Summary:
Ref T13516. Currently, the "File Tree" element is a semi-dynamic side panel that's implemented as a special mode of a side nav panel.
This implementation is fairly clunky, and arose from organic growth out of the side nav. As such, it has some weird behaviors, doesn't have builtin support for show/hide, and can't generalize easily.
Introduce a "FormationView" which supports loading a page up with piles of side panels in various modes.
Test Plan: No callers and no user-visible impact.
Maniphest Tasks: T13516
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21150
Summary:
Ref T13515. This restores the "Open in Editor" behavior to Diffusion, and makes "\" work there.
The URI pattern is now sent as a structured template to the client, so the code will work properly if a file path contains "%l".
Test Plan:
- Clicked "Open in Editor" and pressed "\" in Diffusion when viewing a file.
- Clicked a line, hit "\", got the file opened to that line.
Maniphest Tasks: T13515
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21149
Summary:
Ref T13515. Currently, "Open in Editor" only works with a file-level selection.
- If we have a change-level or inline-level selection, open the parent changeset.
- If we have no selection, but the banner is showing something, open the fine shown in the banner.
Test Plan: With files, inlines, changes, and no selection, pressed "\". Saw files pop open in my external editor.
Maniphest Tasks: T13515
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21148
Summary: Ref T13515. External editor URIs currently depend on repositories having callsigns, but callsigns are no longer required. Add some variables to support configuring this feature for repositories that do not have callsigns.
Test Plan: Changed settings to use new variables, saw links generate appropriately.
Maniphest Tasks: T13515
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21147
Summary:
Ref T13515.
- Previously valid editor URIs may become invalid without being changed (if an administrator removes a protocol from the list, for example), but this isn't explained very well. Show an error on the settings page if the current value isn't usable.
- Generate a list of functions from an authority in the parser.
- Generate a list of protocols from configuration.
Test Plan: {F7370872}
Maniphest Tasks: T13515
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21146
Summary:
Ref T13515. Settings currently has some highly specialized code for rendering "Changes saved." messages. The "saved" state is communicated across a redirect-after-POST by adding `/saved/` to the end of the URI.
This isn't great. It needs a lot of moving pieces, including special accommodations in routing rules. It's user-visible. It has the wrong behavior if you reload the page or navigate directly to the "saved" URI.
Try this scheme, which is also pretty sketchy but seems like an upgrade on the balance:
- Set a cookie on the redirect which identifies the form we just saved.
- On page startup: if this cookie exists, save the value and clear it.
- If the current page started with a cookie identifying the form on the page, treat the page as a "saved" page.
This supports passing a small amount of state across the redirect-after-POST flow, and when you reload the page it doesn't keep the message around. Applications don't need to coordinate it, either. Seems somewhat cleaner?
Test Plan: In Firefox, Safari, and Chrome: saved settings, saw a "Saved changes" banner without any URI junk. Reloaded page, saw banner vanish properly.
Maniphest Tasks: T13515
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21144
Summary:
Ref T13515. Currently, opening a file to a particular line in an external editor relies on replacing "%l" with "%l" (which is escaped as "%25l") on the server, and then replacing "%25l" with the line number on the client. This will fail if the file path (or any other variable) contains "%l" in its unencoded form.
The parser also can't identify invalid variables.
Pull the parser out, formalize it, and make it generate an intermediate representation which can be sent to the client and reconstituted.
(This temporarily breaks Diffusion and permanently removes the weird, ancient integration in Dark Console.)
Test Plan:
- Added a bunch of tests for the actual parser.
- Used "Open in Editor" in Differential.
Maniphest Tasks: T13515
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21143
Summary: Ref T13515. No callsites actually use this, most editors don't support it, it doesn't seem terribly useful for the ones that do, it makes template-based APIs for line-number substitution complicated, and we can probably just loop on `window.open()` anyway.
Test Plan: Grepped for affected symbols, found no more references. Loaded settings page, saw no more setting.
Maniphest Tasks: T13515
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21142
Summary:
Ref T13515. Adding "\" ("Open in External Editor") made this slighlty worse, but it was already pretty bad.
Long ago the keys had a special style on them, but this got changed and dropped somewhere around D16568 -- although at the time, I think they still had a grey background (see T11654).
Some later change removed this background.
Put the background back and separate the keystrokes into groups.
Test Plan: {F7370615}
Maniphest Tasks: T13515
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21141
Summary:
Ref T13515. It's not intuitive that these settings are "Display Preferences", even thought they're intenrally related to some of the other display preferences.
Give them a separate group.
Test Plan: {F7370500}
Maniphest Tasks: T13515
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21140
Summary:
Ref T13455. Update the other "view state" properties to work like "highlight" now works.
Some complexity here arises from these concerns:
- In "View Standalone", we render the changeset inline. This is useful for debugging/development, and desirable to retain.
- In all other cases, we render the changeset with AJAX.
So the client needs to be able to learn about the "state" properties of the changeset on two different flows. Prior to this change, each pathway had a fair amount of unique code.
Then, some bookkeeping issues:
- At inital rendering time, we may not know which renderer will be selected: it may be based on the client viewport dimensions.
- Prior to this change, the client didn't separate "value of the property for the changeset as rendered" and "desired value of the property".
Test Plan:
- Viewed changes in Differential, Diffusion, and in standalone mode.
- Toggled renderer, character sets, and document engine (this one isn't terribly useful). Reloaded, saw them stick.
- Started typing a comment, cancelled it, hit the undo UI.
Maniphest Tasks: T13455
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21138
Summary:
Ref T13455. Add container-level storage for persistent view state, and persist "Highlight As..." inside it.
The storage generates a "PhabricatorChangesetViewState" configuration object as an output.
When preferences are expressed on a diff and that diff is later attached to a revision, we attempt to copy the preferences.
The internal storage tracks per-changeset settings, but currently always uses "last update wins" to apply the settings in the UI.
Test Plan:
- Viewed revisions, changed highlighting, reloaded. Saw highlighting stick in revision view and standalone view.
- Viewed commits, changed highlighting, reloaded. Saw highlighting stick.
- Created a diff, changed highlighting, turned it into a revision, saw highlighting persist.
Subscribers: jmeador, PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13455
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21137
Summary:
Ref T13515. We "shield" some changesets, including generated code and intradiffs with no intermediate changes.
These files don't get shielded if they have inline comments.
But, if the viewer has collapsed all the comments, we can shield the file again.
Test Plan:
- Created a change affecting files A and B, with three diffs:
- Touch A and B.
- Touch B only.
- Touch nothing.
- Added an inline to A and collapsed it.
- Viewed Diff 1 vs Diff 2:
- Saw A collapse with a note about inlines.
- Saw B changes, normally.
- Viewed Diff 2 vs Diff 3:
- Saw A collapse with a note about inlines.
- Saw B collapse normally.
- Uncollapsed the inline, viewed 1v2 and 2v3, saw A expand in both cases.
Maniphest Tasks: T13515
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21136
Summary: Ref T13515. See PHI1661. If a file is selected, add a keystroke to click the "Open in External Editor" link.
Test Plan: In Safari, Chrome, and Firefox: used "J" to select a file, then "\" to open it in an external editor. (In Safari and Chrome, this prompts.)
Maniphest Tasks: T13515
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21135
Summary: Fixes T13512. Archived packages in Owners are missing hinting, but should have it.
Test Plan:
Before:
{F7369122}
After:
{F7369128}
Maniphest Tasks: T13512
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21134
Summary:
Fixes T13508. The "Notification" and "Messages" icons in the menu bar have a CSS transition animation on hover.
In Chrome, when this element moves up 2px, you can get a flicker in and out of the hover state if the user's cursor is at the very bottom of the element, since the bounding box for the element is rapidly sliding in and out of the area under the cursor.
To fix this: as we move the element up, also make it taller.
Test Plan: In Safari, Chrome, and Firefox: put my cursor at the very bottom of the element, no longer saw any animation flickering.
Maniphest Tasks: T13508
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21133
Summary:
Fixes T13510. This migration currently fails because it tries to affect the "paste" database, but when it runs this database will be named "pastebin".
Since the cost of fixing it in place or moving it past the rename migration both seem relatively high (and the cost of throwing it away is plausibly zero) just throw it for now.
Test Plan: Looked at file, saw no more code that can execute.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13510
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21132
Summary:
Ref PHI1292. Enable fulltext searchs in paste. Maybe this should only index a snippet instead of the entire content?
Also updates table names in `PhabricatorPasteQuery`.
Test Plan: Created some pastes, indexed them, searched for them.
Reviewers: amckinley
Subscribers: codeblock, Korvin, PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20650
Summary: Ref T13511. Currently, Ferret fulltext field functions (like "title:") are hard-coded. Modularize them so extensions may define new ones.
Test Plan: Added a new custom field which emits data for the indexer, searched for "animal-noises:moo", "animal-noises:-", etc., in global search and application search.
Maniphest Tasks: T13511
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21131
Summary:
Ref T13511. Ferret functions currently define "aliases", and some applications override the default aliases.
This probably isn't really the right model, since it means the available function aliases in global search depend on the types of documents you're searching for. This isn't fundamentally unworkable but is kind of weird.
Regardless, these don't actually work. Searching for "description:x" is a syntax error.
Since they don't work, it's a good bet no one is relying on them. Just get rid of them until there's a clearer argument for the feature.
Test Plan: Grepped for "getFunctionMap", got no other hits. Ran some queries with the alias functions, got syntax errors.
Maniphest Tasks: T13511
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21130
Summary:
Ref T13501. Depends on D21127. With the "prefix" behavior removed in D21127, we now have two virtually identical copies of the same code.
The newer one in Ferret is better: it slices utf8 correctly and is slightly more efficient on large inputs. Pull it out and make all callers call into it.
Test Plan:
- Grepped for all affected symbols.
- Ran `bin/search index --force ...` to reindex various objects (tasks, files).
- Searched for things in the UI.
Maniphest Tasks: T13501
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21128
Summary:
Ref T13501. The older ngram code has some "prefix" behavior that tries to handle cases where a user issues a very short (one or two character) query.
This code doesn't work, presumably never worked, and can not be made to work (or, at least, I don't see a way, and am fairly sure one does not exist).
If the user searches for "xy", we can find trigrams in the form "xy*" using the index, but not in the form "*xy". The code makes a misguided effort to look for " xy", but this will only find "xy" in words that begin with "xy", like "xylophone".
For example, searching Files for "om" does not currently find "random.txt".
Remove this behavior. Without engaging the trigram index, these queries fall back to an unidexed "LIKE" table scan, but that's about the best we can do.
Test Plan: Searched for "om", hit "random.txt".
Maniphest Tasks: T13501
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21127
Summary: Ref T13511. This function does nothing interesting and has no callers.
Test Plan: Grepped for callers.
Maniphest Tasks: T13511
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21126
Summary:
Ref T13507. We currently compress normal responses, but do not compress file data responses because most files we serve are images and already compressed.
However, there are some cases where large files may be highly compressible (e.g., huge XML files stored in LFS) and we can benefit from compressing responses.
Make a reasonable guess about whether compression is beneficial and enable compression if we guess it is.
Test Plan:
- Used `curl ...` to download an image with `Accept-Encoding: gzip`. Got raw image data in the response (as expected, because we don't expect images to be worthwhile to recompress).
- Used `curl ...` to download a text file with `Accept-Encoding: gzip`. Got a compressed response. Decompressed the response into the original file.
Maniphest Tasks: T13507
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21125
Summary:
See <https://discourse.phabricator-community.org/t/storage-upgrade-error/3748>.
It is broadly unsafe for migrations to use "save()". If the object gains new fields later, the query will include "SET newField = X", which will fail against the old schema which is in the process of being upgraded.
Instead, migrations must issue raw SQL against the schema as it is expected to exist at the time the migration executes.
Migrations have followed this rule for a long time, but this ~6 year old migration was overlooked. Update it to issue a raw query to perform the policy update.
Test Plan: This is somewhat flimsy since rebuilding a genuine reproduction case is messy, but used "bin/storage --apply ..." to at least get the new query to execute against modern Phabricator without issues.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21124
Summary:
See <https://hackerone.com/reports/850114>.
An attacker with administrator privileges can configure "notification.servers" to connect to internal services, either directly or with chosen parameters by selecting an attacker-controlled service and having it issue a "Location" redirect.
Generally, we allow this attack to occur. The same administrator can use an authentication provider or a VCS repository to perform the same attack, and we can't reasonably harden these workflows without breaking things that users expect to be able to do.
There's no reason this particular variation of the attack needs to be allowable, though, and the current behavior isn't consistent with how other similar things work.
- Hide the "notification.servers" configuration, which also locks it. This is similar to other modern service/server configuration.
- Don't follow redirects on these requests. Aphlict should never issue a "Location" header, so if we encounter one something is misconfigured. Declining to follow this header likely makes the issue easier to debug.
Test Plan:
- Viewed configuration in web UI.
- Configured a server that "Location: ..." redirects, got a followed redirect before and a failure afterward.
{F7365973}
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21123
Summary:
Ref T13507. Now that we handle processing of "Content-Encoding: gzip" headers by default, this setup check can get a decompressed body back. Since it specifically wants a raw body back, disable this behavior.
Also, "@" a couple things which can get in the way if they fail now that error handling is more aggressive about throwing on warnings.
Test Plan: Ran setup check after other changes in T13507, got clean result.
Maniphest Tasks: T13507
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21122
Summary: Ref T13507. If we believe the server can accept "Content-Encoding: gzip" requests, make the claim in an "X-Conduit-Capabilities" header in responses. Clients can use request compression on subsequent requests.
Test Plan: See D21119 for the client piece.
Maniphest Tasks: T13507
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21120
Summary: Ref T13507. See that task for discussion.
Test Plan: Faked different response behaviors and hit both variations of this error.
Maniphest Tasks: T13507
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21116
Summary:
See PHI1692. Currently, the Aphlict log is ridiculously verbose. As an initial pass at improving this:
- When starting in "debug" mode, pass "--debug=1" to Node.
- In Node, separate logging into "log" (lower-volume, more-important messages) and "trace" (higher-volume, less-important messages).
- Only print "trace" messages in "debug" mode.
Test Plan: Ran Aphlict in debug and non-debug modes. Behavior unchanged in debug mode, but log has more sensible verbosity in non-debug mode.
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21115
Summary:
See PHI1692. Currently, it's hard to get a local profile or "--trace" of some Diffusion API methods, since they always proxy via HTTP -- even if the local node can serve the request.
This always-proxy behavior is intentional (so we always go down the same code path, to limit surprises) but inconvenient when debugging. Allow an operator to connect to a node which can serve a request and issue a `--local` call to force in-process execution.
This makes it straightforward to "--trace" or "--xprofile" the call.
Test Plan: Ran `bin/conduit call ...` with and without `--local` using a Diffusion method on a clustered repository. Without `--local`, saw proxy via HTTP. With `--local`, saw in-process execution.
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21114
Summary: Ref T13509. In `title:big "red" dog`, keep "title" sticky across all three terms, since this seems like it's probably the best match for intent.
Test Plan: Added unit tests; ran unit tests.
Maniphest Tasks: T13509
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21111
Summary:
Ref T13509. Now that the compiler can parse these queries, actually implement them.
These are fairly easy to implement:
- For present, just "JOIN". If it works, the field is present.
- For absent, we "LEFT JOIN" and then "WHERE any_column IS NULL".
Test Plan: Searched for various documents with and without fields present, got sensible results in Maniphest. For example, "body:-" finds tasks with no body, "body:- duck" finds tasks with no body and "duck" elsewhere in the content, and so on.
Maniphest Tasks: T13509
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21110
Summary:
Ref T13509. Since `title:- cat` is now ambiguous, forbid spaces after operators.
Also, forbid spaces inside operators, although this has no effect today.
Test Plan: Added unit tests, ran unit tests.
Maniphest Tasks: T13509
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21109
Summary:
Ref T13509. Currently, functions are "sticky", but this stickness is in the query execution layer.
Instead:
- move stickiness to the query compiler; and
- make it so that functions are not sticky if their arguments are quoted.
For example:
- `title:x y` previously meant `title:x title:y` (and still does). The "title:" is sticky.
- `title:"x" y` previously meant `title:x title:y`. It now means `title:x all:y`. The "title:" is not sticky because the argument is quoted.
Test Plan: Added unit tests, ran unit tests.
Maniphest Tasks: T13509
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21108
Summary: Ref T13509. Parse "xyz:-" as "xyz is absent" and "xyz:~" as "xyz is present". These are new operators which the compiler emits separately from "not" and "substring".
Test Plan: Added unit tests, ran unit tests.
Maniphest Tasks: T13509
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21107
Summary:
Ref T13509. Certain query tokens like `title:=""` are currently accepted by the parser but discarded, and have no impact on the query. This isn't desirable.
Instead, require that tokens making an assertion about field content must be nonempty.
Test Plan: Added unit tests, made them pass.
Maniphest Tasks: T13509
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21106
Summary: Ref T13490. This simplifies some client behavior in the general case.
Test Plan: Called API method, saw URIs.
Maniphest Tasks: T13490
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21105
Summary:
See PHI1697. If a diff is not attached to a revision (for example, if it was created with "arc diff --only"), but is attached to a repository, it is supposed to be visible only to users who can see that repository.
It currently skips this extended policy check and may incorrectly be visible to too many users.
(Once a diff is attached to a revision, this rule is enforced properly via the revision policy.)
Test Plan:
- Set repository R to be visible only to Alice.
- As Alice, created a diff from a working copy of repository R with "arc diff --only".
- As Bailey, viewed the diff.
- Before: visible diff.
- After: policy exception (as expected).
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21103
Summary: Ref T13490. This simplifies mostly-theoretical cases where you're accessing Phabricator via arc-over-ssh and the Conduit protocol + domain may differ from the production protocol + domain.
Test Plan: Called API via web UI, saw sensible URI values in results.
Maniphest Tasks: T13490
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21102
Summary:
Ref T13507. See that task for discussion. This check appears to be obsolete in all common cases and misfires if the client submits compressed requests.
Since the cases where it could still trigger correctly are extremely rare and should still have plausible behavior, just remove it.
Test Plan: Grepped for calls.
Maniphest Tasks: T13507
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21077
Summary: Ref T13505. See that task for details. When a class has exactly one "@task" block, this API returns a string. Some day, this should be made more consistent.
Test Plan: Viewed a class with exactly one "@task", no more fatal. Viewed classes with zero and more than one "@task" attributes, got clean renderings.
Maniphest Tasks: T13505
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21062
Summary: Ref T13505. See that task for discussion.
Test Plan: Ran `diviner generate` locally, found a page fataling on this `strlen()`, applied patch, got a sketchy but not-broken page.
Maniphest Tasks: T13505
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21061
Summary: See PHI1684. Expose the published state of the "Done" checkbox to the API.
Test Plan: Made API calls on a comment in all four states, got correct published states via the API in all cases.
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21059
Summary:
See <https://discourse.phabricator-community.org/t/upgrade-from-sep-30-2016/3702/>. A user performing an upgrade from 2016 to 2020 ran into an issue where this setup query is overheating.
This is likely caused by too many rows changing state during query execution, but the particulars aren't important since this setup check isn't too critical and will catch the issue eventually. It's fine to just move on if this query fails for any reason.
Test Plan: Forced the query to overheat, loaded setup issues, got overheating fatal. Applied patch, no more fatal.
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21057
Summary:
See PHI1688. If many refs with a large amount of shared ancestry are deleted from a repository, we can spend much longer than necessary marking their mutual ancestors as unreachable over and over again.
For example, if refs A, B and C all point near the head of an obsolete "develop" branch and have about 1K shared commits reachable from no other refs, deleting all three refs will lead to us performing 3,000 mark-as-unreachable operations (once for each "<ref, commit>" pair).
Instead, we can stop exploring history once we reach an already-unreachable commit.
Test Plan:
- Destroyed 7 similar refs simultaneously.
- Ran `bin/repository refs`, saw 7 entries appear in the `oldref` table.
- Ran `bin/repository discover` with some debugging statements added, saw sensible-seeming behavior which didn't double-mark any newly-unreachable refs.
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21056
Summary:
Depends on D21053. Ref T11968. Three things have changed:
- Overseers can no longer use FutureIterator to continue execution of an arbitrary list of futures from any state. Use FuturePool instead.
- Same with repository daemons.
- Probably (?) fix an API change in the Harbormaster exec future.
Test Plan:
- Ran "bin/phd debug task" and "bin/phd debug pull", no longer saw Future-management related errors.
- The Harbormaster future is easiest to test by just seeing if production works once this change is deployed there.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T11968
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21054
Summary:
We write some synthetic HTTP responses inside unit tests. Some responses have an indirect side effect of adjusting "zlib.output_compression", but this adjustment fails if headers have already been output. From a CLI context, headers appear to count as already-output after we write anything to stdout:
```
<?php
echo headers_sent() ? "Y" : "N";
echo "\n";
echo headers_sent() ? "Y" : "N";
echo "\n";
```
This script prints "N", then "Y".
Recently, the default severity of warnings was increased in libphutil; this has been a long-standing warning but now causes test failures.
This behavior is sort of silly but the whole thing is kind of moot anyway. Just skip it if "headers_sent()" is true.
Test Plan: Ran "arc unit --everything", got clean results.
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D21055