249
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20173
Summary:
Ref T13249. See PHI1059. This allows "locked" in `maniphest.statuses` to specify that either "comments" are locked (current behavior, advisory, overridable by users with edit permission, e.g. for calming discussion on a contentious issue or putting a guard rail on things); or "edits" are locked (hard lock, only task owner can edit things).
Roughly, "comments" is a soft/advisory lock. "edits" is a hard/strict lock. (I think both types of locks have reasonable use cases, which is why I'm not just making locks stronger across the board.)
When "edits" are locked:
- The edit policy looks like "no one" to normal callers.
- In one special case, we sneak the real value through a back channel using PolicyCodex in the specific narrow case that you're editing the object. Otherwise, the policy selector control incorrectly switches to "No One".
- We also have to do a little more validation around applying a mixture of status + owner transactions that could leave the task uneditable.
For now, I'm allowing you to reassign a hard-locked task to someone else. If you get this wrong, we can end up in a state where no one can edit the task. If this is an issue, we could respond in various ways: prevent these edits; prevent assigning to disabled users; provide a `bin/task reassign`; uh maybe have a quorum convene?
Test Plan:
- Defined "Soft Locked" and "Hard Locked" statues.
- "Hard Locked" a task, hit errors (trying to unassign myself, trying to hard lock an unassigned task).
- Saw nice new policy guidance icon in header.
{F6210362}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13249
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20165
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:
See PHI1073. Improve the UX here:
- When there are a small number of connected tasks, no changes.
- When there are too many total connected tasks, but not too many directly connected tasks, show hint text with a "View Standalone Graph" button to view more of the graph.
- When there are too many directly connected tasks, show better hint text with a "View Standalone Graph" button.
- Always show a "View Standalone Graph" option in the dropdown menu.
- Add a standalone view which works the same way but has a limit of 2,000.
- This view doesn't have "View Standalone Graph" links, since they'd just link back to the same page, but is basically the same otherwise.
- Increase the main page task limit from 100 to 200.
Test Plan:
Mobile View:
{F6210326}
Way too much stuff:
{F6210327}
New persistent link to the standalone page:
{F6210328}
Kind of too much stuff:
{F6210329}
Standalone view:
{F6210330}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: 20after4
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20164
Summary:
Ref T13249. See PHI774. When users follow an email login link ("Forgot password?", "Send Welcome Email", "Send a login link to your email address.", `bin/auth recover`), we send them to a password reset flow if an install uses passwords.
If an install does not use passwords, we previously dumped them unceremoniously into the {nav Settings > External Accounts} UI with no real guidance about what they were supposed to do. Since D20094 we do a slightly better job here in some cases. Continue improving this workflow.
This adds a page like "Reset Password" for "Hey, You Should Probably Link An Account, Here's Some Options".
Overall, this stuff is still pretty rough in a couple of areas that I imagine addressing in the future:
- When you finish linking, we still dump you back in Settings. At least we got you to link things. But better would be to return you here and say "great job, you're a pro".
- This UI can become a weird pile of buttons in certain configs and generally looks a little unintentional. This problem is shared among all the "linkable" providers, and the non-login link flow is also weird.
So: step forward, but more work to be done.
Test Plan: {F6211115}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13249
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20170
Summary: Ref T13249. Poll for Duo updates in the background so we can automatically update the UI when the user clicks the mobile phone app button.
Test Plan: Hit a Duo gate, clicked "Approve" in the mobile app, saw the UI update immediately.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13249
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20169
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:
Depends on D20140. Ref T13250. Currently, the top-level exception handler doesn't dump stacks because we might not be in debug mode, and we might double-extra-super fatal if we call `PhabricatorEnv:...` to try to figure out if we're in debug mode or not.
We can get around this by setting a flag on the Sink once we're able to confirm that we're in debug mode. Then it's okay for the top-level error handler to show traces.
There's still some small possibility that showing a trace could make us double-super-fatal since we have to call a little more code, but AphrontStackTraceView is pretty conservative about what it does and 99% of the time this is a huge improvement.
Test Plan: {F6205122}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13250
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20142
Summary:
Ref T13244. See PHI1059. When you lock a task, users who can edit the task can currently override the lock by using "Edit Task" if they confirm that they want to do this.
Mark these edits with an emblem, similar to the "MFA" and "Silent" emblems, so it's clear that they may have bent the rules.
Also, make the "MFA" and "Silent" emblems more easily visible.
Test Plan:
Edited a locked task, overrode the lock, got marked for it.
{F6195005}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: aeiser
Maniphest Tasks: T13244
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20131
Summary: Ref T13244. See PHI1052. Our error handling for Stripe errors isn't great right now. We can give users a bit more information, and a less jarring UI.
Test Plan:
Before (this is in developer mode, production doesn't get a stack trace):
{F6197394}
After:
{F6197397}
- Tried all the invalid test codes listed here: https://stripe.com/docs/testing#cards
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13244
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20132
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 D20122. Fixes T8029. Adds an "Approve User" action to the "Manage" page.
Users are normally approved from the "Approval Queue", but if you click into a user's profile to check them out in more detail it kind of dead ends you right now. I've occasionally hit this myself, and think this workflow is generally reasonable enough to support upstream.
Test Plan: {F6193742}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T8029
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20123
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 D20106. Ref T6703. Since I plan to change the `ExternalAccount` table, these migrations (which rely on `save()`) will stop working.
They could be rewritten to use raw queries, but I suspect few or no installs are affected. At least for now, just make them safe: if they would affect data, fatal and tell the user to perform a more gradual upgrade.
Also remove an `ALTER IGNORE TABLE` (this syntax was removed at some point) and fix a `%Q` when adjusting certain types of primary keys.
Test Plan: Ran `bin/storage upgrade --no-quickstart --force --namespace test1234` to get a complete migration since the beginning of time.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T6703
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20107
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 D20026. Ref T13222. Ref T13231. The primary change here is that we'll no longer send you an SMS if you hit an MFA gate without CSRF tokens.
Then there's a lot of support for genralizing into Duo (and other push factors, potentially), I'll annotate things inline.
Test Plan: Implemented Duo, elsewhere.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13231, T13222
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20028
Summary:
Depends on D20016. Ref T920. This does nothing interesting on its own since the TOTP provider has no guidance/warnings, but landing it separately helps to simplify an upcoming SMS diff.
SMS will have these guidance messages:
- "Administrator: you haven't configured any mailer which can send SMS, like Twilio."
- "Administrator: SMS is weak."
- "User: you haven't configured a contact number."
Test Plan: {F6151283} {F6151284}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T920
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20017
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: Depends on D19992. Ref T13222. If administrators provide a custom login message, show it on the login screen.
Test Plan:
{F6137930}
- Viewed login screen with and without a custom message.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13222
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19994
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
Summary:
See PHI1023. Ref T7607. Occasionally, companies need their billing address (or some other custom text) to appear on invoices to satisfy process or compliance requirements.
Allow accounts to have a custom "Billing Name" and a custom "Billing Address" which appear on invoices.
Test Plan: {F6134707}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T7607
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19979
Summary:
Ref T13222. Ref T13231. See PHI912. I'm planning to turn MFA providers into concrete objects, so you can disable and configure them.
Currently, we only support TOTP, which doesn't require any configuration, but other provider types (like Duo or Yubikey OTP) do require some configuration (server URIs, API keys, etc). TOTP //could// also have some configuration, like "bits of entropy" or "allowed window size" or whatever, if we want.
Add concrete objects for this and standard transaction / policy / query support. These objects don't do anything interesting yet and don't actually interact with MFA, this is just skeleton code for now.
Test Plan:
{F6090444}
{F6090445}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13231, T13222
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19935
Summary: See PHI1017. This is a trivial fix even though these burnups are headed toward a grisly fate.
Test Plan: Moused over some January datapoints, saw "1" instead of "0".
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19967
Summary:
Ref T12509. This upgrades a `weakDigest()` callsite to SHA256-HMAC and removes three config options:
- `celerity.resource-hash`: Now hard-coded, since the use case for ever adjusting it was very weak.
- `celerity.enable-deflate`: Intended to make cache inspection easier, but we haven't needed to inspect caches in ~forever.
- `celerity.minify`: Intended to make debugging minification easier, but we haven't needed to debug this in ~forever.
In the latter two cases, the options were purely developer-focused, and it's easy to go add an `&& false` somewhere in the code if we need to disable these features to debug something, but the relevant parts of the code basically work properly and never need debugging. These options were excessively paranoid, based on the static resource enviroment at Facebook being far more perilous.
The first case theoretically had end-user utility for fixing stuck content caches. In modern Phabricator, it's not intuitive that you'd go adjust a Config option to fix this. I don't recall any users ever actually running into problems here, though.
(An earlier version of this change did more magic with `celerity.resource-hash`, but this ended up with a more substantial simplification.)
Test Plan: Grepped for removed configuration options.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T12509
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19941
Summary:
Ref T13222. In D19918, I refactored how timelines get "view data". Today, this is always additional data about which images/changesets/diffs are visible on the current revision/commit/mock, so we can tell if inline comments should be linked to a `#anchor` on the same page (if the inline is rendered there somewhere) or to a `/D123?id=1&vs=2` full link on a different page (if it isn't), but in general this could be any sort of state information about the current page that affects how the timeline should render.
Previously, comment previews did not use any specialized object code and always rendered a "generic" timeline story. This was actually a bug, but none of the code we have today cares about this (since it's all inline related, and inlines render separately) so it never impacted anything.
After the `TimelineEngine` change, the preview renders with Differential-specific code. This is more correct, but we were not passing the preview the "view data" so it broke.
This preview doesn't actually need the view data and we could just make it bail out if it isn't present, but pass it through for consistency and so this works like we'd expect if we do something fancier with view data in the future.
Test Plan: Viewed comment and inline comment previews in Differential, saw old behavior restored.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13222
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19943
Summary:
Ref T920. Over time, mail has become much more complex and I think considering "mail", "sms", "postcards", "whatsapp", etc., to be mostly-the-same is now a more promising avenue than building separate stacks for each one.
Throw away all the standalone SMS code, including the Twilio config options. I have a separate diff that adds Twilio as a mail adapter and functions correctly, but it needs some more work to bring upstream.
This permanently destroys the `sms` table, which no real reachable code ever wrote to. I'll call this out in the changelog.
Test Plan:
- Grepped for `SMS` and `Twilio`.
- Ran storage upgrade.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T920
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19939
Summary:
Depends on D19906. Ref T13222. This isn't going to win any design awards, but make the "wait" and "answered" elements a little more clear.
Ideally, the icon parts could be animated Google Authenticator-style timers (but I think we'd need to draw them in a `<canvas />` unless there's some clever trick that I don't know) or maybe we could just have the background be like a "water level" that empties out. Not sure I'm going to actually write the JS for either of those, but the UI at least looks a little more intentional.
Test Plan:
{F6070914}
{F6070915}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13222
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19908
Summary: Depends on D19921. Ref T11351. Ref T13065. Update Pholio to use the shared mail infrastructure. See D19670 for a previous change in this vein.
Test Plan: Ran upgrade, spot-checked that everything made it into the new table alive.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13065, T11351
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19922
Summary:
Depends on D19914. Ref T11351. Some of the Phoilo rabbit holes go very deep.
`PhabricatorApplicationTransactionInterface` currently requires you to implement `willRenderTimeline()`. Almost every object just implements this as `return $timeline`; only Pholio, Diffusion, and Differential specialize it. In all cases, they are specializing it mostly to render inline comments.
The actual implementations are a bit of a weird mess and the way the data is threaded through the call stack is weird and not very modern.
Try to clean this up:
- Stop requiring `willRenderTimeline()` to be implemented.
- Stop requiring `getApplicationTransactionViewObject()` to be implemented (only the three above, plus Legalpad, implement this, and Legalpad's implementation is a no-op). These two methods are inherently pretty coupled for almost any reasonable thing you might want to do with the timeline.
- Simplify the handling of "renderdata" and call it "View Data". This is additional information about the current view of the transaction timeline that is required to render it correctly. This is only used in Differential, to decide if we can link an inline comment to an anchor on the same page or should link it to another page. We could perhaps do this on the client instead, but having this data doesn't seem inherently bad to me.
- If objects want to customize timeline rendering, they now implement `PhabricatorTimelineInterface` and provide a `TimelineEngine` which gets a nice formal stack.
This leaves a lot of empty `willRenderTimeline()` implementations hanging around. I'll remove these in the next change, it's just going to be deleting a couple dozen copies of an identical empty method implementation.
Test Plan:
- Viewed audits, revisions, and mocks with inline comments.
- Used "Show Older" to page a revision back in history (this is relevant for "View Data").
- Grepped for symbols: willRenderTimeline, getApplicationTransactionViewObject, Legalpad classes.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T11351
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19918
Summary:
Ref T11351. In Pholio, we currently use a `mockID`, but a `mockPHID` is generally preferable / more modern / more flexible. In particular, we need PHIDs to load handles and prefer PHIDs when exposing information to the API, and using PHIDs internally makes a bunch of things easier/better/faster and ~nothing harder/worse/slower.
I'll add some inlines about a few things.
Test Plan: Ran migrations, spot-checked database for sanity. Loaded Pholio, saw data unchanged. Created and edited images.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T11351
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19914
Summary:
Depends on D19893. Ref T13222. See PHI873. A challenge is "answered" if you provide a valid response. A challenge is "completed" if we let you through the MFA check and do whatever actual action the check is protecting.
If you only have one MFA factor, challenges will be "completed" immediately after they are "answered". However, if you have two or more factors, it's possible to "answer" one or more prompts, but fewer than all of the prompts, and end up with "answered" challenges that are not "completed".
In the future, it may also be possible to answer all the challenges but then have an error occur before they are marked "completed" (for example, a unique key collision in the transaction code). For now, nothing interesting happens between "answered" and "completed". This would take the form of the caller explicitly providing flags like "wait to mark the challenges as completed until I do something" and "okay, mark the challenges as completed now".
This change prevents all token reuse, even on the same workflow. Future changes will let the answered challenges "stick" to the client form so you don't have to re-answer challenges for a short period of time if you hit a unique key collision.
Test Plan:
- Used a token to get through an MFA gate.
- Tried to go through another gate, was told to wait for a long time for the next challenge window.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13222
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19894
Summary:
Depends on D19912. Ref T11351. Images currently use `getMock()->getPolicy()` stuff to define policies. This causes bugs with object policies like "Subscribers", since the policy engine tries to evaluate the subscribers //for the image// when the intent is to evaluate the subscribers for the mock.
Move this to ExtendedPolicies to fix the behavior, and give Images sensible policy behavior when they aren't attached to a mock (specifically: only the user who created the image can see it).
Test Plan: Applied migrations, created and edited mocks and images without anything blowing up. Set mock visibility to "Subscribers", everything worked great.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T11351
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19913
Summary:
Depends on D19888. Ref T13222. When we issue an MFA challenge, prevent the user from responding to it in the context of a different workflow: if you ask for MFA to do something minor (award a token) you can't use the same challenge to do something more serious (launch nukes).
This defuses highly-hypothetical attacks where the attacker:
- already controls the user's session (since the challenge is already bound to the session); and
- can observe MFA codes.
One version of this attack is the "spill coffee on the victim when the code is shown on their phone, then grab their phone" attack. This whole vector really strains the bounds of plausibility, but it's easy to lock challenges to a workflow and it's possible that there's some more clever version of the "spill coffee" attack available to more sophisticated social engineers or with future MFA factors which we don't yet support.
The "spill coffee" attack, in detail, is:
- Go over to the victim's desk.
- Ask them to do something safe and nonsuspicious that requires MFA (sign `L123 Best Friendship Agreement`).
- When they unlock their phone, spill coffee all over them.
- Urge them to go to the bathroom to clean up immediately, leaving their phone and computer in your custody.
- Type the MFA code shown on the phone into a dangerous MFA prompt (sign `L345 Eternal Declaration of War`).
- When they return, they may not suspect anything (it would be normal for the MFA token to have expired), or you can spill more coffee on their computer now to destroy it, and blame it on the earlier spill.
Test Plan:
- Triggered signatures for two different documents.
- Got prompted in one, got a "wait" in the other.
- Backed out of the good prompt, returned, still prompted.
- Answered the good prompt.
- Waited for the bad prompt to expire.
- Went through the bad prompt again, got an actual prompt this time.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13222
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19889
Summary:
Ref T13222. See PHI873. Ref T9770.
Currently, we support only TOTP MFA. For some MFA (SMS and "push-to-app"-style MFA) we may need to keep track of MFA details (e.g., the code we SMS'd you). There isn't much support for that yet.
We also currently allow free reuse of TOTP responses across sessions and workflows. This hypothetically enables some "spyglass" attacks where you look at someone's phone and type the code in before they do. T9770 discusses this in more detail, but is focused on an attack window starting when the user submits the form. I claim the attack window opens when the TOTP code is shown on their phone, and the window between the code being shown and being submitted is //much// more interesting than the window after it is submitted.
To address both of these cases, start tracking MFA "Challenges". These are basically a record that we asked you to give us MFA credentials.
For TOTP, the challenge binds a particular timestep to a given session, so an attacker can't look at your phone and type the code into their browser before (or after) you do -- they have a different session. For now, this means that codes are reusable in the same session, but that will be refined in the future.
For SMS / push, the "Challenge" would store the code we sent you so we could validate it.
This is mostly a step on the way toward one-shot MFA, ad-hoc MFA in comment action stacks, and figuring out what's going on with Duo.
Test Plan:
- Passed MFA normally.
- Passed MFA normally, simultaneously, as two different users.
- With two different sessions for the same user:
- Opened MFA in A, opened MFA in B. B got a "wait".
- Submitted MFA in A.
- Clicked "Wait" a bunch in B.
- Submitted MFA in B when prompted.
- Passed MFA normally, then passed MFA normally again with the same code in the same session. (This change does not prevent code reuse.)
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13222, T9770
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19886
Summary:
Ref T13222. Ref T13225. We store a digest of the session key in the session table (not the session key itself) so that users with access to this table can't easily steal sessions by just setting their cookies to values from the table.
Users with access to the database can //probably// do plenty of other bad stuff (e.g., T13134 mentions digesting Conduit tokens) but there's very little cost to storing digests instead of live tokens.
We currently digest session keys with HMAC-SHA1. This is fine, but HMAC-SHA256 is better. Upgrade:
- Always write new digests.
- We still match sessions with either digest.
- When we read a session with an old digest, upgrade it to a new digest.
In a few months we can throw away the old code. When we do, installs that skip upgrades for a long time may suffer a one-time logout, but I'll note this in the changelog.
We could avoid this by storing `hmac256(hmac1(key))` instead and re-hashing in a migration, but I think the cost of a one-time logout for some tiny subset of users is very low, and worth keeping things simpler in the long run.
Test Plan:
- Hit a page with an old session, got a session upgrade.
- Reviewed sessions in Settings.
- Reviewed user logs.
- Logged out.
- Logged in.
- Terminated other sessions individually.
- Terminated all other sessions.
- Spot checked session table for general sanity.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13225, T13222
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19883
Summary:
Ref T13222. See PHI873. I'm preparing to introduce a new MFA "Challenge" table which stores state about challenges we've issued (to bind challenges to sessions and prevent most challenge reuse).
This table will reference sessions (since each challenge will be bound to a particular session) but sessions currently don't have PHIDs. Give them PHIDs and slightly modernize some related code.
Test Plan:
- Ran migrations.
- Verified table got PHIDs.
- Used `var_dump()` to dump an organic user session.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13222
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19881
Summary: Ref T13218. This is like `loadOneWhere(...)` but with more dark magic. Get rid of it.
Test Plan:
- Forced `20130219.commitsummarymig.php` to hit this code and ran it with `bin/storage upgrade --force --apply ...`.
- Ran `20130409.commitdrev.php` with `bin/storage upgrade --force --apply ...`.
- Called `user.search` to indirectly get primary email information.
- Did not test Releeph at all.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13218
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19876
Summary:
Ref T13222. See PHI996. Ref T10743. For context, perhaps see T12171.
Node changed some signatures, behaviors, and error handling here in recent versions. As far as I can tell:
- The `script.runInNewContext(...)` method has never taken a `path` parameter, and passing the path has always been wrong.
- The `script.runInNewContext(...)` method started taking an `[options]` parameter at some point, and validating it, so the bad `path` parameter now throws.
- `vm.createScript(...)` is "soft deprecated" but basically fine, and keeping it looks more compatible.
This seems like the smallest and most compatible correct change.
Test Plan: Under Node 10, started Aphlict. Before: fatal error on bad `options` parameter to `runInNewContext()` (expected dictionary). After: notification server starts.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13222, T10743
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19860
Summary:
Ref T13222. Fixes T12588. See PHI683. In several cases, we present the user with a choice between multiple major options: Alamnac service types, Drydock blueprint types, Repository VCS types, Herald rule types, etc.
Today, we generally do this with radio buttons and a "Submit" button. This isn't terrible, but often it means users have to click twice (once on the radio; once on submit) when a single click would be sufficient. The radio click target can also be small.
In other cases, we have a container with a link and we'd like to link the entire container: notifications, the `/drydock/` console, etc. We'd like to just link the entire container, but this causes some problems:
- It's not legal to link block eleements like `<a><div> ... </div></a>` and some browsers actually get upset about it.
- We can `<a><span> ... </span></a>` instead, then turn the `<span>` into a block element with CSS -- and this sometimes works, but also has some drawbacks:
- It's not great to do that for screenreaders, since the readable text in the link isn't necessarily very meaningful.
- We can't have any other links inside the element (e.g., details or documentation).
- We can `<form><button> ... </button></form>` instead, but this has its own set of problems:
- You can't right-click to interact with a button in the same way you can with a link.
- Also not great for screenreaders.
Instead, try adding a `linked-container` behavior which just means "when users click this element, pretend they clicked the first link inside it".
This gives us natural HTML (real, legal HTML with actual `<a>` tags) and good screenreader behavior, but allows the effective link target to be visually larger than just the link.
If no issues crop up with this, I'd plan to eventually use this technique in more places (Repositories, Herald, Almanac, Drydock, Notifications menu, etc).
Test Plan:
{F6053035}
- Left-clicked and command-left-clicked the new JS fanciness, got sensible behaviors.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13222, T12588
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19855
Summary:
Ref T13216. See PHI985. If you disable cookies in Firefox, accessing `window.localStorage` throws an exception. Currently, this pretty much kills all scripts on the page.
Instead, catch and ignore this, as though `window.localStorage` was not defined.
Test Plan:
- Set Firefox to "no cookies".
- Loaded any page while logged out.
- Before: JS fatal early in the stack.
- After: page loads and JS works.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13216
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19832
Summary:
Ref T13216. See PHI985. When you click a line number to start an inline comment, we intend to initiate the action only if you used the left mouse button (desktop) or a touch (tablet/device).
We currently have a `not right` condition for doing this, but it only excludes right clicks, not middle clicks (or other nth-button clicks). The `not right` condition was sligthly easier to write, but use an `is left` condition instead of a `not right` condition.
Test Plan:
- In Safari, Firefox and Chrome:
- Used left click to start an inline.
- Used middle click to do nothing (previously: started an inline).
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13216
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19836
Summary:
See PHI975. Ref T13216. Ref T2543. Previously, see D19204 and PHI433.
When you're acting on a draft revision, we change the button text to "Submit Quietly" as a hint that your actions don't generate notifications yet.
However, this isn't accurate when one of your actions is "Request Review", which causes the revision to publish.
Allow actions to override the submit button text, and make the "Request Review" action change the button text to "Publish Revision".
The alternative change I considered was to remove the word "Quietly" in all cases.
I'm not //thrilled// about how complex this change is to adjust one word, but the various pieces are all fairly clean individually. I'm not sure we'll ever be able to use it for anything else, but I do suspect that the word "Quietly" was the change in D19204 with the largest effect by far (see T10000).
Test Plan:
- Created a draft revision. Saw "Submit Quietly" text.
- Added a "Request Review" action, saw it change to "Publish Revision".
- Reloaded page, saw stack saved and "Publish Revision".
- Removed action, saw "Submit Quietly".
- Repeated on a non-draft revision, button stayed put as "Submit".
- Submitted the various actions, saw them have the desired effects.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13216, T2543
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19810
Summary: See PHI977. Ref T13216. Some text, like long package names, may overflow hovercards. Add overflow CSS behaviors to remedy this.
Test Plan:
Before:
{F6012699}
After:
{F6012700}
(You can use `/search/hovercard/` to render hovercards in a handy standalone way.)
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13216
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19809
Summary:
Fixes T8440. See that task for discussion.
Ref T13216. See PHI976.
Test Plan:
In Chrome, hovered a timestamp and moved the mouse up to the "overlap" area (see T8440). Before: flickered like crazy. After: no flickering.
(I couldn't reproduce the original issue in modern Firefox or Safari.)
Reviewers: amckinley, avivey
Reviewed By: avivey
Maniphest Tasks: T8440, T13216
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19808
Summary:
Ref T13216. See PHI959. These two recent migrations can be expressed more efficiently:
- When updating commit audit statuses, the field isn't JSON encoded or anything so we can just issue several bulk UPDATEs.
- When inserting mail keys, we can batch them in groups of 100.
Test Plan: Used `bin/storage upgrade -f --apply phabricator:...` to reapply patches. Saw equivalent behavior and faster runtimes.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13216
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19802
Summary:
Ref T13217. This method is slightly tricky:
- We can't safely return a string: return an array instead.
- It no longer makes sense to accept glue. All callers use `', '` as glue anyway, so hard-code that.
Then convert all callsites.
Test Plan: Browsed around, saw fewer "unsafe" errors in error log.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: yelirekim, PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13217
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19784
Summary:
Depends on D19779. Ref T13216. The push logs currently record the "hostWait", which is roughly "locking + subprocess cost". We also record locking separately, so we can figure out "subprocess cost" alone by subtracting the lock costs.
However, the subprocess (normally `git receive-pack`) runs hooks, and we don't have an easy way to figure out how much time was spent doing actual `git` stuff vs spent doing commit hook processing. This would have been useful in diagnosing at least one recent issue.
Track at least a rough hook cost and record it in the push logs.
Test Plan: Pushed to a repository, saw a reasonable hook cost appear in the database table.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13216
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19780
Summary:
Depends on D19778. Ref T13216. See PHI943, PHI889, et al.
We currently have a push log and a pull log, but do not separately log intracluster synchronization events. We've encountered several specific cases where having this kind of log would be helpful:
- In PHI943, an install was accidentally aborting locks early. Having timing information in the sync log would let us identify this more quickly.
- In PHI889, an install hit an issue with `MaxStartups` configuration in `sshd`. A log would let us identify when this is an issue.
- In PHI889, I floated a "push the linux kernel + fetch timeout" theory. A sync log would let us see sync/fetch timeouts to confirm this being a problem in practice.
- A sync log will help us assess, develop, test, and monitor intracluster routing sync changes (likely those in T13211) in the future.
Some of these events are present in the pull log already, but only if they make it as far as running a `git upload-pack` subprocess (not the case with `MaxStartups` problems) -- and they can't record end-to-end timing.
No UI yet, I'll add that in a future change.
Test Plan:
- Forced all operations to synchronize by adding `|| true` to the version check.
- Pulled, got a sync log in the database.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13216
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19779
Summary:
See <https://hackerone.com/reports/434116>. Slowvote has a piece of Javascript that attempts to let you vote on `{V123}` polls inline.
It does not work: nothing ever triggers it (nothing renders a control with a `slowvote-option` sigil).
At least for now, just remove it. It has a completely separate pathway in the controller and both pathways are buggy, so this makes fixing them easier.
Test Plan: Voted in plurality and approval polls via Slowvote and the embedded widget.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19773
Summary:
Fixes T13208. See that task for details.
The `clone $query` line is safe if `$query` is a builtin query (like "open").
However, if it's a saved query we clone not only the query parameters but the ID, too. Then when we `save()` the query later, we overwrite the original query.
So this would happen in the database. First, you run a query and save it as the workboard default (query key "abc123"):
| 123 | abc123 | {"...xxx..."} |
Then we `clone` it and change the parameters, and `save()` it. But that causes an `UPDATE ... WHERE id = 123` and the table now looks like this:
| 123 | def456 | {"...yyy..."} |
What we want is to create a new query instead, with an `INSERT ...`:
| 123 | abc123 | {"...xxx..."} |
| 124 | def456 | {"...yyy..."} |
Test Plan:
- Followed reproduction steps from above.
- With just the new `save()` guard, hit the guard error.
- With the `newCopy()`, got a new copy of the query and "View as Query" remained functional without overwriting the original query row.
- Ran migration, saw an affected board get fixed.
Reviewers: amckinley, joshuaspence
Reviewed By: joshuaspence
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13208
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19768
Summary:
Depends on D19751. Ref T13210. When Drydock needs to reclaim an existing unused resource in order to build a new resource to satisfy a lease, the lease which triggered the reclaim currently gets thrown back into the pool with a 15-second yield.
If the queue is pretty empty and the reclaim is quick, this can mean that we spend up to 15 extra seconds just waiting for the lease update task to get another shot at building a resource (the resource reclaim may complete in a second or two, but nothing else happens until the yield ends).
Instead, when a lease triggers a reclaim, have the reclaim reawaken the lease task when it completes. In the best case, this saves us 15 seconds of waiting. In other cases (the task already completed some other way, the resource gets claimed before the lease gets to it), it's harmless.
Test Plan:
- Allocated A, A, A working copies with limit 3. Leased a B working copy.
- Before patch: allocation took ~32 seconds.
- After patch: allocation takes ~17 seconds (i.e., about 15 seconds less).
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13210
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19752
Summary: Ref T13197. See PHI873. I want to give RepositoryOperation objects access to Drydock logging like leases, resources, and blueprints currently have. This just does the schema/query changes, no actual UI or new logging yet.
Test Plan: Ran storage upgrade, poked around the UI looking for anything broken.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13197
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19671
Summary:
Depends on D19661. Ref T13077. See PHI840.
When a user edits a page normally, add a "Save as Draft" button. Much of this change is around making that button render and behave properly: it needs to be an `<input type="submit" ...>` so browsers submit it and we can figure out which button the user clicked.
Then there are a few minor rules:
- If you're editing a page which is already a draft, we only give you "Save as Draft". This makes edits to update/revise a draft more natural.
- Highlight "Publish" if it's a likely action that you might want to take.
Internally, there are two types of edits. Both types create a new version with the new content. However:
- A "content" edit sets the version shown on the live page to the newly-created version.
- A "draft" edit does not update the version shown on the live page.
Test Plan: Edited a published document, edited the draft. Published documents. Reverted documents.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13077
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19662
Summary:
Depends on D19659. Fixes T1894. Ref T13077. See PHI840.
- Add an EditEngine, although it currently supports no fields.
- Add (basic, top-level-only) commenting (we already had the table in the database).
This will probably create some issues. I'm most concerned about documents accumulating a ton of old, irrelevant comments over time which are hard to keep track of and no longer relevant. But I think this is probably a step forward in almost all cases, and a good thing on the balance.
This also moves us incrementally toward putting all editing on top of EditEngine.
Test Plan: {F5877347}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13077, T1894
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19660
Summary: Depends on D19652. Ref T13197. See PHI851. This migrates the actual `auditStatus` on Commits, and older status transactions.
Test Plan:
- Ran migrations.
- Spot-checked the database for sanity.
- Ran some different queries, got unchanged results from before migration.
- Reviewed historic audit state transactions, and accepted/raised concern on new audits. All state transactions appeared to generate properly.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13197
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19655
Summary: Depends on D19651. Ref T13197. The application now accepts either numeric or string values. However, for consistency and to reduce surprise in the future, migrate existing saved queries to use string values.
Test Plan: Saved some queries on `master` with numeric constants, ran the migration, saw string constants in the database and equivalent behavior in the UI.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13197
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19652
Summary: See PHI871. Ref T13197. These sections are only divided visually and don't have textual headers. Add aural headers.
Test Plan: {F5875471}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13197
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19654
Summary:
Ref T13195. If a Phriction page begins with a code block, the `clear: both;` currently makes it clear the action list.
Instead, use table-cell layout on desktops.
Test Plan: Viewed a Phriction page with an initial code block on desktop/tablet/mobile/printable layouts. Now got more sensible layouts in all cases.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: GoogleLegacy
Maniphest Tasks: T13195
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19649
The unique key on <documentPHID, version> may fail to apply if any content
rows don't have a valid document. This is rare, but we have some old random
garbage rows on "secure.phabricator.com" which prevent the next patch from
applying. Just toss these rows, they're junk.
Summary:
Ref T13077. We need to know the maximum version of a document in several cases, so denormalize it onto the Document object.
Then clean up some behaviors where we edit a document with, e.g., 7 versions but version 5 is currently published. For now, we: edit starting with version 7, save as version 8, and immediately publish the new version.
Test Plan:
- Ran migration.
- Edited a draft page without hitting any weird version errors.
- Checked database for sensible `maxVersion` values.
Reviewers: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13077
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19625
Summary:
See T13193. See T13077. If we drop a column which is part of a UNIQUE KEY, MariaDB raises an error.
This is probably a bad idea on our side anyway, but in this case it wasn't an obviously bad idea.
To get around this:
- Drop the unique key, if it exists, before dropping the column.
- Explicitly add the new unique key afterward.
Test Plan: Ran `bin/storage upgrade` locally without issue, but I'm on MySQL. Will follow up on T13193.
Reviewers: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19624
Summary: Depends on D19621. Ref T13077. Fixes T4815. This adds previous/current/next/draft buttons and makes navigation between unpublished and published versions of a document more clear.
Test Plan: {F5841997}
Reviewers: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13077, T4815
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19622
Summary: Depends on D19619. Ref T13065. Ref T13077. Migrate Phriction mail keys to the new infrastructure and drop the column.
Test Plan: Ran migrations, spot-checked the database.
Reviewers: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13077, T13065
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19620
Summary:
Ref T13077. This is mostly just a small cleanup change, even though the actual change is large.
We currently reference content and document objects from one another with `contentID` and `documentID`, but this means that `contentID` must be nullable. Switching to PHIDs allows the column to be non-nullable.
This also supports reorienting some current and future transactions around PHIDs, which is preferable for the API. In particular, I'm adding a "publish version X" transaction soon, and would rather callers pass a PHID than an ID or version number, since this will make the API more consistent and powerful.
Today, `contentID` gets used as a cheaty way to order documents by (content) edit time. Since PHIDs aren't orderable and stuff is going to become actually-revertible soon, replace this with an epoch timestamp.
Test Plan:
- Created, edited, moved, retitled, and deleted Phriction documents.
- Grepped for `documentID` and `contentID`.
- This probably breaks //something// but I'll be in this code for a bit and am likely to catch whatever breaks.
Reviewers: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13077
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19619
Summary:
Depends on D19616. Ref T13077. Fixes T8172. In the last round of design updates, a lot of actions got stuffed into "Actions" menus.
I never really got used to these and think they're a net usability loss, and broadly agree with the feedback in T8172. I'd generally like to move back toward a state where actions are available on the page, not hidden in a menu.
For now, just put a curtain view on these pages. This could be refined later (e.g., stick this menu to the right hand side of the screen) depending on where other Phriction changes go.
(Broadly, I'm also not satisfied with where we ended up on the fixed-width pages like Diffusion > Manage, Config, and Instances. In contrast, I //do// like where we ended up with Phortune in terms of overall design. I anticipate revisiting some of this stuff eventually.)
Test Plan:
- Looked at Phriction pages on desktop/tablet/mobile/printable -- actions are now available on the page.
- Looked at other DocumentView pages (like Phame blogs) -- no changes for now.
Reviewers: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13077, T8172
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19617
Summary: Ref T13189. See PHI710. Ref T13088. Fixes T9951. Allow callers to `harbormaster.sendmessage` to specify that the test details are remarkup so they can use rich formatting and include links, files, etc.
Test Plan: {F5840098}
Reviewers: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13189, T13088, T9951
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19615
Summary: Ref T13189. See PHI690. When a lease is first acquired or activated, note the time. This supports better visibility into queue lengths. For now, this is only queryable via DB and visible in the UI, but can be more broadly exposed in the future.
Test Plan: Landed a revision, saw the leases get sensible timestamps for acquisition/activation.
Reviewers: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13189
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19613
Summary:
Ref T13187. See PHI836. The "action" comment actions in Differential (Accept, Reject, etc) render a single line of descriptive text. This is currently slightly misaligned.
Give it similar sizing information to the label element to the left, so it lines up properly.
Test Plan:
Note that "Request Review" and "This revision will be..." are now aligned:
{F5828077}
Reviewers: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13187
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19600
Summary:
Depends on D19594. See PHI823. Ref T13164.
- Add a label for the "X" button in comment areas, like "Remove Action: Change Subscribers".
- Add a label for the floating header display options menu in Differential.
- Add `role="button"` to `PHUIButtonView` objects that we render with an `<a ...>` tag.
Test Plan:
Viewed a revision with `?__aural__=true`:
- Saw "Remove Action: ..." label.
- Saw "Display Options" label.
- Used inspector to verify that some `<a class="button" ...>` now have `<a class="button" role="button" ...>`. This isn't exhaustive, but at least improves things. A specific example is the "edit", "reply", etc., actions on inline comments.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13164
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19595
Summary:
Ref T13164. See PHI748. Path validation has a 750ms timeout which blames to rP5038ab850c, in 2011.
Production path validation is sometimes taking more than 750ms, particularly on the initial page load where we may validate many paths simultaneously.
I have no idea why we have this timeout, and it isn't consistent with how we perform other AJAX requests. Just remove it.
Test Plan:
- Reproduced issue in production, saw all validation calls failing at 750ms. Actual underlying calls succeed, they just take more than 750ms to resolve.
- Loaded path validator locally, got green checkmark.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13164
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19575
Summary:
Ref T13164. See PHI693. In Differential, you can {nav View Options > View Standalone} to get a standalone view of a single changeset. You can also arrive here via the big changeset list for revisions affecting a huge number of files.
We currently suggest that all the keyboard shortcuts work, but some do not. In particular, the "Next File" and "Previous File" keyboard shortcuts (and some similar shortcuts) do not work. In the main view, the next/previous files are on the same page. In the standalone view, we'd need to actually change the URI.
Ideally, we should do this (and, e.g., put prev/next links on the page). As a first step toward that, hide the nonfunctional shortcuts to stop users from being misled.
Test Plan:
- Viewed a revision in normal and standalone views.
- No changes in normal view, and all keys still work ("N", "P", etc).
- In standalone view, "?" no longer shows nonfunctional key commands.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13164
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19571
Summary: Ref T12164. Defines a new manual activity that suggests rebuilding repository identities before Phabricator begins to rely on them.
Test Plan:
- Ran migration, observed expected setup issue: {F5788217}
- Ran `bin/config done identities` and observed setup issue get marked as done.
- Ran `/bin/storage upgrade --apply phabricator:20170912.ferret.01.activity.php` to make sure I didn't break the reindex migration; observed reindex setup issue appear as expected.
- Ran `./bin/config done reindex` and observed reindex issue cleared as expected.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin, PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T12164
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19497
Summary:
Ref T13164. See PHI774. Fixes T12435.
Since Phriction is hierarchical, there isn't a super strong motivation to support Spaces: you can generally set policies on a small number of documents to get the desired effective policy behavior.
However, it still improves consistency and there's no reason //not// to support Spaces. In the case where you have some moderately weird/complex policy on one or more Spaces, using Spaces to define the policy behavior can make things a bit simpler and easier to understand.
This probably doesn't actually fix whatever the root problem in T12435 was (complicated, non-hierarchical access policies?). See also a bunch of discussion in T12442. So we might end up going beyond this to address other use cases, but I think this is reasonable regardless.
Test Plan: Created and edited Phriction documents and shifted them between Spaces. Searched by Space, etc.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13164, T12435
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19553
Summary:
Depends on D19551. Ref T13164. Projects use a special kind of header setup that has a more specific CSS rule to make content black. Add an even more specific rule to make it red.
(This could probably be disentangled a bit and isn't necessarily the cleanest fix, but I poked at it for a few minutes and didn't come up with anything cleaner.)
Test Plan: Viewed projects in spaces, saw the space names colored red properly.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13164
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19552
Summary:
See PHI774. Ref T13164. There is no reason projects //don't// support Spaces, just a vague concern that it's not hugely useful and might be a bit confusing.
However, it's at least somewhat useful (to improve consistency and reduce special casing) and doesn't necessarily seem more confusing than Projects are anyway. Support is trivial from a technical point of view, so just hook it up.
Test Plan: Created new projects, shifted projects between spaces. The support is all pretty much automatic.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13164
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19549
Summary:
Ref T13151. See PHI685. When you haunt the panel, we only let it take up part of the screen. Let it take up slightly more of the screen so that it's more likely to fit completely on-screen without needing to scroll.
The behavior when it does scroll is fine (you get a scrollbar if your OS/browser is set up to show them) so this is a bit trivial/silly, but seems fine and doesn't have a big JS maintenance cost or anything.
Test Plan: Pressed "Z", resized my window to a weird tiny useless size, got slightly better (I guess) behavior.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13151
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19480
Summary: Ref T13151. See PHI616. There's a bug where the current banner changeset isn't cleared correctly when we hide the banner.
Test Plan:
- View revision with several changesets.
- Scroll down slowly through first changeset until banner appears.
- Scroll up until banner disappears.
- Scroll back down.
- Before: banner fails to reappear (code still thinks it's visible and we don't want to update it).
- After: banner reappears correctly.
Reviewers: amckinley, jmeador
Reviewed By: jmeador
Maniphest Tasks: T13151
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19474
Summary:
Fixes T13148. Ref T13105. The new document rendering engine for images let them overflow the UI bounds.
Add `max-width: 100%;` to keep them contained.
Test Plan:
- Viewed a very wide image in Safari, Firefox and Chrome. Saw sensible rendering.
- Also viewed a normal image, saw normal behavior.
Reviewers: amckinley, avivey
Reviewed By: avivey
Maniphest Tasks: T13148, T13105
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19457
Summary:
Fixes T13147. In D19437, I changed this logic to support deleting the `""` (empty string) token, but `[].pop()` returns `undefined`, not `null`, if the list is empty and I didn't think to try deleting an empty input.
Fix the logic so we don't end up in a loop if the input is empty.
Test Plan:
- In any browser, deleted all tokens in a tokenizer; then pressed delete again.
- Before: tab hangs in an infinte loop.
- After: smooth sailing.
Reviewers: amckinley, avivey
Reviewed By: avivey
Maniphest Tasks: T13147
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19456
Summary: Depends on D19429. Depends on D19423. Ref T12164. This creates new columns `authorIdentityPHID` and `committerIdentityPHID` on commit objects and starts populating them. Also adds the ability to explicitly set an Identity's assignee to "unassigned()" to null out an incorrect auto-assign. Adds more search functionality to identities. Also creates a daemon task for handling users adding new email address and attempts to associate unclaimed identities.
Test Plan: Imported some repos, watched new columns get populated. Added a new email address for a previous commit, saw daemon job run and assign the identity to the new user. Searched for identities in various and sundry ways.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin, PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T12164
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19443
Summary: Depends on D19423. Ref T12164. Adds controllers capable of listing and editing `PhabricatorRepositoryIdentity` objects. Starts creating those objects when commits are parsed.
Test Plan: Reparsed some revisions, observed objects getting created in the database. Altered some `Identity` objects using the controllers and observed effects in the database. No attempts made to validate behavior under "challenging" author/committer strings.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin, PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T12164
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19429
Summary: Ref T12164. Start building initial objects for managing `RepositoryIdentity` objects. This won't land until much more of the infrastructure is in place.
Test Plan: Ran `bin/storage upgrade` and observed expected table.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin, PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T12164
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19423
Summary:
See PHI652. When you `echo x | arc paste` today, you end up with a Paste object that has the empty string as its "language".
This is normally not valid. Pastes where the language should be autodetected should have the value `null`, not the empty string.
This behavior likely changed when `paste.create` got rewritten in terms of `paste.edit`. Adjust the implementation so it only adds the LANGUAGE transaction if there's an actual language.
Also, fix an issue where you can't use the "delete" key to delete tokens with the empty string as their value.
Test Plan:
- Created a paste with `echo x | arc paste`, got a paste in autodetect mode instead of with a bogus language value.
- Created a paste with `echo x | arc paste --lang rainbow`, got a rainbow paste.
- Deleted an empty string token with the keyboard.
- Deleted normal tokens with the keyboard.
- Edited subscribers/etc normally with the keyboard and mouse to make sure I didn't ruin anything.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19437
Summary:
See PHI624. Some of the mobile navigation and breadcrumbs in support pacts aren't as good as they could be.
In particular, we generally collapse crumbs on mobile to just the first and last crumbs. The first crumb is the application; the last is the current page.
On `/PHIxxx` pages, the first crumb isn't very useful since the Support landing page is two levels up: you usually want to go back to the pact, not all the way back to the Support landing page.
We also don't need the space since the last crumb (`PHIxxx`) is always small.
Allow Support and other similar applications to tailor the crumb behavior more narrowly if they end up in situations like this.
Test Plan:
- With an additional change to instances (see next diff), viewed a support issue page (`/PHI123`) on mobile and desktop.
- Saw a link directly back to the pact on both mobile and desktop.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19438
Summary:
Depends on D19427. Ref T13130. See PHI251. Support configuring owners packages so they ignore generated paths.
This is still a little rough. A couple limitations:
- It's hard to figure out how to use this control if you don't know what it's for, but we don't currently have a "CheckboxesEditField". I may add that soon.
- The attribute ignore list doesn't apply to Diffusion, only Differential, which isn't obvious. I'll either try to make it work in Diffusion or note this somewhere.
- No documentation yet (which could mitigate the other two issues a bit).
But the actual behavior seems to work fine.
Test Plan:
- Set a package to ignore paths with the "generated" attribute. Saw the package stop matching generated paths in Differential.
- Removed the attribute from the ignore list.
- Tried to set invalid attributes, got sensible errors.
- Queried a package with Conduit, got the ignored attribute list.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13130
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19428
Summary:
Depends on D19426. Ref T13130. Ref T13065. While I'm making changes to Owners for "Ignore generated paths", clean up the "mailKey" column.
We recently (D19399) added code to automatically generate and manage mail keys so we don't need a ton of `mailKey` properties in the future. Migrate existing mail keys and blow away the explicit column on packages.
Test Plan: Ran migration, manually looked at the database and saw sensible data. Edited a package to send some mail, which looked good.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13130, T13065
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19427
Summary:
See PHI604. Ref T13130. Ref T13105. There's currently no way to turn blame off in Diffusion. Add a "Hide Blame" option to the "View Options" dropdown so it can be toggled off.
Also fix a couple of bugs around this: for example, if you loaded a Jupyter notebook and then switched to "Source" view, blame would incorrectly fail to activate because the original rendering of the "stage" used an asynchronous engine so `willRenderRef()` wasn't called to populate blame.
Test Plan:
- Viewed a source file, toggled blame off/on, reloaded page to see state stick in URL.
- Viewed a Jupyter notebook, toggled to "Source" view, saw blame.
- Viewed stuff in Files (no blame UI options).
- Tried to do some invalid stuff like toggle blame on a non-blame engine (options disable properly).
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13130, T13105
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19414
Summary:
Ref T13130. See PHI617.
The new build log UI has tags like `<a href="...">Show More Above <span icon>^</span></a>`. If you click the little "^" icon, the event target is the `<span />` instead of the `<a />` so we expand on the wrong node.
Instead, select the `<a />` by sigil explicitly.
Test Plan: Viewed new log UI in Harbormaster, clicked "^" icon and text, got the same (correct) behavior on both.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13130
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19410
Summary:
Ref T13065. `mailKey`s are a private secret for each object. In some mail configurations, they help us ensure that inbound mail is authentic: when we send you mail, the "Reply-To" is "T123+456+abcdef".
- The `T123` is the object you're actually replying to.
- The `456` is your user ID.
- The `abcdef` is a hash of your user account with the `mailKey`.
Knowing this hash effectively proves that Phabricator has sent you mail about the object before, i.e. that you legitimately control the account you're sending from. Without this, anyone could send mail to any object "From" someone else, and have comments post under their username.
To generate this hash, we need a stable secret per object. (We can't use properties like the PHID because the secret has to be legitimately secret.)
Today, we store these in `mailKey` properties on the actual objects, and manually generate them. This results in tons and tons and tons of copies of this same ~10 lines of code.
Instead, just store them in the Mail application and generate them on demand. This change also anticipates possibly adding flags like "must encrypt" and "original subject", which are other "durable metadata about mail transmission" properties we may have use cases for eventually.
Test Plan:
- See next change for additional testing and context.
- Sent mail about Herald rules (next change); saw mail keys generate cleanly.
- Destroyed a Herald rule with a mail key, saw the mail properties get nuked.
- Grepped for `getMailKey()` and converted all callsites I could which aren't the copy/pasted boilerplate present in 50 places.
- Used `bin/mail receive-test --to T123` to test normal mail receipt of older-style objects and make sure that wasn't broken.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13065
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19399
Summary: Ref T13126. After SourceView changes, embedded pastes with the `{Pxxx}` syntax are line-wrapping line numbers in Safari, at least. Put a stop to this.
Test Plan: Viewed a `{Pxxx}` with more than 10 lines. Before: weird line wrapping; after: nice consistent display.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13126
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19393
Summary: See discussion in D19379. The 4-tuple of (device, network, address, port) should be unique.
Test Plan: Created lots of duplicate interfaces, bound those interfaces to various services, observed migration script clean things up correctly.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin, PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19388
Summary:
Ref T13127. Users with red/green colorblindness may have difficulty using this element in its current incarnation.
We could give it different behavior if the "Accessibility" option is set for red/green colorblind users, but try a one-size-fits-all approach since the red/green aren't wholly clear anwyay.
Test Plan: {F5530050}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13127
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19385
Summary:
Ref T13124. Ref T13131. Fixes T8953. See PHI512.
When you receieve a notification about an object and then someone hides that object from you (or deletes it), you get a phantom notification which is very difficult to clear.
For now, test that notifications are visible when you open the menu and clear any that are not.
This could be a little more elegant than it is, but the current behavior is very clearly broken. This unbreaks it, at least.
Test Plan:
- As Alice, configured task stuff to notify me (instead of sending email).
- As Bailey, added Alice as a subscriber to a task, then commented on it.
- As Alice, loaded home and saw a notification count. Didn't click it yet.
- As Bailey, set the task to private.
- As Alice, clicked the notification bell menu icon.
- Before change: no unread notifications, bell menu is semi-stuck in a phantom state which you can't clear.
- After change: bad notifications automatically cleared.
{F5530005}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13131, T13124, T8953
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19384
Summary: Fixes T13129. This at least makes the existing UI work again before we banish Phlux to the shadow realm.
Test Plan: Edited the visibility for a Phlux variable, didn't get an error. Nothing showed up in the edge tables when I made those changes, but at least it doesn't error out anymore.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin, PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13129
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19387
Summary:
The name of networks should be unique.
Also adds support for exact-name queries for AlamanacNetworks.
Test Plan: Applied migration with existing duplicates, saw networks renamed, attempted to add duplicates, got a nice error message.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin, PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19379
Summary:
Depends on D19377. Ref T13125. Ref T13124. Ref T13105. Coverage reporting in Diffusion didn't initially survive the transition to Document Engine; restore it.
This adds some tentative/theoretical support for multiple columns of coverage, but no way to actually produce them in the UI. For now, the labels, codes, and colors are hard coded.
Test Plan:
Added coverage with `diffusion.updatecoverage`, saw coverage in the UI:
{F5525542}
Hovered over coverage, got labels and highlighting.
Double-checked labels for "N" (Not Executable) and "U" (Uncovered). See PHI577.
Faked some multi-column coverage, but you can't currently get this yourself today:
{F5525544}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13125, T13124, T13105
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19378
Summary: Ref T13105. After moving Diffusion to DocumnentEngine, this no longer has callers. It will become part of the document behavior.
Test Plan: Grepped for calls to the `diffusion-browse-file` behavior, found none.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13105
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19377
Summary:
Depends on D19349. Ref T13105. This was the behavior in Diffusion before with a little hard-coded snippet.
Remove that snippet ("diffusion-jump-to") and add a more general-purpose snippet to SourceView.
This is a tiny bit hacky still (and probably doesn't work quite right with Quicksand) but gets things working again and works in all of Files, Paste, and Diffusion.
Test Plan: Followed links to particular lines in Paste, Files and Diffusion; got scrolled to the right place.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13105
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19350
Summary:
Depends on D19348. Ref T13105. When copying text from Paste or Diffusion, we'd like to copy only source, not line numbers.
We currently accomplish this with zero-width spaces plus a trigger that fires on "copy" in Paste and Diffusion. This is quite gross.
In the new-style Harbormaster logs, we use an approach that seems slightly better: CSS psuedoelements.
This isn't a complete solution (see also PHI504 / T5032) but puts us in a slightly better place.
Use it in Paste/Files/Diffusion too.
This gives us good behavior in all browsers in Files and Paste.
This gives us good behavior in Chrome and Firefox in Diffusion. Safari will copy (but not visually select) blame information in Diffusion. I think we can live with that for now.
Test Plan: Selected and copy/pasted stuff in Diffusion, Files, and Paste. Got good behavior everywhere except Safari + Diffusion.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13105
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19349
Summary:
Depends on D19347. Ref T13105. See PHI565. The "highlight lines" behavior is interacting poorly with the new blame element in Diffusion.
Make the behavior a little simpler and hopefully more robust.
Test Plan:
- Clicked commit/revision links in Diffusion, saw the links get followed instead of the lines highlighted.
- Highlighted lines in Diffusion, saw just the line/code highlight instead of the whole thing.
- Highlighted lines in Paste and new-style Harbormaster build logs, saw consistent behavior.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13105
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19348
Summary: Depends on D19346. Ref PHI568. I love Javascript.
Test Plan:
- Viewed a revision.
- Dragged file tree view really wide.
- Scrolled document to the right.
- Toggled file tree off and on by pressing "f" twice.
- Before patch: file tree grew wider and wider after it was toggled.
- After patch: file tree stayed the same size after it was toggled.
- Dragged to various widths and reloaded to make sure the "sticky across reloads" behavior still works.
- Scrolled right, dragged the tree a bit, then reloaded and didn't see it flip out.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19347
Summary:
Ref T13105. Previously, the "source code" view in Paste rendered on a brown/orange-ish background. I've been using this element in more contexts (Files, Diffusion) and removed the colored background to make text (particularly syntax-highlighted text) easier to read and reduce visual noise with the new blame colors.
In Diffusion the view is in a box with a white background so removing the background left us with white, but in Paste it's just directly on the page so the background was bleeding through. Instead, set it to white explicitly.
Test Plan: Viewed source files in Files, Diffusion and Paste; saw text on a white background.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13105
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19346
Summary:
See PHI568. If you make the file tree UI very wide so that the page generates a horizontal scrollbar and then scroll the page, the page content can paint underneath the menu.
The menu already has a z-index to make it render above the content, but doesn't actually have a background. Give it a background.
The "transparent" rule was added in D16346 but I don't see any reason why we actually need it there, so I think this probably won't break anything.
Test Plan: {F5518822}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13120
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19344
Summary:
Depends on D19322. Ref T13120. Ref T12414.
Currently, `AlmanacDevice` has a bit of a beast of a `TYPE_INTERFACE` transaction that fully creates a complex Interface object. This isn't very flexible or consistent, and Interfaces are complex enough to reasonably have their own object behaviors (for example, they have their own PHIDs).
The complexity of this transaction makes modularizing `AlmanacDevice` transactions tricky. To simplify this, move Interface toward having its own set of normal transactions.
This change just adds some reasonable-looking transactions; it doesn't actually hook them up in the UI or make them reachable. I'll test that they actually work as I swap the UI over.
We may also have some code using the `TYPE_INTERFACE` transaction in Phacility support stuff, so that may need to wait a week to actually phase out.
Test Plan: Ran `bin/storage upgrade` and `arc liberate`. This code isn't reachable yet.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13120, T12414
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19323
Summary: Ref T13118. The first fix there fixed Safari, but made Chrome weird. Try this?
Test Plan: Viewed a code block with `name=...` in Safari, Firefox and Chrome and saw consistent display without weird wrappping.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13118
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19319
Summary:
Depends on D19313. Ref T13105. Fixes T13015. We lost the coloration for ages in the switch to Document Engine.
Restore it, and use a wider range of colors to make the information more clear.
Test Plan: Viewed some blame, saw a nice explosion of bright colors. This is a cornerstone of good design.
Maniphest Tasks: T13105, T13015
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19314
Summary:
Depends on D19312. Ref T13105. For readability, render only one link for each contiguous block of changes.
Also make the actual rendering logic a little more defensible.
Test Plan: Viewed some files with blame, saw one render per chunk instead of one per line.
Maniphest Tasks: T13105
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19313
Summary: Depends on D19311. Ref T13105. Currently, blame only renders on the initial request. Instead, redraw blame after swapping views.
Test Plan: Swapped from "Source -> Hexdump -> Source" and "Hexdump -> Source". Saw blame on source in all cases.
Maniphest Tasks: T13105
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19312
Summary: Ref T13105. The line linker behavior currently has trouble identifying the line number when blame is active. Improve this, albeit not the most cleanly.
Test Plan: Selected lines with blame on.
Maniphest Tasks: T13105
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19310
Summary: Ref T13105. This needs refinement but blame sort of works again, now.
Test Plan: Viewed files in Diffusion and Files; saw blame in Diffusion when viewing in source mode.
Reviewers: mydeveloperday
Reviewed By: mydeveloperday
Maniphest Tasks: T13105
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19309
Summary: Ref T13105. Ref T13047. This makes symbol indexes work with DocumentEngine in Files, and restores support in Diffusion.
Test Plan: Command-clicked stuff, got taken to the symbol index with reasonable metadata in Diffusion, Differential and Files.
Reviewers: mydeveloperday
Reviewed By: mydeveloperday
Maniphest Tasks: T13105, T13047
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19307
Summary:
Ref T13105. Fixes some issues with line linking and highlighting under DocumentEngine:
- Adding `$1-3` to the URI didn't work correctly with query parameters.
- Reading `$1-3` from the URI didn't work correctly because Diffusion parses them slightly abnormally.
Test Plan: Clicked/dragged lines to select them. Observed URI. Reloaded page, got the right selection.
Reviewers: mydeveloperday
Reviewed By: mydeveloperday
Maniphest Tasks: T13105
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19305
Summary: Fixes T13118. Ref T13120. This construction is a little odd; I'm not entirely sure why Safari is doing what it's doing, but this appears to fix it.
Test Plan: Viewed blocks like those in T13118 in Safari. Before the patch, weird last-letter wrapping. After the patch, sensible behavior.
Maniphest Tasks: T13118, T13120
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19303
Summary: Ref T13110. See PHI230. Show revision sizes on a roughly logarithmic scale from 1-7 stars. See D16322 for theorycrafting on this element.
Test Plan: Looked at some revisions, saw plausible-looking size markers.
Maniphest Tasks: T13110
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19294
Summary:
Depends on D19284. Ref T13110. It's now possible to get a revision into a "Abandoned + But, Never Promoted From Draft" state. Show this in the header and provide the draft hint above the comment area.
Also, remove `shouldBroadcast()`. The method `getShouldBroadcast()` now has the same meaning.
Finally, migrate existing drafts to `shouldBroadcast = false` and default `shouldBroadcast` to `true`. If we don't do this, every older revision becomes a non-broadcasting revision because this flag was not explicitly set on revision creation before, only on promotion out of draft.
Test Plan: Ran migration; abandoned draft revisions and ended up in a draft + abandoned state.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13110
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19285
Summary: Depends on D19273. Ref T13105. Adds "Change Text Encoding..." and "Highlight As..." options when rendering documents, and makes an effort to automatically detect and handle text encoding.
Test Plan:
- Uploaded a Shift-JIS file, saw it auto-detect as Shift-JIS.
- Converted files between encodings.
- Highlighted various things as "Rainbow", etc.
Maniphest Tasks: T13105
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19274
Summary:
Ref T13114. See PHI522. Although it looks like results are already ordered correctly, the override rendering isn't accommodating disabled results gracefully.
Give closed results a distinctive look (grey + strikethru) so it's clear when you're autocompleting `@mention...` into a disabled user.
Test Plan: {F5497621}
Maniphest Tasks: T13114
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19272
Summary:
Depends on D19258. Ref T13105.
- When the default renderer is an Ajax renderer, don't replace the URI. For example, when viewing a Jupyter notebook, the URI should remain `/F123`, not instantly change to `/view/123/jupyter/`.
- Fix an issue where non-ajax renderers could fail to display the dropdown menu properly.
Test Plan:
- Viewed a Jupyter notebook, stayed on the same URI.
- Changed rendering, got different URIs.
- Viewed a JSON file and toggled renderers via dropdown.
Reviewers: mydeveloperday
Reviewed By: mydeveloperday
Maniphest Tasks: T13105
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19259
Summary:
Ref T13105. This adds various small client-side improvements to document rendering.
- In the menu, show which renderer is in use.
- Make linking to lines work.
- Make URIs persist information about which rendering engine is in use.
- Improve the UI feedback for transitions between document types.
- Load slower documents asynchronously by default.
- Discard irrelevant requests if you spam the view menu.
Test Plan: Loaded files, linked to lines, swapped between modes, copy/pasted URLs.
Maniphest Tasks: T13105
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19256
Summary: Ref T13105. Allow normal text files to be rendered as documents, and add a "source code" rendering engine.
Test Plan: Viewed some source code.
Reviewers: mydeveloperday
Reviewed By: mydeveloperday
Maniphest Tasks: T13105
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19254
Summary:
Depends on D19252. Ref T13105. This very roughly renders Jupyter notebooks.
It's probably better than showing the raw JSON, but not by much.
Test Plan:
- Viewed various notebooks with various cell types, including markdown, code, stdout, stderr, images, HTML, and Javascript.
- HTML and Javascript are not live-fired since they're wildly dangerous.
Maniphest Tasks: T13105
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19253
Summary:
Depends on D19251. Ref T13105. This adds rendering engine support for PDFs.
It doesn't actually render them, it just renders a link which you can click to view them in a new window. This is much easier than actually rendering them inline and at least 95% as good most of the time (and probably more-than-100%-as-good some of the time).
This makes PDF a viewable MIME type by default and adds a narrow CSP exception for it. See also T13112.
Test Plan:
- Viewed PDFs in Files, got a link to view them in a new tab.
- Clicked the link in Safari, Chrome, and Firefox; got inline PDFs.
- Verified primary CSP is still `object-src 'none'` with `curl ...`.
- Interacted with the vanilla lightbox element to check that it still works.
Maniphest Tasks: T13105
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19252
Summary:
Ref T13105. Although Markdown is trickier to deal with, we can handle Remarkup easily.
This may need some support for encoding options.
Test Plan: Viewed `.remarkup` files, got remarkup document presentation by default. Viewed other text files, got an option to render as remarkup.
Reviewers: avivey
Reviewed By: avivey
Subscribers: mydeveloperday, avivey
Maniphest Tasks: T13105
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19251
Summary:
Depends on D19249. Ref T13109. Add timing information to the `PushEvent`:
- `writeWait`: Time spent waiting for a write lock.
- `readWait`: Time spent waiting for a read lock.
- `hostWait`: Roughly, total time spent on the leaf node.
The primary goal here is to see if `readWait` is meaningful in the wild. If it is, that motivates smarter routing, and the value of smarter routing can be demonstrated by looking for a reduction in read wait times.
Test Plan: Pushed some stuff, saw reasonable timing values in the table. Saw timing information in "Export Data".
Maniphest Tasks: T13109
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19250
Summary:
Depends on D19247. Ref T13109. When we receive an SSH request, generate a random unique ID for the request. Then thread it down through the process tree.
The immediate goal is to let the `ssh-exec` process coordinate with `commit-hook` process and log information about read and write lock wait times. Today, there's no way for `ssh-exec` to interact with the `PushEvent`, but this is the most helpful place to store this data for users.
Test Plan: Made pushes, saw the `PushEvent` table populate with a random request ID. Exported data and saw the ID preserved in the export.
Maniphest Tasks: T13109
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19249
Summary:
Depends on D19245. Fixes T11145. Ref T13108. See PHI488. Disable workflow buttons when they're clicked to prevent accidental client-side double submission.
This might have some weird side effects but we should normally never need to re-use a workflow dialog form so it's not immediately obvious that this can break anything.
Test Plan:
- Added `sleep(1)` to the Mute controller and the Maniphest task controller.
- Added `phlog(...)` to the Mute controller.
- Opened the mute dialog, mashed the button a thousand times.
- Before: Saw a bunch of logs.
- After: Button immediately disables, saw only one log.
Maniphest Tasks: T13108, T11145
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19246
Summary:
See PHI488. Ref T13108. Currently, there is a narrow window between when the response returns and when the browser actually follows the redirect where the form is live and you can click the button again.
This is relativey easy if Phabricator is running //too fast// since the button may be disabled only momentarily. This seems to be easier in Firefox/Chrome than Safari.
Test Plan:
- In Firefox and Chrome, spam-clicked a comment submit button.
- Before: could sometimes get a double-submit.
- After: couldn't get a double-submit.
- This could probably be reproduced more reliabily by adding a `sleep(1)` to whatever we're redirecting //to//.
- Submitted an empty comment, got a dialog plus a still-enabled form (so this doesn't break the non-redirect case).
Maniphest Tasks: T13108
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19245
Summary:
Depends on D19238. Ref T13105. Give document engines some reasonable automatic support for degrading gracefully when someone tries to hexdump a 100MB file or similar.
Also, make "Video" sort above "Audio" for files which could be rendered either way.
Test Plan: Viewed audio, video, image, and other files. Adjusted limits and saw full, partial, and fallback/error rendering.
Maniphest Tasks: T13105
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19239
Summary: Depends on D19237. Ref T13105. This adds a (very basic) "Hexdump" engine (mostly just to have a second option to switch to) and a selector for choosing view modes.
Test Plan: Viewed some files, switched between audio/video/image/hexdump.
Maniphest Tasks: T13105
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19238
Summary:
Ref T13105. This change begins modularizing document rendering. I'm starting in Files since it's the use case with the smallest amount of complexity.
Currently, we hard-coding the inline rendering for images, audio, and video. Instead, use the modular engine pattern to make rendering flexible and extensible.
There aren't any options for switching modes yet and none of the renderers do anything fancy. This API is also probably very unstable.
Test Plan: Viewwed images, audio, video, and other files. Saw reasonable renderings, with "nothing can render this" for any other file type.
Maniphest Tasks: T13105
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19237
Summary:
See <https://discourse.phabricator-community.org/t/desktop-only-notifications-mode-is-broken/1234>. Ref T13102. The "Desktop Only" mode for notifications currently shows both desktop and web notifications.
In fact, `JX.Notification` currently has no ability to render notifications as desktop-only. Make this work.
Note that many of the variables and parameters here, including `showAnyNotification`, `web_ready`, and `desktop_ready`, are named in an incorrect or misleading way. However, the new behavior appears to be correct.
Test Plan:
- Emitted test notifications in "No Notifications", "Web Only", "Web and Desktop", and "Desktop" modes.
- Saw appropriate notifications appear in the UI.
Maniphest Tasks: T13102
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19233
Summary: Ref T13106. When profiling service queries, there's no convenient way to easily get a sense of why a query was issued. Add a mode to collect traces for each query to make this more clear. This is rough, but works well enough to be useful.
Test Plan: Clicked "Analyze Query Plans", got stack traces for each service call.
Maniphest Tasks: T13106
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19221
Summary:
See PHI451. Ref T13102. DarkConsole uses an ancient inline "onclick" handler to expand the stack traces for errors.
The new Content-Security-Policy prevents this from functioning.
Replace this with a more modern behavior-driven action instead.
Test Plan:
- Clicked some errors in DarkConsole, saw stack traces appear.
- Grepped for `onclick` and `jsprintf()` to see if I could find any more of these, but came up empty.
Maniphest Tasks: T13102
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19218
Summary:
Fixes T12994. We need `MYSQLI_ASYNC` to implement client-side query timeouts, and we need MySQLi + MySQL Native Driver to get `MYSQLI_ASYNC`.
Recommend users install MySQLi and MySQL Native Driver if they don't have them. These are generally the defaults and best practice anyway, but Ubuntu makes it easy to use the older stuff.
All the cases we're currently aware of stem from `apt-get install php5-mysql` (which explicitly selects the non-native driver) so issue particular guidance about `php5-mysqlnd`.
Test Plan:
- Faked both issues locally, reviewed the text.
- Will deploy to `secure`, which currently has the non-native driver.
Maniphest Tasks: T12994
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19216
Summary:
Ref T13102. An install has a custom rule for bridging JIRA references via Doorkeeper and would like to be able to render them as `JIRA-123` instead of `JIRA JIRA-123 Full JIRA title`.
I think it's reasonable to imagine future support upstream for `JIRA-123`, `{JIRA-123}`, and so on, although we do not support these today. We can take a small step toward eventual support by letting the rendering pipeline understand different view modes.
This adds an optional `name` (the default text rendered before we do the OAuth sync) and an optional `view`, which can be `short` or `full`.
Test Plan:
I tested this primarily with Asana, since it's less of a pain to set up than JIRA. The logic should be similar, hopefully.
I changed `DoorkeeperAsanaRemarkupRule` to specify `name` and `view`, e.g `'view' => (mt_rand(0, 1) ? 'short' : 'full')`. Then I made a bunch of Asana references in a comment and saw them randomly go short or long.
Maniphest Tasks: T13102
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19215
Summary:
See PHI431. Ref T13102. An install is interested in a custom "non-sticky" accept action, roughly.
On the one hand, this is a pretty hacky patch. However, I suspect it inches us closer to T731, and I'm generally comfortable with exploring the realms of "Accept Next Update", "Unblock Without Accepting", etc., as long as most of it doesn't end up enabled by default in the upstream.
Test Plan:
- Accepted and updated revisions normally, saw accepts respect global stickiness.
- Modified the "Accept" action to explicitly be unsticky, saw nonsticky accept behavior after update.
Maniphest Tasks: T13102
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19211
Summary: Ref T13103. Make favicons customizable, and perform dynamic compositing to add marker to indicate things like "unread messages".
Test Plan: Viewed favicons in Safari, Firefox and Chrome. With unread messages, saw pink dot composited into icon.
Maniphest Tasks: T13103
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19209
Summary:
See PHI439. This fills in additional information about Owners packages.
Also removes dead `primaryOwnerPHID`.
Test Plan: Called `owners.search` and reviewed the results. Grepped for `primaryOwnerPHID`.
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19207
Summary:
See <https://discourse.phabricator-community.org/t/lightbox-not-working/1201/3>. The lightbox code is fragile and currently relies on simulating a click on the actual "<a />" tag surrounding other images in the document.
This breaks the prev/next links which ignore the event because it there's no "<img />".
Instead, don't simulate clicks and just call the code we want directly.
Test Plan: Added several images to a page, used lightbox prev/next buttons to cycle between them.
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19197
Summary:
Depends on D19192. Ref T4190. Ref T13101. Instead of directly including the proxy endpoint with `<img src="..." />`, emit a placeholder and use AJAX to make the request. If the proxy fetch fails, replace the placeholder with an error message.
This isn't the most polished implementation imaginable, but it's much less mysterious about errors.
Test Plan: Used `{image ...}` for valid and invalid images, got images and useful error messages respectively.
Maniphest Tasks: T13101, T4190
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19193
Summary: Depends on D19190. Fixes T12590. Ref T13099. Replaces the barely-usable, gigantic, poorly ordered "<select />" control with a tokenizer. Attempts to fix various minor issues.
Test Plan:
- Edited paths: include/exclude paths, from different repositories, different actual paths.
- Used "Add New Path" to add rows, got repository selector prepopulated with last value.
- Used "remove".
- Used validation typeahead, got reasonable behaviors?
The error behavior if you delete the repository for a path is a little sketchy still, but roughly okay.
Maniphest Tasks: T13099, T12590
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19191
Summary: Ref T12590. This is ancient code which was used to prefill `/trunk/tfb/www/` or similar at Facebook. I don't think it ever had a UI and no install has asked for this feature since 2011.
Test Plan: Grepped for affected symbols, edited paths in Owners.
Maniphest Tasks: T12590
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19189
Summary:
Depends on D19183. Ref T11015. Currently, adding a trailing slash works great and omitting it mysteriously doesn't work.
Store a normalized version with an unconditional trailing slash for the lookup logic to operate on, and a separate display version which tracks what the user actually typed.
Test Plan:
- Entered "/src/main.c", "/src/main.c/", saw them de-duplicate.
- Entered "/src/main.c", saw it stay that way in the UI but appear as "/src/main.c/" internally.
- Added a rule for "/src/applications/owners" (no slash), created a revision touching paths in that directory, saw Owners fire for it.
- Changed the display value of a path only ("/src/main.c" to "/src/main.c/"), saw the update reflected in the UI without any beahvioral change.
Maniphest Tasks: T11015
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19184
Summary:
Depends on D19182. Ref T11015. This changes `path` from `text255` to `longtext` because paths may be arbitrarily long.
It adds `pathDisplay` to prepare for display paths and storage paths having different values. For now, `pathDisplay` is copied from `path` and always has the same value.
Test Plan:
- Ran migration, checked database for sanity (all `pathDisplay` and `path` values identical).
- Added new paths, saw `pathDisplay` and `path` get the same values.
- Added an unreasonably enormous path with far more than 255 characters.
Maniphest Tasks: T11015
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19183
Summary:
Depends on D19181. Ref T11015. This nukes duplicates from the table if they exist, then adds a unique key.
(Duplicates should not exist and can not be added with any recent version of the web UI.)
Test Plan:
- Tried to add duplicates with web UI, didn't have any luck.
- Explicitly added duplicates with manual `INSERT`s.
- Viewed packages in web UI and saw duplicates.
- Ran migrations, got a clean purge and a nice unique key.
- There's still no way to actually hit a duplicate key error in the UI (unless you can collide hashes, I suppose), this is purely a correctness/robustness change.
Maniphest Tasks: T11015
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19182
Summary: Ref T11015. This supports making path names arbitrarily long and putting a proper unique key on the table.
Test Plan:
- Migrated, checked database, saw nice digested indexes.
- Edited a package, saw new rows update with digested indexes.
Maniphest Tasks: T11015
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19181
Summary:
Ref T13099. See that task for discussion. Chrome is unhappy with an MFA form submitting to an endpoint which redirects you to an OAuth URI.
Instead, do the redirect entirely on the client.
Chrome's rationale here isn't obvious, so we may be able to revert this at some point.
Test Plan: Went through the OAuth flow locally, was redirected on the client. Will verify in production.
Maniphest Tasks: T13099
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19177
Summary: Ref T13099. Move most of the "Update" logic to modular transactions
Test Plan: Created and updated revisions. Flushed the task queue. Grepped for `TYPE_UPDATE`. Reviewed update transactions in the timeline and feed.
Maniphest Tasks: T13099
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19175
Summary: Depends on D19173. Ref T13096. Adds an optional, disabled-by-default lock log to make it easier to figure out what is acquiring and holding locks.
Test Plan: Ran `bin/lock log --enable`, `--disable`, `--name`, etc. Saw sensible-looking output with log enabled and daemons restarted. Saw no additional output with log disabled and daemons restarted.
Maniphest Tasks: T13096
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19174
Summary:
Depends on D19166. Ref T13088. When the user scrolls away from a followed log, break the focus lock.
Let users stop following a live log.
Show when lines are added more clearly.
Don't refresh quite as quickly give users a better shot at clicking the stop button.
These behaviors can probably be refined but are at least more plausible and less actively user-hostile than the first version of this behavior was.
Test Plan: Used `write-log --rate` to write a large log slowly. Clicked "Follow Log", followed for a bit. Scrolled away, still got live updates but no more scroll lock. Clicked stop, no more updates.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13088
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19167
Summary:
Depends on D19165. Ref T13088. Currently, in other applications, we use Zero Width Spaces and Javascript "copy" listeners to prevent line numbers from being copied. This isn't terribly elegant.
Modern browsers support a second approach: using psuedo-elements with `content`. Try this in Harbormaster since it's conceptually cleaner, at least. One immediate drawback is that Command-F can't find this text either.
Test Plan: In Safari, Chrome and Firefox, highlighted ranges of lines and copy/pasted text. Got just text (no line numbers) in all cases.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13088
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19166
Summary: Depends on D19164. Ref T13088. Now that the JS behaviors are generic, use them on the Harbormaster standalone page.
Test Plan: Clicked lines and dragged across line ranges. Reloaded pages. Saw expected highlighting behavior in the client and on the server across reloads.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13088
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19165
Summary: Depends on D19163. Ref T13088. Increase the generality of this code so it can be shared with Harbormaster.
Test Plan: Clicked individual lines, clicked-and-dragged, etc., in Paste. Got sensible URI and highlight behaviors.
Maniphest Tasks: T13088
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19164
Summary:
Depends on D19162. Ref T13088. When a user links to `$1234`, we need to render a default view of the log with a piece at the head, a piece at the end, and a piece in the middle.
We also need to figure out the offset for line 1234, or multiple offsets for "1234-2345".
Since the logic views/reads mostly anticipated this it isn't too much of a mess, although there are a couple of bugs this exposes with view specifications that use combinations of parameters which were previously impossible.
Test Plan: Viewed a large log with no line marker. Viewed `$1`. Viewed `$end`. Viewed `$35-40`, etc. Expanded context around logs.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13088
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19163
Summary: Depends on D19156. Ref T13094. This replaces the remaining forms in the file embed view and lightbox with normal download links.
Test Plan: Clicked "Download" and lightbox -> download for embedded files.
Maniphest Tasks: T13094
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19157
Summary:
Depends on D19155. Ref T13094. Ref T4340.
We can't currently implement a strict `form-action 'self'` content security policy because some file downloads rely on a `<form />` which sometimes POSTs to the CDN domain.
Broadly, stop generating these forms. We just redirect instead, and show an interstitial confirm dialog if no CDN domain is configured. This makes the UX for installs with no CDN domain a little worse and the UX for everyone else better.
Then, implement the stricter Content-Security-Policy.
This also removes extra confirm dialogs for downloading Harbormaster build logs and data exports.
Test Plan:
- Went through the plain data export, data export with bulk jobs, ssh key generation, calendar ICS download, Diffusion data, Paste data, Harbormaster log data, and normal file data download workflows with a CDN domain.
- Went through all those workflows again without a CDN domain.
- Grepped for affected symbols (`getCDNURI()`, `getDownloadURI()`).
- Added an evil form to a page, tried to submit it, was rejected.
- Went through the ReCaptcha and Stripe flows again to see if they're submitting any forms.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13094, T4340
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19156
Summary: Depends on D19152. Ref T13088. This adds live log tailing. It is probably not the final version of this feature because it prevents escape once you begin tailing a log.
Test Plan: Used `bin/harbormaster write-log --rate ...` to write a log slowly. Viewed it in the web UI. Clicked "Follow Log". Followed the log until the write finished, a lifetime later.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13088
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19153
Summary: Depends on D19148. Ref T13088. The new rendering always executes range requests for data it needs, and we can satisfy these requests by loading the smallest number of chunks which span that range.
Test Plan: Piped 50,000 lines of Apache log into Harbormaster, viewed it in the new UI, got sensible rendering times and a reasonable amount of data actually going over the wire.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13088
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19149
Summary:
See PHI399. Ref T4340. This header provides an additional layer of protection against various attacks, including XSS attacks which embed inline `<script ...>` or `onhover="..."` content into the document.
**style-src**: The "unsafe-inline" directive affects both `style="..."` and `<style>`. We use a lot of `style="..."`, some very legitimately, so we can't realistically get away from this any time soon. We only use one `<style>` (for monospaced font preferences) but can't disable `<style>` without disabling `style="..."`.
**img-src**: We use "data:" URIs to inline small images into CSS, and there's a significant performance benefit from doing this. There doesn't seem to be a way to allow "data" URIs in CSS without allowing them in the document itself.
**script-src** and **frame-src**: For a small number of flows (Recaptcha, Stripe) we embed external javascript, some of which embeds child elements (or additional resources) into the document. We now whitelist these narrowly on the respective pages.
This won't work with Quicksand, so I've blacklisted it for now.
**connect-src**: We need to include `'self'` for AJAX to work, and any websocket URIs.
**Clickjacking**: We now have three layers of protection:
- X-Frame-Options: works in older browsers.
- `frame-ancestors 'none'`: does the same thing.
- Explicit framebust in JX.Stratcom after initialization: works in ancient IE.
We could probably drop the explicit framebust but it wasn't difficult to retain.
**script tags**: We previously used an inline `<script>` tag to start Javelin. I've moved this to `<data data-javelin-init ...>` tags, which seems to work properly.
**`__DEV__`**: We previously used an inline `<script>` tag to set the `__DEV__` mode flag. I tried using the "initialization" tags for this, but they fire too late. I moved it to `<html data-developer-mode="1">`, which seems OK everywhere.
**CSP Scope**: Only the CSP header on the original request appears to matter -- you can't refine the scope by emitting headers on CSS/JS. To reduce confusion, I disabled the headers on those response types. More headers could be disabled, although we're likely already deep in the land of diminishing returns.
**Initialization**: The initialization sequence has changed slightly. Previously, we waited for the <script> in bottom of the document to evaluate. Now, we go fishing for tags when domcontentready fires.
Test Plan:
- Browsed around in Firefox, Safari and Chrome looking for console warnings. Interacted with various Javascript behaviors. Enabled Quicksand.
- Disabled all the framebusting, launched a clickjacking attack, verified that each layer of protection is individually effective.
- Verified that the XHProf iframe in Darkconsole and the PHPAST frame layout work properly.
- Enabled notifications, verified no complaints about connecting to Aphlict.
- Hit `__DEV__` mode warnings based on the new data attribute.
- Tried to do sketchy stuff with `data:` URIs and SVGs. This works but doesn't seem to be able to do anything dangerous.
- Went through the Stripe and Recaptcha workflows.
- Dumped and examined the CSP headers with `curl`, etc.
- Added a raw <script> tag to a page (as though I'd found an XSS attack), verified it was no longer executed.
Maniphest Tasks: T4340
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19143
Summary:
Depends on D19141. Ref T13088. Some of the fundamental log behaviors like "loading the correct rows" are now a bit better behaved.
The UI is a little less garbage, too.
Test Plan: Viewed some logs and loaded more context by clicking the buttons.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13088
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19142
Summary: Depends on D19139. Ref T13088. This doesn't actually work, but is close enough that a skilled attacker might be able to briefly deceive a small child.
Test Plan:
- Viewed some very small logs under very controlled conditions, saw content.
- Larger logs vaguely do something resembling working correctly.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13088
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19141
Summary:
Depends on D19138. Ref T13088. When we want to read the last part of a logfile //and show accurate line numbers//, we need to be able to get from byte offsets to line numbers somehow.
Our fundamental unit must remain byte offsets, because a test can emit an arbitrarily long line, and we should accommodate it cleanly if a test emits 2GB of the letter "A".
To support going from byte offsets to line numbers, compute a map with periodic line markers throughout the offsets of the file. From here, we can figure out the line numbers for arbitrary positions in the file with only a constant amount of work.
Test Plan: Added unit tests; ran unit tests.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13088
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19139
Summary: Depends on D19137. Ref T13088. This allows `rebuild-log` to skip work if the chunks are already compressed. It also prepares for a future GC which is looking for "text" or "gzip" chunks to throw away in favor of archival into Files; such a GC can use this column to find collectable logs and then write "file" to it, meaning "chunks are gone, this data is only available in Files".
Test Plan: Ran migration, saw logs populate as "text". Ran `rebuild-log`, saw logs rebuild as "gzip".
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13088
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19138
Summary: Depends on D19135. Ref T13088. Denormalize the total log size onto the log itself. This makes reasoning about the log at display time easier, and we don't need to fish around in the database as much to figure out what we're dealing with.
Test Plan: Ran `bin/harbormaster rebuild-log`, saw an existing log populate. Ran `bin/harbormaster write-log`, saw new log write with proper length information.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13088
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19136
Summary: Depends on D19131. Ref T13088. During log finalization, stream the log into Files to support "Download Log", archive to Files, and API access.
Test Plan: Ran `write-log` and `rebuild-log`, saw Files objects generate with log content and appropriate permissions.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13088
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19132
Summary:
Ref T13090. The default width changed recently to become much wider, but the behavior on this control isn't great. Instead:
- Pick a default width somewhere between the two.
- Make the width sticky across show/hide (pressing "f" twice remembers your width instead of resetting it).
- Make the width sticky across reloads (dragging the bar, then reloading the page keeps the bar in the same place).
Test Plan:
- Without settings, loaded page: got medium-width bar.
- Dragged bar wide/narrow, toggled on/off with "f", got persistent width.
- Dragged bar wide/narrow, reloaded page, got persistent width.
- Dragged bar wide/narrow, toggled it off, reloaded page, toggled it on, got persistent width.
Maniphest Tasks: T13090
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19129
Summary:
Ref T13083. Facts has a fair amount of weird hardcoding and duplication of responsibilities. Reduce this somewhat: no more hard-coded fact aggregates, no more database-driven list of available facts, etc. Generally, derive all objective truth from FactEngines. This is more similar to how most other modern applications work.
For clarity, hopefully: rename "FactSpec" to "Fact". Rename "RawFact" to "Datapoint".
Split the fairly optimistic "RawFact" table into an "IntDatapoint" table with less stuff in it, then dimension tables for the object PHIDs and key names. This is primarily aimed at reducing the row size of each datapoint. At the time I originally wrote this code we hadn't experimented much with storing similar data in multiple tables, but this is now more common and has worked well elsewhere (CustomFields, Edges, Ferret) so I don't anticipate this causing issues. If we need more complex or multidimension/multivalue tables later we can accommodate them. The queries a single table supports (like "all facts of all kinds in some time window") don't make any sense as far as I can tell and could likely be UNION ALL'd anyway.
Remove all the aggregation stuff for now, it's not really clear to me what this should look like.
Test Plan: Ran `bin/fact analyze` and viewed web UI. Nothing exploded too violently.
Subscribers: yelirekim
Maniphest Tasks: T13083
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19119
Summary:
Ref T13077. The autosuggester is a little too eager right now, and will eat carriage returns after typing `[` if you never activate the tokenizer.
To fix this, try just canceling sooner. If that doesn't work, we might need to cancel more eagerly by testing to see if the tokenizer is actually open.
Test Plan: Typed `[x]<return>`, got my return instead of getting trapped by the autosuggester.
Maniphest Tasks: T13077
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19110
Summary: Depends on D19107. Ref T13077. The underlying datasource may need some adjustment but this appears to work properly locally.
Test Plan: Typed `[[ por` locally, was suggested "Porcupine Facts". Typed `[[ / ]]`, saw it render as a reference to the wiki root instead of the install root.
Maniphest Tasks: T13077
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19108
Summary:
Depends on D19106. Fixes T5941. Ref T13077. Allows you to find Phriction documents as suggestions from global quick search.
Also supports `w` to jump to Phriction and `w query` to query Phriction.
The actual query logic for the datasource may need some tweaking after it collides with reality, but seems to produce fairly reasonable results in local testing against synthetic data.
Test Plan: Searched for "Porcupine Facts", "Travel Companions", and other useful local pages. Searched for `w`. Searched for `w zebra facts`.
Maniphest Tasks: T13077, T5941
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19107
Summary:
Depends on D19099. Ref T13077. Updates Phriction documents to string constants to make API interactions cleaner and statuses more practical to extend.
This does not seem to require any transaction migrations because none of the Phriction transactions actually store status values: status is always a side effect of other edits.
Test Plan: Created, edited, deleted, moved documents. Saw appropriate UI cues. Browsed and filtered documents by status in the index.
Maniphest Tasks: T13077
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19100
Summary:
Depends on D19095. Ref T6203. Ref T13077. This column is nullable in an inconsistent way. Make it non-nullable.
Also clean up one more content query on the history view.
Test Plan: Ran migration, then created and edited documents without providing a descriptino or hitting `NULL` exceptions.
Maniphest Tasks: T13077, T6203
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19096
Summary: Ref T13077. Prepares for modern API access to document history using standard "v3" APIs.
Test Plan: Ran migration, verified PHIDs appeared in the database. Created/edited a document, got even more PHIDs in the database.
Maniphest Tasks: T13077
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19092
Summary:
Ref T13072. See PHI361. The bug in T10746 where aborting builds didn't propagate properly to the buildable was fixed, but existing builds are still stuck "Building".
Since it doesn't look like anything will moot this before these changes promote to `stable`, just migrate these builds into "failed".
Test Plan: Ran migration, saw it affect only relevant builds and correctly fail them.
Maniphest Tasks: T13072
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19091
Summary: Fixes T13080. The banner wasn't properly included in the sleep/wake logic.
Test Plan:
Mentioned `Dxxx` on a task. Enabled persistent chat to activate Quicksand. Reloaded page. Clicked `Dxxx`. Scrolled down until a changeset header appeared. Pressed back button.
- Before patch: ended up on task, with header still around.
- After patch: ended up on task, with header properly vanquished.
Pressed "forward", ended up back on the revision with the header again.
Maniphest Tasks: T13080
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19086
Summary: Ref T13054. Companion storage change for D19062.
Test Plan: Applied migration and adjustments. Viewed messages in Harbormaster; created them with `harbormaster.sendmessage`; processed them with `bin/phd debug task`.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13054
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19063
Summary: Depends on D19056. Fixes T8475. Ref T13054. Merges "ModernHunk" back into "Hunk".
Test Plan: Grepped for `modernhunk`. Reviewed revisions. Created a new revision. Used `bin/differential migrate-hunk` to migrate hunks between storage formats and back.
Maniphest Tasks: T13054, T8475
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19057
Summary: Ref T13054. Ref T8475. This table has had no readers or writers for more than a year after it was migrated to the modern table.
Test Plan: Ran migration, verified that all the data was still around.
Maniphest Tasks: T13054, T8475
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19056
Summary: These transaction constants are flipped, which can produce the wrong result in some cases.
Test Plan: `./bin/storage upgrade -f --apply phabricator:20180208.maniphest.02.populate.php`
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19054
Summary: Ref T11330. Adds general support for webhooks. This is still rough and missing a lot of pieces -- and not yet useful for anything -- but can make HTTP requests.
Test Plan: Used `bin/webhook call ...` to complete requests to a test endpoint.
Maniphest Tasks: T11330
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19045
Summary: See PHI356. Adds inline comment and done counts to the filetree. Also makes the filetree wider by default.
Test Plan: Fiddled with filetrees in different browsers on different revisions. Added inlines, marked them done/undone.
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19041
Summary: See PHI356. Makes it easier to pick out change types in the filetree view in Differential.
Test Plan: Created a diff with adds, copies, moves, deletions, and binary files. Viewed in Differential, had an easier time picking stuff out.
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19040
Summary:
Ref T4434. Although some of the use cases for this data are better fits for Facts, this data is reasonable to track separately.
I have an approximate view of it already ("closed, ordered by date modified") that's useful to review things that were fixed recently. This lets us make that view more effective.
This just adds (and populates) the storage. Followups will add Conduit, Export, Search, and UI support.
This is slightly tricky because merges work oddly (see T13020).
Test Plan:
- Ran migration, checked database for sensible results.
- Created a task in open/closed status, got the right database values.
- Modified a task to close/open it, got the right values.
- Merged an open task, got updates.
Maniphest Tasks: T4434
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19037
Summary: Ref T13053. See PHI126. Add an explicit "Mute" action to kill mail and notifications for a particular object.
Test Plan: Muted and umuted an object while interacting with it. Saw mail route appropriately.
Maniphest Tasks: T13053
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19033
Summary:
Depends on D19012. Ref T13053. In D19012, I've changed "Thread-Topic" to always use PHIDs.
This change drops the selective on-object storage we have to track the original, human-readable title for objects.
Even if we end up backing out the "Thread-Topic" change, we'd be better off storing this in a table in the Mail app which just has `<objectPHID, first subject we used when sending mail for that object>`, since then we get the right behavior without needing every object to have this separate field.
Test Plan: Grepped for `original`, `originalName`, `originalTitle`, etc.
Reviewers: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13053
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19013
Summary:
This is currently `🎉`, which I'd never have guessed.
(This isn't a super scalable approach, but this emoji is in particularly common use. See also T12644.)
Test Plan: Typed `:party`, `:confet`, etc.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18993
Summary: See PHI333. Some of the cleanup at the tail end of the bulk edit changes made "Assign To" stop working properly, since we don't strip the `array(...)` off the `array(PHID)` value we receive.
Test Plan:
- Used bulk editor to assign and unassign tasks (single value datasource).
- Used bulk editor to change projects (multi-value datasource).
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18975
Summary:
See PHI325. When a transaction group in Differential (or Pholio) only has an inline comment, it renders with a "V" caret but no actual dropdown menu.
This caret renders in a "disabled" color, but the color is "kinda grey". The "active" color is "kinda grey with a dab of blue". Here's what they look like today:
{F5401581}
Just remove it.
Test Plan: Viewed one of these, no longer saw the inactive caret.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18963
When we change a nullable column to a non-nullable column, we can get a
data truncation error if any value was "NULL".
This is exceptionally unusual, but our two very oldest Herald rules have
a "NULL" policy on `secure`.
Summary:
Depends on D18939. Ref T13047. Symbol lookup can be activated from a diff (in Differential or Diffusion) or from the static view of a file at a particular commit.
In the latter case, we need to figure out the path a little differently. The character and line number approaches still work as written.
Test Plan:
- Command-clicked symbols in the Diffusion browse view with blame on and off; saw path, line and char populate properly.
- Command-clicked symbols in Differential diff view to check I didn't break anything.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13047
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18940
Summary: Depends on D18937. Ref T13047. When available, provide character positions so external indexers can return more accurate results.
Test Plan: Clicked symbols in Safari, Firefox and Chrome, got sensible-looking character positions.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13047
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18939
Summary:
Ref T13047. In some reasonable cases, knowing the path and line number where a symbol appears is useful in ranking or filtering the set of matching symbols.
Giving symbol sources more information can't hurt, and it's generally free for us to include this context since we just need to grab it out of the document and pass it along.
We can't always get this data (for example, if a user types `s idx` into global search, we have no clue) but this is similar to other types of context which are only available sometimes (like which repository a symbol appears in).
Test Plan: Command-clicked some symbols in 1-up (unified) and 2-up (side-by-side) diff views with symbol indexes configured. Got accurate path and line information in the URI I was redirected to.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13047
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18936
Summary:
Depends on D18926. Ref T6203. Ref T13048. Herald rule repetition policies are stored as integers but treated as strings in most contexts.
After D18926, the integer stuff is almost totally hidden inside `HeraldRule` and getting rid of it completely isn't too tricky.
Do so now.
Test Plan:
- Created "only the first time" and "every time" rules. Did a SELECT on their rows in the database.
- Ran migrations, got a clean bill of health from `storage adjust`.
- Did another SELECT on the rows, saw a faithful conversion to strings "every" and "first".
- Edited and reviewed rules, swapping them between "every" and "first".
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13048, T6203
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18927
Summary:
Ref T13048. This migration is from January 2012 and probably only impacted Facebook.
It references `HeraldRepetitionPolicyConfig`, which I'd like to change significantly. I initially just replaced the constant with a literal `0`, but I don't think there's any actual value in retaining this migration nowadays.
The cost of removing this migration is: if you installed Phabricator before January 2012 and haven't upgraded since then, you'll have a few more rows in the `APPLIED` table than necessary. Herald will still work correctly.
Test Plan: Reading.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13048
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18924
Summary:
Depends on D18907. Ref T13043. Ref T12509. We have some weird old password digest behavior that isn't terribly concerning, but also isn't great.
Specifically, old passwords were digested in weird ways before being hashed. Notably, account passwords were digested with usernames, so your password stops working if your username is chagned. Not the end of the world, but silly.
Mark all existing hashes as "v1", and automatically upgrade then when they're used or changed. Some day, far in the future, we could stop supporting these legacy digests and delete the code and passwords and just issue upgrade advice ("Passwords which haven't been used in more than two years no longer work."). But at least get things on a path toward sane, modern behavior.
Test Plan: Ran migration. Spot-checked that everthing in the database got marked as "v1". Used an existing password to login successfully. Verified that it was upgraded to a `null` (modern) digest. Logged in with it again.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13043, T12509
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18908
Summary:
Ref T13043. After D18903, this data has migrated to shared infrastructure and has no remaining readers or writers.
Just delete it now, since the cost of a mistake here is very small (users need to "Forgot Password?" and pick a new password).
Test Plan: Grepped for `passwordHash`, `passwordSalt`, and variations.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13043
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18904
Summary:
Ref T13043. This moves user account passwords to the new shared infrastructure.
There's a lot of code changes here, but essentially all of it is the same as the VCS password logic in D18898.
Test Plan:
- Ran migration.
- Spot checked table for general sanity.
- Logged in with an existing password.
- Hit all error conditions on "change password", "set password", "register new account" flows.
- Verified that changing password logs out other sessions.
- Verified that revoked passwords of a different type can't be selected.
- Changed passwords a bunch.
- Verified that salt regenerates properly after password change.
- Tried to login with the wrong password, which didn't work.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13043
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18903
Summary:
Ref T13043. In D18898 I moved VCS passwords to the new shared infrastructure.
Before account passwords can move, we need to make two changes:
- For legacy reasons, VCS passwords and Account passwords have different "digest" algorithms. Both are more complicated than they should be, but we can't easily fix it without breaking existing passwords. Add a `PasswordHashInterface` so that objects which can have passwords hashes can implement custom digest logic for each password type.
- Account passwords have a dedicated external salt (`PhabricatorUser->passwordSalt`). This is a generally reasonable thing to support (since not all hashers are self-salting) and we need to keep it around so existing passwords still work. Add salt support to `AuthPassword` and make it generate/regenerate when passwords are updated.
Then add a nice story about password digestion.
Test Plan: Ran migrations. Used an existing VCS password; changed VCS password. Tried to use a revoked password. Unit tests still pass. Grepped for callers to legacy `PhabricatorHash::digestPassword()`, found none.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13043
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18900
Summary:
Ref T13043. After D18898, this has been migrated to new, more modern storage and no longer has any readers or writers.
One migration from long ago (early 2014) is affected. Since this is ancient and the cost of dropping this is small (see inline), I just dropped it.
I'll note this in the changelog.
Test Plan: Ran migrations, got a clean bill of health from `storage status`. Grepped for removed symbol.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13043
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18899
Summary:
Ref T13043. Migrate VCS passwords away from their dedicated table to new the new shared infrastructure.
Future changes will migrate account passwords and remove the old table.
Test Plan:
- Ran migrations.
- Cloned with the same password that was configured before the migrations (worked).
- Cloned with a different, invalid password (failed).
- Changed password.
- Cloned with old password (failed).
- Cloned with new password (worked).
- Deleted password in web UI.
- Cloned with old password (failed).
- Set password to the same password as it currently is set to (worked, no "unique" collision).
- Set password to account password. !!This (incorrectly) works for now until account passwords migrate, since the uniqueness check can't see them yet.!!
- Set password to a new unique password.
- Cloned (worked).
- Revoked the password with `bin/auth revoke`.
- Verified web UI shows "no password set".
- Verified that pull no longer works.
- Verified that I can no longer select the revoked password.
- Verified that accounts do not interact:
- Tried to set account B to account A's password (worked).
- Tried to set account B to a password revoked on account A (worked).
- Spot checked the `password` and `passwordtransaction` tables for saniity.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13043
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18898
Summary:
Ref T13043. Currently:
- Passwords are stored separately in the "VCS Passwords" and "User" tables and don't share as much code as they could.
- Because User objects are all over the place in the code, password hashes are all over the place too (i.e., often somewhere in process memory). This is a very low-severity, theoretical sort of issue, but it could make leaving a stray `var_dump()` in the code somewhere a lot more dangerous than it otherwise is. Even if we never do this, third-party developers might. So it "feels nice" to imagine separating this data into a different table that we rarely load.
- Passwords can not be //revoked//. They can be //deleted//, but users can set the same password again. If you believe or suspect that a password may have been compromised, you might reasonably prefer to revoke it and force the user to select a //different// password.
This change prepares to remedy these issues by adding a new, more modern dedicated password storage table which supports storing multiple password types (account vs VCS), gives passwords real PHIDs and transactions, supports DestructionEngine, supports revocation, and supports `bin/auth revoke`.
It doesn't actually make anything use this new table yet. Future changes will migrate VCS passwords and account passwords to this table.
(This also gives third party applications a reasonable place to store password hashes in a consistent way if they have some need for it.)
Test Plan: Added some basic unit tests to cover general behavior. This is just skeleton code for now and will get more thorough testing when applications move.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13043
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18894
Summary:
See PHI173. Currently, Herald has an "Assign to" action for tasks, and you can specify custom fields with datasource values (like users or projects) that have a limit (like 1 "Owner", or 12 "Jury Members").
Herald doesn't support these limits right now, so you can write `[ Assign to ][ X, Y, Z ]`. This just means "Assign to X", but make it more clear by actually enforcing the limit in the UI.
Test Plan:
- Created a "projects" custom field with limit 1.
- Tried to create actions that 'assign to' or 'set custom field to' more than one thing, got helpfully rebuffed by the UI.
- Created an "add subscribers" action with more than one value.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18887
Summary:
Fixes T13042. This hooks up the new "silent" mode from D18882 and makes it actually work.
The UI (where we tell you to go run some command and then reload the page) is pretty clumsy, but should solve some problems for now and can be cleaned up eventually. The actual mechanics (timeline aggregation, Herald interaction, etc.) are on firmer ground.
Test Plan:
- Made a normal bulk edit, got mail and feed stories.
- Made a silent bulk edit, no mail and no feed.
- Saw "Silent Edit" marker in timeline for silent edits:
{F5386245}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13042
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18883
Summary: Ref T13025. We're getting kind of a lot of actions, so put them in nice groups so they're easier to work with.
Test Plan: {F5386038}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13025
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18880
Summary:
Depends on D18866. Ref T13025. Fixes T12415. This makes the old "Add Comment" action work, and adds support for a new "Set description to" action (possibly, I could imagine "append description" being useful some day, maybe).
The implementation is just a `<textarea />`, not a whole fancy remarkup box with `[Bold] [Italic] ...` buttons, preview, typeaheads, etc. It would be nice to enrich this eventually but doing the rendering in pure JS is currently very involved.
This requires a little bit of gymnastics to get the transaction populated properly, and adds some extra validation since we need some code there anyway.
Test Plan:
- Changed the description of a task via bulk editor.
- Added a comment to a task via bulk editor.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13025, T12415
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18867
Summary:
Depends on D18862. See PHI173. Ref T13025. Fixes T10005. This redefines bulk edits in terms of EditEngine fields, rather than hard-coding the whole thing.
Only text fields -- and, specifically, only the "Title" field -- are supported after this change. Followup changes will add more bulk edit parameter types and broader field support.
However, the title field now works without any Maniphest-specific code, outside of the small amount of binding code in the `ManiphestBulkEditor` subclass.
Test Plan: Used the bulk edit workflow to change the titles of tasks.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13025, T10005
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18863
Summary:
Depends on D18805. Ref T13025. Fixes T10268.
Instead of using a list of IDs for the bulk editor, power it with SearchEngine queries. This gives us the full power of SearchEngine and lets us use a query key instead of a list of 20,000 IDs to avoid issues with URL lengths.
Also, split it into a base `BulkEngine` and per-application subclasses. This moves us toward T10005 and universal support for bulk operations.
Also:
- Renames most of "batch" to "bulk": we're curently inconsitent about this, I like "bulk" better since I think it's more clear if you don't regularly interact with `.bat` files, and newer stuff mostly uses "bulk".
- When objects in the result set can't be edited because you don't have permission, show the status more clearly.
This probably breaks some stuff a bit since I refactored so heavily, but it seems mostly OK from poking around. I'll clean up anything I missed in followups to deal with remaining items on T13025.
Test Plan:
{F5302300}
- Bulk edited from Maniphest.
- Bulk edited from a workboard (no more giant `?ids=....` in the URL).
- Hit most of the error conditions, I think?
- Clicked the "Cancel" button.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13025, T10268
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18806
Summary:
Ref T13025. See PHI50. Fixes T11286. Ref T10005. Begin modernizing the bulk editor.
For T10005 ("move the bulk editor to modern infrastructure"), rewrite the rendering of the editable set so that it is application-agnostic and can work with any kind of object.
For T11286 ("let users de-select items in the working set"), make the working set editable.
Test Plan:
{F5302158}
- Deselected some objects, applied an edit, saw the edit apply to only selected objects.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13025, T11286, T10005
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18805
Summary:
See PHI242. All use cases for this that I know of are pretty hacky, but they don't seem perilous, and it's easier than webhooks.
See P1895, T10183, and T9853 for me previously refusing to implement this since all those use cases were also pretty bad.
Test Plan:
- Wrote a rule to add comments, saw it add comments.
- Reviewed summary, re-edited rule, reviewed transcript to check that all the strings worked OK.
- Wrote a new rule for a non-commentable object (a blog) to make sure I wasn't offered the "Add a comment" action.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18823
Summary:
Ref T10233. See PHI231. When users ignore the `arc land` prompt about bad revision states, make it explicitly clear in the transaction log that they broke the rules.
You can currently figure this out by noticing that there's no "This revision is accepted and ready to land." message, but it's unrealistic to expect non-expert users to look for the //absence// of a message to indicate something, and this state change is often relevant.
Test Plan: {F5302351}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T10233
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18808