Summary: Closes T7945, phabricator_calendar db should now have Edge tables.
Test Plan: Use phabricator_calendar db in mysql, show create table edge, verify edge tables are present.
Reviewers: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley
Reviewed By: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T7945
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D12584
Summary: Ref T6160. Ref T7100. Mercurial branch heads can be closed; track this state so we can be smarter about it.
Test Plan: Closed a branch, run `repository update`, saw it close in the cursor table.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T6160, T7100
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D12550
Summary:
See some earlier discussion in D11593:
> One thing I'm vaguely thinking about is the possibilty that users may be able to invoice one another directly, eventually. For example, we might invoice a contracting client.
> We might need an `isInvoice` flag eventually, but `subscriptionPHID` is a reasonable stand-in for now.
This adds such a flag.
Test Plan:
- Generated an ad-hoc invoice and verified it showed up in the right place.
- Used `bin/phortune invoice` to invoice a subscription and verified it worked correctly.
- Paid an invoice and saw it leave "pending invoices" status.
{F377029}
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D12480
Summary:
Fixes T7601. Ref T7803, weakly (this removes a Query subclass with ad-hoc paging). Herald has a very old edit log which predates transactions and is essentially useless and not really policy-aware. I think it's doing more harm than good; remove it.
Herald rules have proper transactions, but rule edits don't currently render something nice into the transaction log. This is definitely the way forward, but we haven't seen requests for this so don't bother building it for now.
I did put a nice end-cap on the transaction log, though.
Test Plan:
- Viewed Herald UI.
- Grepped for removed classes and methods.
- Edited a rule.
- Viewed rule transaction log.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: cburroughs, chad, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T7601, T7803
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D12346
Summary: These arrays looks a little odd, most likely due to the autofix applied by `ArcanistXHPASTLinter::LINT_ARRAY_SEPARATOR`. See D12296 in which I attempt to improve the autocorrection from this linter rule.
Test Plan: N/A
Reviewers: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Reviewed By: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Subscribers: epriestley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D12281
Summary: Ref T7582. Also adds the basic logic for "rooms" implementation. Also makes sure we use the initializeNewThread method as appropriate.
Test Plan: made a new conpherence and it worked!
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T7582
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D12103
Summary: Fixes T7583. We also add `key_room`, which uses isRoom and dateModified since a very common view of rooms is going to be ordered by last updated.
Test Plan: made the conpherence view controller query specify `withIsRoom(true)` and `withIsRoom(false)`. The former made the controller correctly 404 while the latter had no change in functionality.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T7583
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D12102
Summary:
Ref T7149. This flags allocated but incomplete files and doesn't explode when trying to download them.
Files are marked complete when the last chunk is uploaded.
I added a key on `<authorPHID, isPartial>` so we can show you a list of partially uploaded files and prompt you to resume them at some point down the road.
Test Plan: Massaged debugging settings and uploaded README.md very slowly in 32b chunks. Saw the file lose its "Partial" flag when the last chunk finished.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: joshuaspence, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T7149
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D12063
Summary:
Ref T7149. This isn't complete and isn't active yet, but does basically work. I'll shore it up in the next few diffs.
The new workflow goes like this:
> Client, file.allocate(): I'd like to upload a file with length L, metadata M, and hash H.
Then the server returns `upload` (a boolean) and `filePHID` (a PHID). These mean:
| upload | filePHID | means |
|---|---|---|
| false | false | Server can't accept file.
| false | true | File data already known, file created from hash.
| true | false | Just upload normally.
| true | true | Query chunks to start or resume a chunked upload.
All but the last case are uninteresting and work like exising uploads with `file.uploadhash` (which we can eventually deprecate).
In the last case:
> Client, file.querychunks(): Give me a list of chunks that I should upload.
This returns all the chunks for the file. Chunks have a start byte, an end byte, and a "complete" flag to indicate that the server already has the data.
Then, the client fills in chunks by sending them:
> Client, file.uploadchunk(): Here is the data for one chunk.
This stuff doesn't work yet or has some caveats:
- I haven't tested resume much.
- Files need an "isPartial()" flag for partial uploads, and the UI needs to respect it.
- The JS client needs to become chunk-aware.
- Chunk size is set crazy low to make testing easier.
- Some debugging flags that I'll remove soon-ish.
- Downloading works, but still streams the whole file into memory.
- This storage engine is disabled by default (hardcoded as a unit test engine) because it's still sketchy.
- Need some code to remove the "isParital" flag when the last chunk is uploaded.
- Maybe do checksumming on chunks.
Test Plan:
- Hacked up `arc upload` (see next diff) to be chunk-aware and uploaded a readme in 18 32-byte chunks. Then downloaded it. Got the same file back that I uploaded.
- File UI now shows some basic chunk info for chunked files:
{F336434}
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: joshuaspence, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T7149
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D12060
Summary:
Ref T7352. We were previously identifying things by `<daemonClass, overseerPID, startTime>` but that's not unique in a world where one overseer can run multiple daemons.
We already have an internal "daemonID", it just doesn't get written into the DB right now.
Start writing it, then use it to clean up `phd status`.
Test Plan: Ran `phd status`, got more accurate/useful output than previously.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T7352
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D11865
Summary:
Ref T6840. This feels a little dirty; open to alternate suggestions.
We currently have a race condition where multiple daemons may load a commit and then save it at the same time, when processing "reverts X" text. Prior to this feature, two daemons would never load a commit at the same time.
The "reverts X" load/save has no effect (doesn't change any object properties), but it will set the state back to the loaded state on save(). This overwrites any flag updates made to the commit in the meantime, and can produce the race in T6840.
In other cases (triggers, harbormaster, repositories) we deal with this kind of problem with "append-only-updates + single-consumer", or a bunch of locking. There isn't really a good place to add a single consumer for commits, since a lot of daemons need to access them. We could move the flags column to a separate table, but this feels pretty complicated. And locking is messy, also mostly because we have so many consumers.
Just exempting this column (which has unusual behavior) from `save()` feels OK-ish? I don't know if we'll have other use cases for this, and I like it even less if we never do, but this patch is pretty small and feels fairly understandable (that said, I also don't like that it can make some properties just silently not update if you aren't on the lookout).
So, this is //a// fix, and feels simplest/least-bad for the moment to me, I thiiink.
Test Plan: Added and executed unit tests.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T6840
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D11822
Summary: Fixes T7159.
Test Plan:
Created a legalpad document that needed a signature and I was required to sign it no matter what page I hit. Signed it and things worked! Added a new legalpad document and I had to sign again!
Ran unit tests and they passed!
Logged out as a user who was roadblocked into signing a bunch of stuff and it worked!
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T7159
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D11759
Summary:
Ref T7152. This implements the administrative UI for the upstream email invite workflow.
Pieces of this will be reused in Instances to implement the instance invite workflow, although some of it is probably going to be a bit copy/pastey.
This doesn't actually create or send invites yet, and they still can't be carried through registration.
Test Plan:
{F290970}
{F290971}
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T7152
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D11733
Summary:
Ref T7152. This builds the core of email invites and implements all the hard logic for them, covering it with a pile of tests.
There's no UI to create these yet, so users can't actually get invites (and administrators can't send them).
This stuff is a complicated mess because there are so many interactions between accounts, email addresses, email verification, email primary-ness, and user verification. However, I think I got it right and got test coverage everwhere.
The degree to which this is exception-driven is a little icky, but I think it's a reasonable way to get the testability we want while still making it hard for callers to get the flow wrong. In particular, I expect there to be at least two callers (one invite flow in the upstream, and one derived invite flow in Instances) so I believe there is merit in burying as much of this logic inside the Engine as is reasonably possible.
Test Plan: Unit tests only.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T7152
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D11723
Summary: Fixes T7153.
Test Plan:
used `bin/auth trust-oauth-client` and `bin/auth untrust-oauth-client` to set the bit and verify error states.
registered via oauth with `bin/auth trust-oauth-client` set and I did not have the confirmation screen
registered via oauth with `bin/auth untrust-oauth-client` set and I did have the confirmation screen
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T7153
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D11724
Summary: Ref T7153. I am not sure if this is 100% correct because sometimes you have to POST vs GET and I don't know if the redirect response will / can do the right thing? I think options to fix this would be to 1) restrict this functionality to JUST the Phabricator OAuth provider type or 2) something really fancy with an HTTP(S) future. The other rub right now is when you logout you get half auto-logged in again... Thoughts on that?
Test Plan: setup my local instance to JUST have phabricator oauth available to login. was presented with the dialog automagically...!
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T7153
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D11701
Summary:
I'm hitting this in the cluster and couldn't figure it out after staring at it for a couple minutes. Produce a better error.
This dumps a hash of each configuration key value which is set to a non-default value into the daemon log. This is much more compact than the full config, and doesn't spread secrets around, so it seems like a good balance between providing information and going crazy with it.
Test Plan: {F284139}
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D11699
Summary:
Ref T6881.
- Allow users to set a default payment method for a subscription, which we'll try to autobill (not all payment methods are autobillable, so we can't require this in the general case, and a charge might fail anyway).
- If a subscription has an autopay method, try to automatically bill it.
- Otherwise, we'll send them an email like "hey here's a bill, it couldn't autopay for some reasons, go pay it and fix those if you want".
- (That email doesn't exist yet but there's a comment about it.)
- Also some UI cleanup.
Test Plan:
- Used `bin/phortune invoice` to autobill myself some fake test money.
{F279416}
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T6881
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D11596
Summary:
Ref T6881. This generates a product, purchase and invoice for users, and there's sort of some UI for them. Stuff it doesn't do yet:
- Try to autobill when we have a CC;
- actually tell the user they should pay it;
- ask the application for anything like "how much should we charge", or tell the application anything like "the user paid".
However, these work:
- You can //technically// pay the invoices.
- You can see the invoices you paid in the past.
Test Plan: Used `bin/phriction invoice` to double-bill myself over and over again. Paid one of the invoices.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T6881
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D11580
Summary: Fixes T3404 (post D11565), fixes T5952. This infrastructure has been getting deployed against Maniphest and its time to get these other two applications going on it.
Test Plan: created an email address for paste and used `./bin/mail receive-test` ; a paste was successfully created
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T5952, T3404
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D11570
Summary: Ref T5952. This adds support for a "default author" and deploys it on Maniphest.
Test Plan: used augmented (by this diff) bin/mail receive-test to test creation via an application email with a default author configured and no author specified. a task was created with the author as the default author i configured.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T5952
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D11446
Summary:
Ref T6881. This roughs in the major objects, support classes, and controllers.
- Show subscriptions on account detail.
- Browse all account subscriptions.
- Link to active subsciptions from merchant detail.
Test Plan: Clicked around in the UI. There's no way to create subscriptions yet, so I basically just kicked the tires on this. I probably missed a few things that I'll clean up in followups.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T6881
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D11482
Summary: Ref T5952, T3404. This lays the basic plumbing for how this will work, all the way to deploying on Maniphest. Aside from what is mentioned on T5952, I think page(s) on editing application emails could use a little more helpful text about what's going on, similar to how the config page that's getting deprecated works.
Test Plan: ran migration and noted my create email address migrated successfully. used bin/mail to make a task. added another email and used bin/mail to make a task. deleted an email. edited an email. invoked various error states and they all looked good.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T3404, T5952
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D11418
Summary:
Ref T6881. Hopefully, this is the hard part.
This adds a new daemon (the "trigger" daemon) which processes triggers, schedules them, and then executes them at the scheduled time. The design is a little complicated, but has these goals:
- High resistance to race conditions: only the application writes to the trigger table; only the daemon writes to the event table. We won't lose events if someone saves a meeting at the same time as we're sending a reminder out for it.
- Execution guarantees: scheduled events are guaranteed to execute exactly once.
- Support for arbitrarily large queues: the daemon will make progress even if there are millions of triggers in queue. The cost to update the queue is proportional to the number of changes in it; the cost to process the queue is proportional to the number of events to execute.
- Relatively good observability: you can monitor the state of the trigger queue reasonably well from the web UI.
- Modular Infrastructure: this is a very low-level construct that Calendar, Phortune, etc., should be able to build on top of.
It doesn't have this stuff yet:
- Not very robust to bad actions: a misbehaving trigger can stop the queue fairly easily. This is OK for now since we aren't planning to make it part of any other applications for a while. We do still get execute-exaclty-once, but it might not happen for a long time (until someone goes and fixes the queue), when we could theoretically continue executing other events.
- Doesn't start automatically: normal users don't need to run this thing yet so I'm not starting it by default.
- Not super well tested: I've vetted the basics but haven't run real workloads through this yet.
- No sophisticated tooling: I added some basic stuff but it's missing some pieces we'll have to build sooner or later, e.g. `bin/trigger cancel` or whatever.
- Intentionally not realtime: This design puts execution guarantees far above realtime concerns, and will not give you precise event execution at 1-second resolution. I think this is the correct goal to pursue architecturally, and certainly correct for subscriptions and meeting reminders. Events which execute after they have become irrelevant can simply decline to do anything (like a meeting reminder which executes after the meeting is over).
In general, the expectation for applications is:
- When creating an object (like a calendar event) that needs to trigger a scheduled action, write a trigger (and save the PHID if you plan to update it later).
- The daemon will process the event and schedule the action efficiently, in a race-free way.
- If you want to move the action, update the trigger and the daemon will take care of it.
- Your action will eventually dump a task into the task queue, and the task daemons will actually perform it.
Test Plan:
Using a test script like this:
```
<?php
require_once 'scripts/__init_script__.php';
$trigger = id(new PhabricatorWorkerTrigger())
->setAction(
new PhabricatorLogTriggerAction(
array(
'message' => 'test',
)))
->setClock(
new PhabricatorMetronomicTriggerClock(
array(
'period' => 33,
)))
->save();
var_dump($trigger);
```
...I queued triggers and ran the daemon:
- Verified triggers fire;
- verified triggers reschedule;
- verified trigger events show up in the web UI;
- tried different periods;
- added some triggers while the daemon was running;
- examined `phd debug` output for anything suspicious.
It seems to work in trivial use case, at least.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T6881
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D11419
Summary: ...also adds policies on who can view and who can edit an action. Fixes T6949.
Test Plan: viewed a secret through the new UI and it worked
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T6949
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D11401
Summary:
Ref T3165. Builds a dedicated index for Conpherence to avoid scale/policy filtering concerns.
- This is pretty one-off but I think it's generally OK.
- There's no UI for it.
- `ConpherenceFulltextQuery` is very low-level. You would need to do another query on the PHIDs it returns to actually show anything to the user.
- The `previousTransactionPHID` is so you can load chat context efficiently. Specifically, if you want to show results like this:
> previous line of context
> **line of chat that matches the query**
> next line of context
...you can read the previous lines out of `previousTransactionPHID` directly, and the next lines by issuing one query with `WHERE previousTransactionPHID IN (...)`.
I'm not 100% sure this is useful, but it seemed like a reasonable thing to provide, since there's no way to query this efficiently otherwise and I figure a lot of chat might make way more sense with a couple of lines of context.
Test Plan:
- Indexed a thread manually (whole thing indexed).
- Indexed a thread by updating it (just the new comment indexed).
- Wrote a hacky test script and got reasonable-looking query results.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T3165
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D11234
Summary: Ref T5655. Fixes T6849. This is another take on D11131, which was missing the DB migration and was reverted in rP7c4de0f6be77ddaea593e1f41ae27211ec179a55.
Test Plan: Ran `./bin/storage upgrade` and verified that the classes were renamed in the `phabricator_policy.policy` table.
Reviewers: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley
Reviewed By: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T6849, T5655
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D11166
Summary: This class is no longer used after D10965.
Test Plan: `grep`
Reviewers: btrahan, epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Reviewed By: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Subscribers: Korvin, epriestley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D11133
Summary: Modernize remaining edges to subclass `PhabricatorEdgeType`. Largely based on D11045.
Test Plan: Browsed around and performed various actions include subscribing, unsubscribing and watching.
Reviewers: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley
Reviewed By: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley
Subscribers: epriestley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D11116
Summary: Modernize Project edges to subclass `PhabricatorEdgeType`. Largely based on D11045.
Test Plan: Add a member to a project, saw new rows in the `phabricator_project.edge` and `phabricator_user.edge` tables.
Reviewers: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Reviewed By: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Subscribers: Korvin, epriestley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D11111
Summary: Modernize Differential edges to subclass `PhabricatorEdgeType`. Largely based on D11045.
Test Plan: From previous experience, these changes are fairly trivial and safe. I poked around a little to make sure things looked reasonably okay.
Reviewers: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Reviewed By: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Subscribers: Korvin, Krenair, epriestley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D11074
Summary: T5549
Test Plan: Set edit policy on paste, check that only users meeting the policy requirements can edit it.
Reviewers: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Reviewed By: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Subscribers: Korvin, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T5549
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D11097
Summary: Ref T5402. This more or less "fixes" it but there's probably some polish to do?
Test Plan:
stopped and started daemons. error logs look good.
ran bin/storage upgrade. noted that `adjust` added the appropriate indices for active and archive task.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T5402
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D11044
Summary:
Fixes T5196
If no phd.user is configured the behaviour is unchanged besides printing a warning when run as root (Usually i would add an exit(1) here but that would break existing installs who do that).
If phd.user is set and the current user is root it will run the daemon as: su USER -c "command" (I'm not sure if this works for every platform needed)
Otherwise it will refuse to start if configured and current user mismatch.
Test Plan: Stopped & Started phd daemon with various users and different phd.user settings including root
Reviewers: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley
Reviewed By: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley
Subscribers: vinzent, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T5196
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D11036
Summary: database migration + drop old view code. Fixes T5604.
Test Plan: grepped src/ for TYPE_CCS (no hits); viewed some tasks with old cc transactions and noted they still rendered correctly post data conversion
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T5604
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D11015
Summary:
Fixes T6741. This allows Almanac services to be locked from the CLI. Locked services (and their bindings, interfaces and devices) can not be edited. This serves two similar use cases:
- For normal installs, you can protect cluster configuration from an attacker who compromises an account (or generally harden services which are intended to be difficult to edit).
- For Phacility, we can lock externally-managed instance cluster configuration without having to pull any spooky tricks.
Test Plan:
- Locked and unlocked services.
- Verified locking a service locks connected properties, bindings, binding properties, interfaces, devices, and device properties.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T6741
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D11006
Summary:
Ref T5833. This allows services to be typed, to distinguish between different kinds of services. This makes a few things easier:
- It's easier for clients to select the services they're interested in (see note in T5873 about Phacility). This isn't a full-power solution, but gets is some of the way there.
- It's easier to set appropriate permissions around when modifications to the Phabricator cluster are allowed. These service nodes need to be demarcated as special in some way no matter what (see T6741). This also defines a new policy for users who are permitted to create services.
- It's easier to browse/review/understand services.
- Future diffs will allow ServiceTypes to specify more service structure (for example, default properties) to make it easier to configure services correctly. Instead of a free-for-all, you'll get a useful list of things that consumers of the service expect to read.
The "custom" service type allows unstructured/freeform services to be created.
Test Plan:
- Created a new service (and hit error cases).
- Edited an existing service.
- Saw service types on list and detail views.
- Poked around new permission stuff.
- Ran `almanac.queryservices` with service class specification.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T5833
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10995
Summary:
Ref T5955. Summary of intended changes:
**Improve Granularity of Authorization**: Currently, users have one Conduit Certificate. This isn't very flexible, and means that you can't ever generate an API token with limited permissions or IP block controls (see T6706). This moves toward a world where you can generate multiple tokens, revoke them individually, and assign disparate privileges to them.
**Standardize Token Management**: This moves Conduit to work the same way that sessions, OAuth authorizations, and temporary tokens already work, instead of being this crazy bizarre mess.
**Make Authentication Faster**: Authentication currently requires a handshake (conduit.connect) to establish a session, like the web UI. This is unnecessary from a security point of view and puts an extra round trip in front of all Conduit activity. Essentially no other API anywhere works like this.
**Make Authentication Simpler**: The handshake is complex, and involves deriving hashes. The session is also complex, and creates issues like T4377. Handshake and session management require different inputs.
**Make Token Management Simpler**: The certificate is this huge long thing right now, which is not necessary from a security perspective. There are separate Arcanist handshake tokens, but they have a different set of issues. We can move forward to a token management world where neither of these problems exist.
**Lower Protocol Barrier**: The simplest possible API client is very complex right now. It should be `curl`. Simplifying authentication is a necessary step toward this.
**Unblock T2783**: T2783 is blocked on nodes in the cluster making authenticated API calls to other nodes. This provides a simpler way forward than the handshake mess (or enormous-hack-mess) which would currently be required.
Test Plan:
- Generated tokens.
- Generated tokens for a bot account.
- Terminated tokens (and for a bot account).
- Terminated all tokens (and for a bot account).
- Ran GC and saw it reap all the expired tokens.
NOTE: These tokens can not actually be used to authenticate yet!
{F249658}
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T5955
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10985
Summary:
Ref T2783. This is primarily exploratory and just figuring out what we're blocked on:
- Allow a Repository to be bound to a Service. The Service may eventually define multiple read/write nodes, etc.
- There's no UI to do this binding yet, you have to touch the database manually.
- If a repository is bound to a Service, effect Conduit calls via calls to the remote service instead of executing them in-process.
- These don't actually work yet since there's no authentication (see T5955).
Test Plan:
- Made a nice Service with a nice Binding to a nice Interface on a nice Device.
- Force-associated a repository with the service using a raw MySQL query.
- Saw Phabricator try to make a remote call to the service (on localhost) and fail because of missing auth stuff.
- Also ran `almanac.queryservices`.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T2783
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10982
Summary: Fixes T5604. This should fix some random bugs, lets us move forward more easily, and all that good stuff about killing code debt.
Test Plan:
- Conduit method maniphest.createtask
- verified creating user subscribed
- verified subscription transaction
- Conduit method maniphest.update
- verified subscribers set as specified to ccPHIDs parameter
- verified subscription transaction
- Herald
- verified herald rule to add subscriber worked
- verified no subscribers removed accidentally
- edit controller
- test create and verify author gets added IFF they put themselves in subscribers control box
- test update gets set to exactly what user enters
- lipsum generator'd tasks work
- bulk add subscribers works
- bulk remove subscriber works
- detail controller
- added myself by leaving a comment
- added another user via explicit action
- added another user via implicit mention
- task merge via search attach controller
- mail reply handler
- add subscriber via ./bin/mail receive-test
- unsubscribe via ./bin/mail receive-test
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T5604
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10965
Summary:
Ref T6615. Mixing ASC and DESC ordering on a multipart key makes it dramatically less effective (or perhaps totally ineffective).
Reverse the meaning of the `priority` column so it goes in the same direction as the `id` column (both ascending, lower values execute sooner).
Test Plan:
- Queued 1.2M tasks with `bin/worker flood`.
- Processed ~1 task/second with `bin/phd debug taskmaster` before patch.
- Applied patch, took ~5 seconds for ~1.2M rows.
- Processed ~100-200 tasks/second with `bin/phd debug taskmaster` after patch.
- "Next in Queue" query on daemon page dropped from 1.5s to <1ms.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: aklapper, 20after4, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T6615
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10895
Summary:
Ref T6240. Some discussion in that task. In instance/cluster environments, daemons need to make Conduit calls that bypass policy checks.
We can't just let anyone add SSH keys with this capability to the web directly, because then an adminstrator could just add a key they own and start signing requests with it, bypassing policy checks.
Add a `bin/almanac trust-key --id <x>` workflow for trusting keys. Only trusted keys can sign requests.
Test Plan:
- Generated a user key.
- Generated a device key.
- Trusted a device key.
- Untrusted a device key.
- Hit the various errors on trust/untrust.
- Tried to edit a trusted key.
{F236010}
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T6240
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10878
Summary: Fixes T3189. Now if you say #projects in a commit message they will associate nicely with the commit. Also we record transactions about all this project editing fun.
Test Plan: tested migration by associating some projects with commits and verifying they still showed up post migration. tested adding / removing projects by doing so from the UI, noting transactions written nicely as well
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin, epriestley
Projects: #projects
Maniphest Tasks: T3189
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10877
Summary: Fixes T6152, T6237. This introduces a viewPolicy column to the DifferentialDiff, and re-jiggers the DifferentialDiff policy implementation such that things behave as before once associated with a revision, else use the DifferentialDiff policy column value.
Test Plan: made a diff with a non-standard view policy and noted that policy was still selected in the revision step. arc lint.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T6237, T6152
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10875
Summary: Ref T6237. This sets us up for some future work like T6152, T6200 and generally cleaning up this workflow a bit. Tried to do as little as possible so not exposing transaction view yet. (Though that timeline is going to be a little funky in the common case of just the lone create transaction.)
Test Plan: made a diff from web ui and it worked. made a herald rule to block certain diffs then tried to make such a diff and saw UI letting me know i was blocked
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T6237
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10869
Summary: Fixes T1768. This is mostly a data cleanliness issue as duplicate rows don't really do anything, but let's clear it up now.
Test Plan: made some duplicate rows by adding the same auditor multiple times. ran ./bin/storage upgrade and it worked perfectly!
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T1768
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10849
Summary: See <https://github.com/phacility/phabricator/issues/760>. We removed these methods in D10832 but still need the migration to be able to do project checks.
Test Plan: Ran on a test wiki with `/`, `/projects/` and `/projects/example/`. The first two pages didn't try to use project policies; the third one did.
Reviewers: btrahan, chad
Reviewed By: chad
Subscribers: epriestley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10836
We have at least one project with `null` as a viewPolicy. This should get
sorted out separately, but make the migration robust against it.
Auditors: btrahan
Summary: Ref T4029. this diff makes the pertinent database changes AND adds the migration script. This is important to get the data backend straightened away before we fully ship T4029. Next diff will expose the edit controls for these policies and whatever else work is needed to get that part done right.
Test Plan: made sure the lone project page on my wiki had a project with restrictive view policy. Post migration verified correct policy applied to this lone project page AND most open policy applied to the others
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T4029
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10814
Summary:
Ref T5833. This fixes a few weird things with this table:
- A bunch of columns were nullable for no reason.
- We stored an MD5 hash of the key (unusual) but never used it and callers were responsible for manually populating it.
- We didn't perform known-key-text lookups by using an index.
Test Plan:
- Ran migrations.
- Faked duplicate keys, saw them clean up correctly.
- Added new keys.
- Generated new keys.
- Used `bin/auth-ssh` and `bin/auth-ssh-key`.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T5833
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10805
Summary: Ref T1191. A couple of installs have hit issues with this table, so clean it up before adjustment adds a unique key to it.
Test Plan: Dropped key, added duplicate rows, ran patch, got cleanup, ran adjust to get the key back.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T1191
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10799
Summary:
Ref T1191. Use `storage quickstart` to regenerate `quickstart.sql` using modern schema construction statements.
This puts new installs into utf8mb4 mode immediately without requiring storage adjustment.
Test Plan:
- Ran `arc unit --everything`, which uses quickstart.
- Ran `bin/storage upgrade --namespace temp`, to quickstart a new namespace.
- Ran `bin/storage upgrade --namespace temp --disable-utf8mb4`, to quickstart a new namespace without utf8mb4 support.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T1191
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10797
Summary:
Fixes T6487. Ref T1191. Ref T4029. D10756 introduced, but did not populate, this column. This can cause it to fill with `"\0\0\0..."` after adjustment.
Regardless of the adjustment issue, it's nice to populate this column anyway because there's no fundamental reason an object can't have mail sent about it without being saved first, even though it may not practically be possible in the codebase today.
Test Plan:
- Ran `storage upgrade`, saw the column populate for older documents.
- Forced a couple of keys to bad values (too short or with "\0") and saw the migration fix them.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T4029, T1191, T6487
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10804
Summary: Ref T5833. Since these will no longer be bound specifically to users, bring them to a more central location.
Test Plan:
- Edited SSH keys.
- Ran `bin/ssh-auth` and `bin/ssh-auth-key`.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T5833
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10791
Summary:
Ref T5833. Allow services and devices to be tagged with projects.
(These fluff apply implementations are a good example of the issue discussed in T6403.)
Test Plan: {F229569}
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T5833
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10782
Summary:
Ref T5833. Currently, we have an `AlmanacDeviceProperty`, but it doesn't use CustomFields and is specific to devices. Make this more generic:
- Reuse most of the CustomField infrastructure (so we can eventually get easy support for nice editor UIs, etc).
- Make properties more generic so Services, Bindings and Devices can all have them.
The major difference between this implementation and existing CustomField implementations is that all other implementations are application-authoritative: the application code determines what the available list of fields is.
I want Almanac to be a bit more freeform (basically: you can write whatever properties you want, and we'll put nice UIs on them if we have a nice UI available). For example, we might have some sort of "ServiceTemplate" that says "a database binding should usually have the fields 'writable', 'active', 'credential'", which would do things like offer these as options and put a nice UI on them, but you should also be able to write whatever other properties you want and add services without building a specific service template for them.
This involves a little bit of rule bending, but ends up pretty clean. We can adjust CustomField to accommodate this a bit more gracefully later on if it makes sense.
Test Plan: {F229172}
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T5833
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10777
Summary:
This implements as little as possible to stick a working transactions + editor codepath in the basic create / edit flow. Aside from the transaction tables, this also required adding a mailKey to a phrictionDocument.
Future work would include adding more transactions types for things like "move" and all the pertinent support. Even future work is to add things like policies which will work easily in the transaction framework. Ref T4029.
Test Plan:
- made a wiki doc
- edit a wiki doc
- had someone subscribe to a wiki doc and edited it
For all three, the edits worked, a reasonable email was sent out, and feed stories were generated.
- made a wiki doc at a /location/like/this
document "stubs" were made as expected in /location and /location/like
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: chad, Korvin, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T4029
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10756
Summary: Ref T5833. Allows you to bind a service (like `db.example.com`) to one or more interfaces (for example, to specify a pool with one read/write host and two read-only hosts). You can't configure which hosts have which properties yet, but you can add all the relevant interfaces to the service. Next diff will start supporting service, binding, and device properties like "is writable", "is active", etc., so that Almanac will be able to express operations like "change which database is writable", "disable writes", "bring a device down", etc.
Test Plan: See screenshots.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T5833
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10745
Summary: Ref T5833. An interface is an IP (maybe v4, maybe v6) and port on a specified network (public internet, VPN, NAT block, etc).
Test Plan: See screenshots.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T5833
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10718
Summary: Ref T5833. This differentiates address spaces like the public internet from VPNs, so when a service is available at `192.168.0.1`, we'll know it's on some specific NAT block or whatever.
Test Plan: See screenshots.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T5833
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10715
Summary: Ref T5833. The "uninteresting" part of this object is virtually identical to AlmanacService.
Test Plan: See screenshots.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T5833
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10714
Summary: Ref T5833. See that task for functional goals and some discussion of design.
Test Plan: See screenshots.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T5833
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10713
Summary: Ref T2787. When order statuses change, send merchants and users email about it.
Test Plan: Used `bin/mail` to review mail.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T2787
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10694
Summary: Ref T2787. I mostly just want these in place so I can glue emails to them, but they're also useful on their own.
Test Plan: {F216515}
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T2787
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10688
Summary:
Ref T2787. Make this a little more concrete with explicit membership instead of a general edit policy. In particular, we need to know who to email when orders happen, and can't reasonably do that with an edit policy.
I imagine this might eventually get more nuanced (e.g., users who can only approve orders vs users who can manage the merchant itself) but that's a long ways away.
Test Plan: {F216284}
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T2787
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10681
Summary: Ref T5835. Make fund stories publish to feed and send email.
Test Plan: Made edits, etc., saw them in feed and outbound email.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T5835
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10677
Summary:
Ref T2787. This has some rough edges but basically works.
- Users can cancel orders that are in incomplete states (or in complete states, if the application allows them to -- for example, some future application might allow cancellation of billed-but-not-shipped orders).
- Merchant controllers can partially or fully refund orders from any state after payment.
Test Plan: This is still rough around the edges, but issued Stripe and WePay refunds.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: chad, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T2787
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10664
Summary:
Ref T2787.
- Allow merchants to disable payment providers.
- Show more useful information about providers on the payments page.
- Make test vs live more clear.
- Show merchant status.
- Add a description to merchants to flesh them out a bit -- the merchant areas of responsibilities seem to be fitting well with accounts, etc.
Test Plan: {F215109}
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T2787
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10662
Summary:
Ref T2787. Builds on D10649 by rebining existing objects (carts, charges, etc) to merchantPHIDs and providerPHIDs instead of an implicit global merchant and weird global artifacts (providerType / providerKey).
Basically:
- When you create something that users can pay for, you specify a merchant to control where the payment goes.
- Accounts are install-wide, but payment methods are bound to merchants. This seems to do a reasonable job of balancing usability and technical concerns.
- Replace a bunch of weird links between objects with standard PHIDs.
- Improve "add payment method" flow.
Test Plan: Went through the Fund flow with Stripe and WePay, funding an initiative.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T2787
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10652
Summary:
Ref T2787. Instead of making providers global configuration, make them a thing on merchants with web configuration.
Payment methods and some of the pyament workflow needs to be retooled a bit after this, but this seemed like a reasonable cutoff point for this diff.
Test Plan: See screenshots.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T2787
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10649
Summary:
Ref T2787. Currently, you add payment providers (Stripe, Paypal, etc) in global configuration.
Generally, this approach is cumbersome, limiting, and often hard for users to figure out. It also doesn't provide a natural way to segment payment receivers or provide web access to administrative payment functions like issuing refunds, canceling orders, etc. I think that stuff definitely needs to be in the web UI, and the rule for access to it can't reasonably just be "all administrators" in a lot of reasonable cases.
The only real advantage is that it prevents an attacker from adjusting settings and pointing something at an account they control. But this attack can be mitigated through notifications, some sort of CLI-only merchant lock, payment accounts being relatively identifiable, etc.
So introduce "merchants", which are basically payable entities. An individual merchant will have attached Paypal, Stripe, etc., accounts, and access rules. When you buy something in an application, the merchant to pay is also specified. They also provide an umbrella for dealing with permissions down the line.
This may get a //little// cumbersome because if there are several merchants your saved card information is not shared across them. I think that will be fine in the normal case (most installs will have only one merchant). Even if it isn't and we leave providers global, I think introducing this is the right call from a web UI / permissions point of view. I'll play around with it in the next couple of diffs and figure out exactly where the line goes.
Test Plan: Listed, created, edited, viewed merchants.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T2787
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10648
Summary: Ref T2787. Similar to D10634, give applications more control over the cart workflow. For now this just means they get to pick exit URIs, but in the future they can manage more details of cart behavior.
Test Plan: Funded an initiative and got returned to the initiative instead of dead-ending in Phortune.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T2787
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10638
Summary: Ref T2787. `Product` is currently a fairly heavy object, but as Phortune develops it makes a lot of sense to make it a lighter object and put more product logic in applications. Convert it into a fairly lightweight reference to applications. The idea is that Phortune is mostly providing a cart flow, and applications manage the details of products.
Test Plan: Funded an initiative for $1.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T2787
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10634
Summary:
Ref T2787. Phortune currently stores a bunch of stuff as `...inUSDCents`. This ends up being pretty cumbersome and I worry it will create a huge headache down the road (and possibly not that far off if we do Coinbase/Bitcoin soon). Even now, it's more of a pain than I figured it would be.
Instead:
- Provide an application-level serialization mechanism.
- Provide currency serialization.
- Store currency in an abstract way (currently, as "1.23 USD") that can handle currencies in the future.
- Change all `...inUSDCents` to `..asCurrency`.
- This generally simplifies all the application code.
- Also remove some columns which don't make sense or don't make sense anymore. Notably, `Product` is going to get more abstract and mostly be provided by applications.
Test Plan:
- Created a new product.
- Purchased a product.
- Backed an initiative.
- Ran unit tests.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T2787
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10633
Summary:
Ref T4209. This creates storage for public keys against authorized hosts, such that servers can be authorized to make Conduit calls as the omnipotent user.
Servers are registered into this system by running the following command once:
```
bin/almanac register
```
NOTE: This doesn't implement authorization between servers, just the storage of public keys.
Placing this against Almanac seemed like the most sensible place, since I'm imagining in future that the `register` command will accept more information (like the hostname of the server so it can be found in the service directory).
Test Plan: Ran `bin/almanac register` and saw the host (and public key information) appear in the database.
Reviewers: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley
Reviewed By: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley
Subscribers: epriestley, Korvin
Maniphest Tasks: T4209
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10400
Summary:
Ref T1191. Although I fixed some of the mutations earlier (in D10598), I missed the column mutations under old versions of MySQL. In particular, this isn't valid:
- `ALTER TABLE ... MODIFY columnName VARCHAR(64) COLLATE binary`
Issue the permitted version of this instead, which is:
- `ALTER TABLE ... MODIFY columnName VARBINARY(64)`
Also fixed an issue where a clean schema had the wrong nullability for a column in the draft table. Force it to the expected nullability.
The other trick here is around the one column with a FULLTEXT index on it, which needs a little massaging.
Test Plan:
- Forced my local install to return `false` for utf8mb4 support.
- Did a clean adjust into `binary` columns.
- Poked around, added emoji to things.
- Reverted the fake check and did a clean adjust into `utf8mb4` columns.
- Emoji survived.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: fabe, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T1191
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10627
Summary:
Ref T1191. Now that the whole database is covered, we don't need to do as much work to build expected schemata. Doing them database-by-database was helpful in converting, but is just reudndant work now.
Instead of requiring every application to build its Lisk objects, just build all Lisk objects.
I removed `harbormaster.lisk_counter` because it is unused.
It would be nice to autogenerate edge schemata, too, but that's a little trickier.
Test Plan: Database setup issues are all green.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley, hach-que
Maniphest Tasks: T1191
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10620
Summary:
Ref T1191. Long ago, Maniphest generated with 40-character mail keys. These prevent the migration to `bytes20`. We had about 300 of these on secure.phabricator.com from several years ago.
Just truncate them. This adjusts reply-to addresses, but it's very likely that none are relevant anymore.
Test Plan: Ran migration on `secure.phabricator.com` to truncate keys.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T1191
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10615
Summary: Ref T1191. This predates the mdoern patch stuff and may exist on very, very old installs. By the time they apply this patch, it's guaranteed it won't matter anymore. Drop it to make the schemata consistent with expectations.
Test Plan: Ran patch on installs with and without the table.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T1191
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10611
Summary:
Ref T1191. This destroys surplus columns:
- Pholio's transaction comments have a `mockID` column, but this is not used. The `imageID` column is used instead.
- Phragment has an unused `description` column.
- Releeph has an unused `summary` column.
Test Plan:
- Grepped for usage of these columns.
- Checked that these exist in production, too.
- Ran upgrades.
- Added Pholio inline comments.
- Saw fewer warnings.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley, hach-que
Maniphest Tasks: T1191
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10591
Summary:
Ref T1191. Notable:
- Drops a very old saved query table. See comments inline: plan was to remove it after a year. It's been ~a year and two weeks.
- This has our only fulltext index. I'm not supporting that formally for now, but left a note.
- This has our only MyISAM table. I'm not supporting that explicitly for now, but it shouldn't affect anything. I may deal with this in the future.
- These tables don't actually write directly via Lisk, so there's some fiddling to get the schemata right.
Test Plan: Down to ~250 warnings. No more surplus databases or tables.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T1191
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10589
Summary:
Ref T1191.
- Removes ponder comment table. This was migrated a very long time ago.
Test Plan:
- Grepped for removed table.
- Saw ~100 fewer issues in web UI.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T1191
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10582
Summary:
Ref T1191. Notes:
- Drops the project affiliation table. This is a very old membership table which was migrated to edges.
- Drops the subproject table. This is a very old table for a removed feature.
Test Plan:
- Grepped for dropped tables.
- Saw ~100 fewer setup issues.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T1191
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10581
Summary:
Ref T1191. Some notes here:
- Drops the old LDAP and OAuth info tables. These were migrated to the ExternalAccount table a very long time ago.
- Separates surplus/missing keys from other types of surplus/missing things. In the long run, my plan is to have only two notice levels:
- Error: something we can't fix (missing database, table, or column; overlong key).
- Warning: something we can fix (surplus anything, missing key, bad column type, bad key columns, bad uniqueness, bad collation or charset).
- For now, retaining three levels is helpful in generating all the expected scheamta.
Test Plan:
- Saw ~200 issues resolve, leaving ~1,300.
- Grepped for removed tables.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T1191
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10580
Summary:
Ref T1191.
- This drops two tables.
- Both tables were migrated to transactions a very long time ago and no longer have readers or writers.
Test Plan: Saw ~150 fewer warnings.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T1191
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10576
Summary:
Ref T1191.
- Adds support for custom fields.
- Adds support for partial indexes (indexes on a prefix of a column).
- Drops old auxiliary storage table: this was moved to custom field storage about a year ago.
- Drops old project table: this was moved to edges about two months ago.
Test Plan:
- Viewed web UI, saw fewer issues.
- Used `grep` to verify no readers/writers for storage or project table.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T1191
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10526
Summary:
Ref T1191.
- There was a varchar(50) column. I changed it to `text64`, since this length is unusual.
- There was an int(3) column. I changed it to `int32`, since this length is unusual.
Test Plan: Ran migrations, saw warnings disappear from config tool.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T1191
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10524
Summary: Ref T1191. This was migrated to transactions a very long time ago.
Test Plan: Ran migration, grepped, left comments in Slowvote.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T1191
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10523
Summary:
Ref T1191.
- Fixes T6096. We've migrated away from this table in T4896. The data is now in the transaction table. There have been no reads or writes to this table for some time and I haven't seen any issues from users.
- Fixes T6097. Same deal as above. The data is now in the transaction comment table.
- Fixes T6100. This cache is safe to wipe out, since it's purely read-through. Wiping it will make the migration faster. The column type change fixes storage of PHP serialized objects in a text column.
Test Plan:
- Ran migrations.
- Observed some yellow go blue on the Database Status screen.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T6096, T6100, T6097, T1191
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10520
Summary:
Fixes T5603. Puts the toggling of locking membership into the editor so we get exceptions and all that.
I think the dialogue when you try to leave a project that is locked could be a little better maybe? Right now it just says "You can't leave" and "The membership is locked" more or less; should I surface a link to the policy stuff there too?
Test Plan:
- made a project, toggled the "lock" setting, observed stickiness and good transactions being made
- locked a project and tried to leave as a non-editor - got a dialogue letting me know i couldn't
- locked a project and tried to leave as an editor - left successfully
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: epriestley, Korvin
Maniphest Tasks: T5603
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10508
Summary:
Fixes T6084. Changes:
- Rename `phabricator.show-beta-applications` to `phabricator.show-prototypes`, to reinforce that these include early-development applications.
- Migrate the config setting.
- Add an explicit "no support" banner to the config page.
- Rename "Beta" to "Prototype" in the UI.
- Use "bomb" icon instead of "half star" icon.
- Document prototype applications in more detail.
- Explicitly document that we do not support these applications.
Test Plan:
- Ran migration.
- Resolved "obsolete config" issue.
- Viewed config setting.
- Browsed prototypes in Applications app.
- Viewed documentation.
Reviewers: chad, btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley, hach-que
Maniphest Tasks: T6084
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10493
Summary:
Ref T5835. This is still completely made up (no payment integration), but you can "back" an initiative, type a number in the box, and generate a database row. You can then seach for backers and things you've backed and such.
Notable changes:
- Renamed "FundBacking" to "FundBacker". The former name was sort of because you can back things multiple times, but stuff like `$backings` was just too weird.
- I think that's it?
Test Plan:
- Backed an initiative.
- Viewed that I became a backer.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T5835
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10486
Summary:
Ref T5835. This is all pretty boilerplate, and does not interact with Phortune at all yet.
You can create "Initiatives", which have a title and description, and support most of the expected infrastructure (policies, transactions, mentions, edges, appsearch, remakrup, etc).
Only notable decisions:
- Initiatives have an explicit owner. I think it's good to have a single clearly-responsible user behind an initiative.
- I think that's it?
Test Plan:
- Created an initiative.
- Edited an initiative.
- Changed application policy defaults.
- Searched for initiatives.
- Subscribed to an initiative.
- Opened/closed an initiative.
- Used `I123` and `{I123}` in remarkup.
- Destroyed an initiative.
Reviewers: chad, btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T5835
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10481
Summary:
Fixes T6013. Old image macros/memes never had the file edge written.
We also never wrote file edges for audio.
Finally, the meme controller didn't allow public access.
Write edges for images and audio, perform a migration to populate the historic ones, and make the Editor keep them up to date going forward.
Test Plan:
- Updated image, saw new image attach and old image detach.
- Updated audio, saw new audio attach and old audio detach.
- Ran migration.
- Viewed memes as a logged-out user.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T6013
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10411
Summary: Fixes T4881.
Test Plan: made a config change, saw the issue, restarted daemons and it went away
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: epriestley, Korvin
Maniphest Tasks: T4881
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10339
Summary:
Ref T5932. Ref T5936. This implements build generations in Harbormaster, which provides the infrastructure required to both show users the previous states of restarted builds and to allow users to forcefully abort builds (and their targets).
You can view previous generations of a build by adding `?g=<n>` to the URI, but this isn't exposed in the UI anywhere yet.
Test Plan: Ran a build plan with a Sleep step in it. Reconfigured it for various sleep times and viewed previous generations of the build after restarting it.
Reviewers: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Reviewed By: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Subscribers: epriestley, Korvin
Maniphest Tasks: T5932, T5936
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10321
Summary: Resolves T5895. This reduces page load times significantly when looking at builds.
Test Plan: Viewed a build, saw the page load a lot faster.
Reviewers: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Reviewed By: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Subscribers: epriestley, Korvin
Maniphest Tasks: T5895
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10286
Summary: Ref T5884. We migrated with "canCDN" and then had live writes with "cancdn". Move everything to "canCDN" for consistency.
Test Plan: Ran migration, verified DB only has "canCDN" afterward.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T5884
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10273
Summary: Ref T5819. Implements basic icon and color filtering for projects.
Test Plan: {F189350}
Reviewers: btrahan, chad
Reviewed By: chad
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T5819
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10230
Summary:
Ref T1049. This keeps track of how long a build target takes to execute in Harbormaster and displays it in the build view page. I'm not sure whether "Started" is really that useful once the target has completed?
Also, I change the name of the time taken depending on whether or not the target has completed; if it's still in progress it's called "Elapsed" and if it's completed then it's "Duration". The primary reason for this is that "Duration" sounds like post tense, whereas "Elapsed" is current tense. I'm not sure whether this is okay or not?
Test Plan: Ran a Sleep build step and saw the target dates / times appear correctly.
Reviewers: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Reviewed By: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Subscribers: talshiri, epriestley, Korvin
Maniphest Tasks: T5824, T1049
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10174
Summary:
Fixes T5840. Some time ago I incorrectly believed that `latin1_bin` collation was synonymous with "binary". It is not, and does not permit UTF8 characters outside of BMP, among other sequences.
These two tables currently have `LONGTEXT` columns which should be `LONGBLOB`. The table design is explicilty intended to accommodate invalid/unreasonably long ref names, but the collation prevents this from working properly.
After T1191, we'll have a general system for resolving this, but a user hit an issue yesterday (T5840) with a brnach name containing Chinese characters.
Test Plan:
- Tried emoji inserts into both tables, was rebuffed.
- Ran migration.
- Performed emoji inserts into both tables.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T5840
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10217
Summary:
Fixes T5677.
- Instead of using `sequence == 0` to mean "this is the backlog column", flag the column explicitly.
- Migrate existing sequence 0 columns to have the flag.
- Add the flag when initializing or copying a board.
- Remove special backlog logic when reordering columns.
Test Plan:
- Migrated columns, viewed some boards, they looked identical.
- Reordered the backlog column a bunch of times (first, last, middle, dragged other stuff around).
- Added tasks to a project, saw them show up in the reordered backlog.
- Initialized a new board and saw a backlog column show up.
- Copied an existing board and saw the backlog column come over.
- Tried to hide a backlog column.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T5677
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10189
Summary:
Fixes T5476. Using edges to store which objects are on which board columns ends up being pretty awkward. In particular, it makes T4807 very difficult to implement.
Introduce a dedicated `BoardColumnPosition` storage.
This doesn't affect ordering rules (T4807) yet: boards are still arranged by priority. We just read which tasks are on which columns out of a new table.
Test Plan:
- Migrated data, then viewed some boards. Saw exactly the same data.
- Dragged tasks from column to column.
- Created a task directly into a column.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T5476
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10160
Summary:
Ref T4896. Currently, subscriptions to commits are stored as auditors with a special "CC" type.
Instead, use normal subscriptions storage, reads and writes.
Test Plan:
- Ran migration and verified data still looked good.
- Viewed commits in UI and saw "subscribers".
- Saw "Automatically Subscribed", clicked Subscribe/Unsubscribe on a non-authored commit, saw subscriptions update.
- Pushed a commit through Herald rules and saw them trigger subscriptions and auditors.
- Used "Add CCs".
- Added CCs with mentions.
Reviewers: btrahan, joshuaspence
Reviewed By: btrahan, joshuaspence
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T4896
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10103
Summary:
Ref T1049. This uses tabs on build targets to hide the configuration details and variables by default, instead promoting the target name, it's status and a description of the build step. The description is a new field on each build step.
The primary advantage of having a description on build steps is that DevOps can configure appropriate description information (including any troubleshooting information for build failures) on build steps, and developers who have builds fail against their code review can then look at this information.
Test Plan: Viewed a build plan and saw the appropriate information.
Reviewers: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley
Reviewed By: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley
Subscribers: epriestley, Korvin
Maniphest Tasks: T1049
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10093
Summary:
Depends on D9806. This implements the build simulator, which is used to calculate the order of build steps in the plan editor. This includes a migration script to convert existing plans from sequential based to dependency based, and then drops the sequence column.
Because build plans are now dependency based, the grippable and re-order behaviour has been removed.
Test Plan: Tested the migration, saw the dependencies appear correctly.
Reviewers: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Reviewed By: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Subscribers: epriestley, Korvin
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D9847
Summary:
Ref T4896. Depends on D10052. This is the major/scary migration, but not really so bad. It is substantially similar to D8210, but less complex because there are fewer actions here.
This moves `PhabricatorAuditComment` storage to `PhabricatorAuditTransaction`, then reads `PhabricatorAuditComment`s as a proxy around the new objects.
Test Plan:
- Before migrating, browsed around. Nothing appeared broken.
- Migrated cleanly.
- Viewed old transactions (inlines, comments, accept/reject/etc, add auditors, add ccs, implicit CCs).
- Added all of those comment types.
- Edited a draft.
- Deleted a draft.
- Spot checked the database for sanity.
Reviewers: btrahan, joshuaspence
Reviewed By: joshuaspence
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T4896
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10055
Summary:
Ref T4896. This is substantially similar to D8196.
Migrate the comment text out of the `audit_comment` table and into the `audit_transaction_comment` table. Do double reads on `PhabricatorAuditComment` so the APIs aren't disturbed. The old table is still updated.
Test Plan:
- Before applying migration, cleared cache and browsed around. Things looked fine, except no comment text.
- Applied migration.
- Cleared cache, browsed around, saw all my old comments.
- Added some new comments.
- Spot checked migrated and new rows in database.
Reviewers: btrahan, joshuaspence
Reviewed By: joshuaspence
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T4896
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10020
Summary:
Ref T4896. This is substantially identical to the process which Differential followed, and mostly copied from the original Differential migration and the Differential proxy object.
Basically, we move all the data over but the application can't tell, and the same APIs do reads and writes to the new table.
Test Plan:
- Browsed UI before migrating, everything looked fine (but no inlines).
- Ran migration.
- Verified draft and published comments survived migration.
- Added a draft.
- Previewed draft.
- Submitted draft.
- Viewed standalone with drafts and published comments.
- Sanity checked data in database, didn't see anything unusual.
Reviewers: btrahan, joshuaspence
Reviewed By: joshuaspence
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T4896
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10018
Summary:
Ref T4896. This adds the new storage, without any code changes.
This storage is substantially identical to the Differential storage, except that `changesetID` has been replaced by `pathID`.
I've retained the properties intended to be used to implement T1460. They might not be quite right, but at least we'll be able to make any fixes consistently to both applications. For now, these fields are empty and ignored.
Test Plan: Ran `./bin/storage upgrade`. Nothing calls this code yet.
Reviewers: btrahan, joshuaspence
Reviewed By: joshuaspence
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T4896
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10017
Summary: Ref T5655. Rename `PhabricatorPHIDType` subclasses for clarity (see discussion in D9839). I'm not too keen on some of the resulting class names, so feel free to suggest alternatives.
Test Plan: Ran unit tests.
Reviewers: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Reviewed By: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Subscribers: epriestley, Korvin, hach-que
Maniphest Tasks: T5655
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D9986
Summary:
Ref T2787. Carts need a status so we can tell if they've been purchased. Also kind of get WePay working as a one-time provider, and let charges not have a methodPHID (they won't for one-time providers).
All the status stuff is still super crazy rough and you can do things like start a checkout, add a bunch of stuff to your cart, complete the checkout, and have Phabricator think you paid for all the stuff you added. But this is fine for now since you can't actually edit carts, and also none of this is at all usable anyway. I'll refine some of the workflows in future diffs, for now I'm just getting things hooked up and technically working.
Test Plan:
- Purcahsed a cart and got a sort of status/done screen instead of a "your money is gone" exception.
- Went through the WePay flow and got a successful test checkout.
Reviewers: btrahan, chad
Reviewed By: chad
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T2787
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10003
Summary: Ref T2787. Makes charges a real object, allows providers to apply them. We are now (just barely) capable of stealing users' money.
Test Plan: {F179584}
Reviewers: btrahan, chad
Reviewed By: chad
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T2787
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10002
Summary:
Ref T2787. Make carts and purchases real objects, with storage, that kind-of work.
Roughly, the idea here is that applications create "purchases" (like "1 large t-shirt") and add them to "carts" (a user can have a lot of different carts at the same time), then hand things off to Phortune to deal with actualy charging a card. Roughly this works like Paypal or other similar systems do, except Phortune is the thing the user gets handed off to.
This doesn't do anything interesting/useful yet.
Also fix some bugs and update some UI.
Test Plan: Added a product to a cart, saw it in cart screen.
Reviewers: btrahan, chad
Reviewed By: chad
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T2787
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10001
Summary: The old class name isn't quite correct.
I'm just updating the migration rather than adding a new one to fix it since
this was very recently introduced and affects only installs using Asana auth,
so it's realistic that the number of affected installs might be 0.
Affected installs can use `--apply` to safely rerun the migration.
Auditors: joshuaspence
Summary: Add a missing migration which should have been included in D9982. Harbormaster and Herald PHIDs are used as actors in some transactions.
Test Plan: Ran `./bin/storage upgrade`. Saw a transaction render correctly as "Herald assigned this task to alincoln" instead of "Unknown Object (Application) assigned this task to alincoln".
Reviewers: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley
Reviewed By: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley
Subscribers: epriestley, Korvin
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10028
Summary: Ref T5655. Some discussion in D9839. Generally speaking, `Phabricator{$name}Application` is clearer than `PhabricatorApplication{$name}`.
Test Plan:
# Pinned and uninstalled some applications.
# Applied patch and performed migrations.
# Verified that the pinned applications were still pinned and that the uninstalled applications were still uninstalled.
# Performed a sanity check on the database contents.
Reviewers: btrahan, epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Reviewed By: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Subscribers: hach-que, epriestley, Korvin
Maniphest Tasks: T5655
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D9982
Summary: This migration script is required for D9999, which has already landed.
Test Plan: Ran `./bin/storage upgrade` and can log in again.
Reviewers: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley
Reviewed By: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley
Subscribers: epriestley, Korvin
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10010
Summary:
Fixes T5614. Ref T4420. Other than the "users" datasource and a couple of others, many datasources ignore what the user typed and just return all results, then rely on the client to filter them.
This works fine for rarely used ("legalpad documents") or always small ("task priorities", "applications") datasets, but is something we should graudally move away from as datasets get larger.
Add a token table to projects, populate it, and use it to drive the datasource query. Additionally, expose it on the applicationsearch UI.
Test Plan:
- Ran migration.
- Manually checked the table.
- Searched for projects by name from ApplicationSearch.
- Searched for projects by name from typeahead.
- Manually checked the typeahead response.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T5614, T4420
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D9896
Summary: Ref T5245. This moves the actual storage over and stops reads and writes to the old table.
Test Plan:
- Verified tasks retained projects across the migration.
- Added and removed projects from tasks.
- Searched for: all, any, users' projects, not-in-projects, no-projects.
Reviewers: chad, btrahan, joshuaspence
Reviewed By: joshuaspence
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T5245
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D9850
Summary: Fixes T5611. We don't need sequences to be unique, and it makes it a pain to update them.
Test Plan: Dragged some columns around.
Reviewers: chad
Reviewed By: chad
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T5611
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D9914
Summary: Fixes T5336. Currently, `PhabricatorWorkerLeaseQuery` is basically FIFO. It makes more sense for the queue to be a priority-queue, and to assign higher priorities to alerts (email and SMS).
Test Plan: Created dummy tasks in the queue (with different priorities). Verified that the priority field was set correctly in the DB and that the priority was shown on the `/daemon/` page. Started a `PhabricatorTaskmasterDaemon` and verified that the higher priority tasks were executed before lower priority tasks.
Reviewers: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Reviewed By: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Subscribers: epriestley, Korvin
Maniphest Tasks: T5336
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D9871
Summary:
Fixes T5532. Allow documents to have a preamble in the header which can be used to explain who should sign a document and why.
Particularly, I plan to use this to navigate the corporate vs individual stuff more sensibly.
Test Plan: {F174228}
Reviewers: chad
Reviewed By: chad
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T5532
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D9819
Summary: Ref T1049. This provides a user-configurable name field on build steps, which allows users to uniquely identify their steps. The intention is that this field will be used in D9806 to better identify the dependencies (rather than showing an unhelpful PHID).
Test Plan: Set the name of some build steps, saw it appear in the correct places.
Reviewers: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Reviewed By: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Subscribers: epriestley, Korvin
Maniphest Tasks: T1049
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D9816
Summary:
Ref T5532. This adds:
- Documents can designate that they should be signed by "Corporations" or "Individuals".
- Corporate documents get different fields and a different exemption process.
- Basically everything works the same but this is like a zillion lines of form code.
Test Plan: See screenshots.
Reviewers: btrahan, chad
Reviewed By: chad
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T5532
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D9812
Summary:
Ref T5532. Allow document managers to add exemptions, which act like signatures but are tracked a little differently.
The primary use case for us is users who sign a corporate CLA and need a user-level exemption if they don't want to sign an individual CLA.
Test Plan: See screenshots.
Reviewers: btrahan, chad
Reviewed By: chad
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T5532
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D9795
Summary: Ref T5471. Adds an archived state for panels. Archived panels don't show up in the default query view or in the "Add Existing Panel" workflow.
Test Plan:
- Archived a panel.
- Activated a panel.
- Viewed / searched for archived/active panels.
- Popped "Add Existing Panel" dropdown and saw it omit archived panels.
Reviewers: chad
Reviewed By: chad
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T5471
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D9779
Summary:
Ref T3116. In the case of anonymous signers, there's no way to do a quick way to check if someone has signed a doc since you can't query by their (nonexistent) external account ID.
Move "name" and "email" to first-class columns and let the engine search for them.
Test Plan: Searched for signatures with name and email fragments.
Reviewers: btrahan, chad
Reviewed By: chad
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T3116
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D9776
Summary: This further helps differentiate types/roles for projects.
Test Plan: {F169758}
Reviewers: chad
Reviewed By: chad
Subscribers: epriestley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D9710
Summary: Ref T2222. See D8355. I'll hold this for a while.
Test Plan: Ran migration.
Reviewers: chad, btrahan
Reviewed By: chad
Subscribers: epriestley, aran
Maniphest Tasks: T2222
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8356
Summary: Ref T2222. I'll hold this, but there are no more reads or writes from/to this table in the application.
Test Plan: Grepped for usage, ran migration, browsed around.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley, aran
Maniphest Tasks: T2222
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8203
Summary:
Ref T4209. Unifies the local (`./bin/phd status`) and global (`./bin/phd status --all`) view into a single table. This generally makes it easy to administer daemons running across multiple hosts.
Depends on D9606.
Test Plan:
```
> sudo ./bin/phd status
ID Host PID Started Daemon Arguments
38 localhost 2282 Jun 18 2014, 7:52:56 AM PhabricatorRepositoryPullLocalDaemon
39 localhost 2289 Jun 18 2014, 7:52:57 AM PhabricatorGarbageCollectorDaemon
40 localhost 2294 Jun 18 2014, 7:52:57 AM PhabricatorTaskmasterDaemon
41 localhost 2314 Jun 18 2014, 7:52:58 AM PhabricatorTaskmasterDaemon
42 localhost 2319 Jun 18 2014, 7:52:59 AM PhabricatorTaskmasterDaemon
43 localhost 2328 Jun 18 2014, 7:53:00 AM PhabricatorTaskmasterDaemon
44 localhost 2354 Jun 18 2014, 7:53:08 AM PhabricatorRepositoryPullLocalDaemon X --not Y
```
Reviewers: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley
Reviewed By: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley
Subscribers: epriestley, Korvin
Maniphest Tasks: T4209
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D9607
Summary:
We already have GC for daemon log events, but not for daemon logs themselves.
Collect old daemon logs which aren't still running.
Test Plan: Ran `phd debug garbage`, observed old logs get cleaned up. Started some daemons, re-ran garbage, made sure they stuck around.
Reviewers: joshuaspence
Reviewed By: joshuaspence
Subscribers: epriestley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D9610
Summary:
Ref T4566. Currently, mocks have a conservative (author only), immutable default edit policy.
Instead:
- Let the edit policy be changed.
- Default the edit policy to "all users", similar to other applications.
- Add an application-level setting for it.
- Migrate existing edit policies to be consistent with the old policy (just the author).
This stops short of adding a separate "owner" and letting that be changed, since Pholio doesn't really have any review/approve type features (at least, so far). We can look at doing this if we get more feedback about it, or if we make owners more meaningful (e.g., add more "review-like" process to mocks).
Test Plan:
- Ran migration scripts.
- Confirmed existing mocks retained their effective policies (author only).
- Created a new mock, saw edit policy.
- Changed edit policy.
- Changed global edit policy default.
- Tried to edit a mock I couldn't edit.
Reviewers: chad
Reviewed By: chad
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T4566
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D9550
Summary:
Ref T4045. Ref T5179. Hunk storage has two major issues:
- It's utf8, but actual diffs are binary.
- It's huge and can't be compressed or archived.
This introduces a second datastore which solves these problems: by recording hunk encoding, supporting compression, and supporting alternate storage. There's no actual compression or storage support yet, but there's space in the table for them.
Since nothing actually uses hunk IDs, it's fine to have these tables exist at the same time and use the same IDs. We can migrate data between the tables gradually without requiring downtime or disrupting installs.
Test Plan:
- There are no writes to the new table yet.
- The only effect this has is making us issue one extra query when looking for hunks.
- Observed the query issue, but everything else continue working fine.
- Created a new diff.
- Ran unit tests.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T4045, T5179
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D9290
Summary: Ref T5089. Adds a `security.require-multi-factor-auth` which forces all users to enroll in MFA before they can use their accounts.
Test Plan:
Config:
{F159750}
Roadblock:
{F159748}
After configuration:
{F159749}
- Required MFA, got roadblocked, added MFA, got unblocked.
- Removed MFA, got blocked again.
- Used `bin/auth strip` to strip MFA, got blocked.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T5089
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D9285
Summary: Fixes T5090. Introduced getIcon into Handle stack which allows you to specify a per handle icon. getIcon falls back ot getTypeIcon.
Test Plan: changed the icon on a project a bunch. verified transactions showed up. verified icon showed up in typeahead. verified icon showed up in tokens that were pre-generated (not typed in). units test passed.
Reviewers: chad, epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: epriestley, Korvin
Maniphest Tasks: T5090
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D9264
Summary:
Fixes T4021. Chooses to keep a "primary" slug based off the name - including all that lovely logic - and allow the user to specify "additional" slugs. Expose these as "hashtags" to the user.
Sets us up for a fun diff where we can delete all the Project => Phriction automagicalness. In terms of this diff, see the TODOs i added.
Test Plan:
added a primary slug as an additional slug - got an error. added a slug in use on another project - got an error. added multiple good slugs and they worked. removed slugs and it worked. made some remark using multiple new slugs and they all linked to the correct project
ran epriestley's case
- Create project "A".
- Give it additional slug "B".
- Try to create project "B".
and i got a nice error about hashtag collision
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: epriestley, Korvin
Maniphest Tasks: T4021
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D9250
Summary:
Ref T4398. We have several auth-related systems which require (or are improved by) the ability to hand out one-time codes which expire after a short period of time.
In particular, these are:
- SMS multi-factor: we need to be able to hand out one-time codes for this in order to prove the user has the phone.
- Password reset emails: we use a time-based rotating token right now, but we could improve this with a one-time token, so once you reset your password the link is dead.
- TOTP auth: we don't need to verify/invalidate keys, but can improve security by doing so.
This adds a generic one-time code storage table, and strengthens the TOTP enrollment process by using it. Specifically, you can no longer edit the enrollment form (the one with a QR code) to force your own key as the TOTP key: only keys Phabricator generated are accepted. This has no practical security impact, but generally helps raise the barrier potential attackers face.
Followup changes will use this for reset emails, then implement SMS multi-factor.
Test Plan:
- Enrolled in TOTP multi-factor auth.
- Submitted an error in the form, saw the same key presented.
- Edited the form with web tools to provide a different key, saw it reject and the server generate an alternate.
- Change the expiration to 5 seconds instead of 1 hour, submitted the form over and over again, saw it cycle the key after 5 seconds.
- Looked at the database and saw the tokens I expected.
- Ran the GC and saw all the 5-second expiry tokens get cleaned up.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T4398
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D9217
Summary:
See title. Adds PhabricatorDashboardInstall data object which scopes installs to objectPHID + applicationClass. This is because we already have a collision for user home pages and user profiles. Assume only one dashboard per objectPHID + applicationClass though at the database level.
Fixes T5076.
Test Plan: From dashboard view, installed a dashboard - success! Went back to dashboard view and uninstalled it!
Reviewers: chad, epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: epriestley, Korvin
Maniphest Tasks: T5076
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D9206
Summary: Fixes T4299, Add status dropdown to mock edit view
Test Plan: Edit mock, close mock, thumbnail title should read (Disabled). Default mocks list should show only open mocks.
Reviewers: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley
Reviewed By: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley
Subscribers: chad, epriestley, Korvin
Maniphest Tasks: T4299
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D9145
Summary:
Fixes T4898. After we increased the strictness of the `%s` conversion, most `serialize()` output is rejected from the cache.
Drop the cache, change the column type to latin1_bin, and then use `%B` to mark the data as binary during query construction.
Test Plan: Viewed Differential, saw cache fills.
Reviewers: btrahan, spicyj
Reviewed By: spicyj
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T4898
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D9171
Summary:
Ref T4994. This stuff works:
- You can dump a blob of coverage information into `diffusion.updatecoverage`. This wipes existing coverage information and replaces it.
- It shows up when viewing files.
- It shows up when viewing commits.
This stuff does not work:
- When viewing files, the Javascript hover interaction isn't tied in yet.
- We always show this information, even if you're behind the commit where it was generated.
- You can't do incremental updates.
- There's no aggregation at the file (this file has 90% coverage), diff (the changes in this commit are 90% covered), or directory (the code in this directory has 90% coverage) levels yet.
- This is probably not the final form of the UI, storage, or API, so you should expect occasional changes over time. I've marked the method as "Unstable" for now.
Test Plan:
- Ran `save_lint.php` to check for collateral damage; it worked fine.
- Ran `save_lint.php` on a new branch to check creation.
- Published some fake coverage information.
- Viewed an affected commit.
- Viewed an affected file.
{F151915}
{F151916}
Reviewers: chad, btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: jhurwitz, epriestley, zeeg
Maniphest Tasks: T5044, T4994
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D9022
Summary: This is useful when you're trying to onboard an entire office and you end up using the Google OAuth anyway.
Test Plan: tested locally. Maybe I should write some tests?
Reviewers: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley
Reviewed By: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley
Subscribers: epriestley, Korvin
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D9150
Summary:
This gets us the ability to specify a "layout mode" and which column a panel should appear in at panel add time. Changing the layout mode from a multi column view to a single column view or vice versa will reset all panels to the left most column.
You can also drag and drop where columns appear via the "arrange" mode.
We also have a new dashboard create flow. Create dashboard -> arrange mode. (As opposed to view mode.) This could all possibly use massaging.
Fixes T4996.
Test Plan:
made a dashboard with panels in multiple columns. verified correct widths for various layout modes
re-arranged collumns like whoa.
Reviewers: chad, epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: epriestley, Korvin
Maniphest Tasks: T4996
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D9031
Summary:
Create transaction, editor, etc, and move command generation over to editor.
Show in a timeline in the buildable page.
Also prevent Engine from creating an empty transaction when build starts (Fixes T4885).
Fixes T4886.
Test Plan: Restart builds and buildables, look at timeline.
Reviewers: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley
Reviewed By: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley
Subscribers: epriestley, Korvin
Maniphest Tasks: T4885, T4886
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D9110
Summary:
Ref T4455. This adds a `repository_parents` table which stores `<childCommitID, parentCommitID>` relationships.
For new commits, it is populated when commits are discovered.
For older commits, there's a `bin/repository parents` script to rebuild the data.
Right now, there's no UI suggestion that you should run the script. I haven't come up with a super clean way to do this, and this table will only improve performance for now, so it's not important that we get everyone to run the script right away. I'm just leaving it for the moment, and we can figure out how to tell admins to run it later.
The ultimate goal is to solve T2683, but solving T4455 gets us some stuff anyway (for example, we can serve `diffusion.commitparentsquery` faster out of this cache).
Test Plan:
- Used `bin/repository discover` to discover new commits in Git, SVN and Mercurial repositories.
- Used `bin/repository parents` to rebuild Git and Mercurial repositories (SVN repos just exit with a message).
- Verified that the table appears to be sensible.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: jhurwitz, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T4455
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D9044
Summary:
Provides a working SMS implementation with support for Twilio.
This version doesn't really retry if we get any gruff at all. Future versions should retry.
Test Plan: used bin/sms to send messages and look at them.
Reviewers: chad, epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: aurelijus, epriestley, Korvin
Maniphest Tasks: T920
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8930
Summary: Fixes T4931. Each new credential should come with the ability to lock the credential permanently, so that no one can ever edit again. Each existing credential must allow user to lock existing credential.
Test Plan: Create new credential, verify that you can lock it before saving it. Open existing unlocked credential, verify that option to lock it exists. Once credential is locked, the option to reveal it should be disabled, and editing the credential won't allow username/password updates.
Reviewers: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley
Reviewed By: #blessed_reviewers, epriestley
Subscribers: epriestley, Korvin
Maniphest Tasks: T4931
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8947
Summary:
Ref T4749. Ref T3265. Ref T4909. Several goals here:
- Move user destruction to the CLI to limit the power of rogue admins.
- Start consolidating all "destroy named object" scripts into a single UI, to make it easier to know how to destroy things.
- Structure object destruction so we can do a better and more automatic job of cleaning up transactions, edges, search indexes, etc.
- Log when we destroy objects so there's a record if data goes missing.
Test Plan: Used `bin/remove destroy` to destroy several users.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T3265, T4749, T4909
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8940
Summary:
Ref T4398. This prompts users for multi-factor auth on login.
Roughly, this introduces the idea of "partial" sessions, which we haven't finished constructing yet. In practice, this means the session has made it through primary auth but not through multi-factor auth. Add a workflow for bringing a partial session up to a full one.
Test Plan:
- Used Conduit.
- Logged in as multi-factor user.
- Logged in as no-factor user.
- Tried to do non-login-things with a partial session.
- Reviewed account activity logs.
{F149295}
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T4398
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8922
Summary:
Ref T3583. Adds edges, query relationships, etc. Lots of debugging/temporary UI.
My general intent here is to use edges to track where panels appear, and then put additional data on the dashboard itself to control layout, positioning, etc.
Dashboards don't actually render yet so this is still pretty boring.
Test Plan:
{F149175}
{F149176}
{F149177}
Reviewers: chad, btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T3583
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8916
Summary: Ref T3583. These will be the primary class carrying panel implementations.
Test Plan:
{F149125}
{F149126}
Reviewers: chad, btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T3583
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8912
Summary:
Ref T4398. This is still pretty rough and isn't exposed in the UI yet, but basically works. Some missing features / areas for improvement:
- Rate limiting attempts (see TODO).
- Marking tokens used after they're used once (see TODO), maybe. I can't think of ways an attacker could capture a token without also capturing a session, offhand.
- Actually turning this on (see TODO).
- This workflow is pretty wordy. It would be nice to calm it down a bit.
- But also add more help/context to help users figure out what's going on here, I think it's not very obvious if you don't already know what "TOTP" is.
- Add admin tool to strip auth factors off an account ("Help, I lost my phone and can't log in!").
- Add admin tool to show users who don't have multi-factor auth? (so you can pester them)
- Generate QR codes to make the transfer process easier (they're fairly complicated).
- Make the "entering hi-sec" workflow actually check for auth factors and use them correctly.
- Turn this on so users can use it.
- Adding SMS as an option would be nice eventually.
- Adding "password" as an option, maybe? TOTP feels fairly good to me.
I'll post a couple of screens...
Test Plan:
- Added TOTP token with Google Authenticator.
- Added TOTP token with Authy.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T4398
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8875
Summary:
Ref T4398. This is roughly a "sudo" mode, like GitHub has for accessing SSH keys, or Facebook has for managing credit cards. GitHub actually calls theirs "sudo" mode, but I think that's too technical for big parts of our audience. I've gone with "high security mode".
This doesn't actually get exposed in the UI yet (and we don't have any meaningful auth factors to prompt the user for) but the workflow works overall. I'll go through it in a comment, since I need to arrange some screenshots.
Test Plan: See guided walkthrough.
Reviewers: chad, btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T4398
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8851
Summary: Fixes T3566 List of poll actions should include ability to close an open poll or reopen a closed poll.
Test Plan: Poll author should be able to close/reopen poll. Non-author should get policy screen when attempting to close/reopen poll.
Reviewers: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Reviewed By: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Subscribers: epriestley, Korvin
Maniphest Tasks: T3566
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8846
Summary: Going to sit on this for a bit so we can fall back to it if needbe, but this table no longer has any reads or writes in the application.
Test Plan: Applied patch locally and poked around.
Reviewers: btrahan, chad
Reviewed By: chad
Subscribers: aran
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8190
Summary:
Ref T3551. Currently, ReleephRequests don't have a direct concept of the //object// being requested. You can request `D123`, but that is just a convenient way to write `rXyyyy`.
When the UI wants to display information about a revision, it deduces it by examining the commit.
This is primarily an attack on T3551, so we don't need to load <commit -> edge -> revision> (in an ad-hoc way) to get revisions. Instead, when you request a revision we keep track of it and can load it directly later.
Later, this will let us do more things: for example, if you request a branch, we can automatically update the commits (as GitHub does), etc. (Repository branches will need PHIDs first, of course.)
This adds and populates the column but doesn't use it yet. The second part of the migration could safely be run while Phabricator is up, although even for Facebook this table is probably quite small.
Test Plan:
- Ran migration.
- Verified existing requests associated sensibly.
- Created a new commit request.
- Created a new revision request.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T3551
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8822
Summary:
Ref T4809. Buildables currently have buildStatus and buildableStatus. Neither are used, and no one knows why we have two.
I'm going to use buildableStatus shortly, but buildStatus is meaningless; burn it.
Test Plan: `grep`, examined similar get/set calls, created a new buildable, ran storage upgrade.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T4809
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8796
Summary:
When we generate account tokens for CSRF keys and email verification, one of the inputs we use is the user's password hash. Users won't always have a password hash, so this is a weak input to key generation. This also couples CSRF weirdly with auth concerns.
Instead, give users a dedicated secret for use in token generation which is used only for this purpose.
Test Plan:
- Ran upgrade scripts.
- Verified all users got new secrets.
- Created a new user.
- Verified they got a secret.
- Submitted CSRF'd forms, they worked.
- Adjusted the CSRF token and submitted CSRF'd forms, verified they don't work.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8748
Summary:
This adds a system which basically keeps a record of recent actions, who took them, and how many "points" they were worth, like:
epriestley email.add 1 1233989813
epriestley email.add 1 1234298239
epriestley email.add 1 1238293981
We can use this to rate-limit actions by examining how many actions the user has taken in the past hour (i.e., their total score) and comparing that to an allowed limit.
One major thing I want to use this for is to limit the amount of error email we'll send to an email address. A big concern I have with sending more error email is that we'll end up in loops. We have some protections against this in headers already, but hard-limiting the system so it won't send more than a few errors to a particular address per hour should provide a reasonable secondary layer of protection.
This use case (where the "actor" needs to be an email address) is why the table uses strings + hashes instead of PHIDs. For external users, it might be appropriate to rate limit by cookies or IPs, too.
To prove it works, I rate limited adding email addresses. This is a very, very low-risk security thing where a user with an account can enumerate addresses (by checking if they get an error) and sort of spam/annoy people (by adding their address over and over again). Limiting them to 6 actions / hour should satisfy all real users while preventing these behaviors.
Test Plan:
This dialog is uggos but I'll fix that in a sec:
{F137406}
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8683
Summary: Fixes T4703. This is a VARCHAR(255) for no particular reason.
Test Plan: {F136160}
Reviewers: btrahan, chad
Reviewed By: chad
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T4703
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8652
Summary: Ref T3549. This table isn't written to yet; rename it and the DAOs and modernize the history controller.
Test Plan: Viewed history page for a product.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T3549
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8633
Summary: followup to D8544. This ends up creating an editor + transactions to get the job done.
Test Plan: made a column - saw a nice created transaction. edited the name - saw a nice name edit. deleted the column - saw a deleted transaction, updated "deleted" ui, and hte action change to activate. "Activated" the column and saw a transaction and updated UI. Tried to delete a column with tasks in it and got an error.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: epriestley, Korvin
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8620
Summary:
Ref T4677. Currently, we record individual actions in a push as PhabricatorRepositoryPushLogs, but tie them together only loosely with a `transactionKey`.
Provide a real PushEvent object, and move some of the denormalized fields to it. This primarily just gives us more robust infrastructure for building, e.g., email about pushes, for T4677, since we can act on real PHIDs rather than passing awkward identifiers around.
Test Plan:
- Performed migration.
- Looked at database for consistency.
- Browsed/queried push logs.
- Pushed a bunch of stuff.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T4677
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8615
Summary:
Ref T1049. Allows external systems to send a message to a build target. The primary intended use case is:
- You make an HTTP request to Jenkins.
- The build goes into a "waiting" state.
- Later, Jenkins calls `harbormaster.sendmessage` to report that the target passed or failed.
- The build continues as appropriate.
This is deceptively complicated because:
- There are a lot of race concerns. We might get a message back from an external system before it even responds to the request we made. We want to make sure we process these messages no matter when we receive them.
- These messages need to be sent to a build target (vs a build or buildable) because we'll get into trouble with parallelization later on otherwise (Jenkins is told to do 3 builds; we can't tell which ones failed or what overall state is unless the message are sent to targets).
- I initially thought about implementing this as a separate "Wait for a response from an external system" build step. This gets a lot more complicated for users once we do parallelization, though. Particularly, in the case where you've told Jenkins to do 3 builds, the three "wait" steps need to know which target they're waiting for (and jenkins needs to know some unique identifier for each target). So this pretty much boils down to a more complicated, more error-prone version of using target PHIDs.
This makes the already-muddy Build UI a bit worse, but it needs a general clarity pass anyway (it's showing way too much uninteresting data, and should show a better summary of results instead).
Test Plan:
- This doesn't really do anything interesting yet.
- Used Conduit to send messages to build plans.
- Viewed the messages on the build screen.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T1049
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8604
Summary: Ref T1049. For consistency, rename these to "Harbormaster...".
Test Plan: Ran migration, ran builds, everything still works fine.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T1049
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8602
Summary:
Ref T1049. Fixes T4602. Moves all the funky field stuff to CustomField. Uses ApplicationTransactions to apply and record edits.
This makes "artifact" fields a little less nice (but still perfectly usable). With D8599, I think they're reasonable overall. We can improve this in the future.
All other field types are better (e.g., fixes weird bugs with "bool", fixes lots of weird behavior around required fields), and this gives us access to many new field types.
Test Plan:
Made a bunch of step edits. Here's an example:
{F133694}
Note that:
- "Required" fields work correctly.
- the transaction record is shown at the bottom of the page.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T4602, T1049
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8600
Summary:
Ref T1812. I think integer constants are going to be confusing and error prone for users to interact with. For example, because we use 0-5, adding a second "open" status like "needs verification" without disrupting the existing statuses would require users to define a status with, e.g., constant `6`, but order it between constants `0` and `1`. And if they later remove statuses, they need to avoid reusing existing constants.
Instead, use more manageable string constants like "open", "resolved", etc.
We must migrate three tables:
- The task table itself, to update task status.
- The transaction table, to update historic status changes.
- The saved query table, to update saved queries which specify status sets.
Test Plan:
- Saved a query with complicated status filters.
- Ran migrations.
- Looked at the query, at existing tasks, and at task transactions.
- Forced migrations to run again to verify idempotentcy/safety.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T1812
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8583
Summary: Fixes T4408. I had to add a "status" to colum. I think we'll need this once we get fancier anyway but for now we have "active" and deleted.
Test Plan: deleted a column. noted reloaded workboard with all those tasks back in the default colun. loaded a task and saw the initial transaction had a "Disabled" icon next to the deleted workboard. also saw the new transaction back to the default column worked.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: epriestley, Korvin
Maniphest Tasks: T4408
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8544
Summary:
Fixes T4637.
- We already allow you to order by this column but don't have a key on it. Add one.
- Expose UI for querying on ranges.
Test Plan:
- Ran some queries, got reasonable-looking results and no table scans.
Reviewers: btrahan, bigo
Reviewed By: bigo
Subscribers: bigo, epriestley
Maniphest Tasks: T4637
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8557
Summary: Ref T2217. I'll hold this for a month or so, but once we're confident the migration didn't ruin anything we should nuke this old data -- it's just an insurance policy against discovering migration issues.
Test Plan: Will run in a month or so.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
Subscribers: epriestley, aran
Maniphest Tasks: T2217
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D7104
Summary:
Ref T988. This fixes the biggest current problem with Diviner, which is dead links to articles.
In the new Diviner, articles can have both a "name" (derived from the file name, and used in the URI) and a "title" (optional, specified explicitly). For example, we have one document with the name "feedback" and the title "Give Feedback! Get Support!".
On disk, we want to use the name for the actual file where the text lives ("feedback.diviner"). We also want to use the name in the URI, to generate a clean URI and to allow us to retitle the document slightly without breaking links to it (for example, we renamed the "Backup" document to "Backups and Migrations").
However, when displaying the article we want to use the title.
Currently, you can //only// link to the name, not the title. This is inconvenient:
- We have a bunch of existing docs which link to titles.
- It's natural/intuitive to link to titles.
- Linking to titles makes it easier/cheaper to generate documentation, because we don't need to be able to resolve things at render time.
To remedy this, allow links to target either names or titles. If we miss on a name query, we'll do a title query. This is implemented with a slug hash to allow approximately correct titles (wrong case/spacing/punctuation, e.g.) and sidestep all the UTF8/column length issues.
(In the long run, atom resolution should theoretically be more sophistiated than it is now, and we should do render-time lookups on at least some documents to catch bad links. However, this is fairly complicated and a relatively advanced feature, and I think allowing links to titles is desirable no matter what.)
Test Plan: The user documentation book now has valid links to articles when the titles and names differ.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran
Maniphest Tasks: T988
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8407
Summary:
Ref T2222. Make the "EditPro" controller accommodate diff updates, and support the transaction type. This one is pretty straightforward.
Also make `revisionPHID` in the comments table nullable to fix the "Edit" action.
Test Plan:
- Created new revision.
- Updated revision.
- Tried to do some invalid stuff.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran
Maniphest Tasks: T2222
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8376
Summary: Ref T2222. Ref T3886. Differential has a legacy storage table for auxiliary fields; move the data to modern storage.
Test Plan:
- Ran migration.
- Verified fields still worked properly afterward (view, edit, etc).
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran
Maniphest Tasks: T3886, T2222
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8355
Summary: Ref T2222. This is obsolete and no longer used. We could deduce it from transactions or commits in modern Phabricator if we wanted it. We may implement a more general mechanism for T4434.
Test Plan: `grep`
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran
Maniphest Tasks: T2222
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8330
Summary:
Ref T1191. Test that MySQL's rules match those of `phutil_is_utf8_with_only_bmp_characters()`:
- Build a string with //every// character that we consider to be a BMP character.
- Write it into MySQL.
- Read it back out.
- Make sure MySQL didn't truncate it.
Test Plan: Ran unit test. This test runs pretty quickly (50ms), the string with every character isn't all that enormous.
Reviewers: btrahan, arice
Reviewed By: arice
CC: chad, arice, aran
Maniphest Tasks: T1191
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8314
Summary: ...do it somewhat generically, so we could fairly easily add this to other applications. Fixes T3496. I got a wee bit lazy and decided not to migrate existing drafts. My excuses aside from laziness are doing it this way will let us see if anyone complains, we can always do a migration later if people do complain, and there's likely to be a lot of garbage data for older / bigger installs, and the migration didn't seem worth itgiven it would also likely be expensive in these cases.
Test Plan: made a draft inline comment on DX and observed DX had a note icon on Differential home page. made a draft comment on DX and observed DX had a note icon on Differential home page. deleted a draft inline comment and noted icon disappeared from Differential homepage. Submitted a draft comment + inline comment and noted icon disappeared.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: Korvin, epriestley, aran
Maniphest Tasks: T3496
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8275
Summary: Fixes T4443. Plug VCS passwords into the shared key stretching. They don't use any real stretching now (I anticipated doing something like T4443 eventually) so we can just migrate them into stretching all at once.
Test Plan:
- Viewed VCS settings.
- Used VCS password after migration.
- Set VCS password.
- Upgraded VCS password by using it.
- Used VCS password some more.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran
Maniphest Tasks: T4443
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8272
Summary:
Ref T2222. This is the big one.
This migrates each `DifferentialComment` to one or more ApplicationTransactions (action, cc, reviewers, update, comment, inlines), and makes `DifferentialComment` a double-reader for ApplicationTransactions.
The migration is pretty straightforward:
- If a comment took an action not otherwise covered, it gets an "action" transaction. This is something like "epriestley abandoned this revision.".
- If a comment updated the diff, it gets an "updated diff" transaction. Very old transactions of this type may not have a diff ID (probably only at Facebook).
- If a comment added or removed reviewers, it gets a "changed reviewers" transaction.
- If a comment added CCs, it gets a "subscribers" transaction.
- If a comment added comment text, it gets a "comment" transaction.
- For each inline attached to a comment, we generate an "inline" transaction.
Most comments generate a small number of transactions, but a few generate a significant number.
At HEAD, the code is basically already doing this, so comments in the last day or two already obey these rules, roughly, and will all generate only one transaction (except inlines).
Because we've already preallocated PHIDs in the comment text table, we only need to write to the transaction table.
NOTE: This significantly degrades Differential, making inline comments pretty much useless (they each get their own transaction, and don't show line numbers or files). The data is all fine, but the UI is garbage now. This needs to be fixed before we can deploy this to users, but it's easily separable since it's all just display code.
Specifically, they look like this:
{F112270}
Test Plan:
I've migrated locally and put things through their paces, but it's hard to catch sketchy stuff locally because most of my test data is nonsense and bad migrations wouldn't necessarily look out of place.
IMPORTANT: I'm planning to push this to a branch and then shift production over to the branch, and run it for a day or two before bringing it to master.
I generally feel good about this change: it's not that big since we were able to separate a lot of pieces out of it, and it's pretty straightforward. That said, it's still one of the most scary/dangerous changes we've ever made.
Reviewers: btrahan
CC: chad, aran
Maniphest Tasks: T2222
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8210
Summary:
Ref T2222. Ref T4415. We're still writing Differential subscription stuff into this weird legacy `differential_relationship` table, which is like an edge table but extremely ancient.
Move it into a proper table.
I've removed `withSubscriptions()` from `DifferentialRevisionQuery`. It was weird, doesn't work consistently with other similar filters, and was only used by the API. Now it means "ccs", which is consistent with the ApplicationSearch UI and with Maniphest.
Test Plan:
Without migrating, added and removed subscribers via various workflows. Queried for subscribers. Everything worked as expected.
Ran the migration, verified data survived.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: FacebookPOC, aran
Maniphest Tasks: T2222, T4415
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8202
Summary:
Ref T2222. Currently, `DifferentialComment` stores both (a) the text of comments and (b) various other transaction details. This data needs to map to both Transactions and TransactionComments in the long run. This diff separates out all the data which is bound for the TransactionComment table, so that when we migrate `DifferentialComment` itself it will //only// need to migrate into the Transactions table. This is a much simpler migration than the inline comment one was, partly because it set up infrastructure and partly because the data is less complex.
Basically, I'm just proxying the read/write for the comment text into the other table. All readers already go through the Query class, and there are only three writers (preview, comment, implicit comment on diff update) which are all highly regular and straightforward to test.
We can also back out of this diff very easily: doing double writes cost only one line of code (`$this->content = $content;`) so we have proper double writes and a trivial revert path.
Test Plan:
- Without migrating, added comments and saw them show up.
- Migrated.
- Saw all the old comments, and no damage to the new ones.
- Added new comments.
- Used comment preview.
- Updated a revision to implicitly create an update comment and verified it looked OK.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran
Maniphest Tasks: T2222
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8196
Summary:
Fixes T4379. Several changes:
- Migrate all project members into subscribers.
- When members are added or removed, subscribe or unsubscribe them.
- Show sub/unsub in the UI.
- Determine mailable membership of projects by querying subscribers.
Test Plan:
- As `duck`, joined a project.
- Added the project as a reviewer to a revision.
- Commented on the revision.
- Observed `duck` receive mail.
- Unsubscribed as `duck`.
- Observed no mail.
- Resubscribed as `duck`.
- Mail again.
- Joined/left project, checked sub/unsub status.
- Ran migration, looked at database.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran, asherkin
Maniphest Tasks: T4379
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8189
Summary: ...by the surprising step of changing how this data is stored from id to phid. Also a small fix to not allow "disabled" rules to be used as herald rule conditions, i.e. can't make a rule that depends on a disabled rule.
Test Plan: viewed existing herald rule that had a rule condition and noted nice new display using handle. made a new rule that had a rule condition and verified it worked correctly.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: Korvin, epriestley, aran
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8186
Summary:
Ref T4379. Long ago, the "Project" vs "ProjectProfile" split was intended to allow a bunch of special fields on projects without burdening the simple use cases, but CustomField handles that far better and far more generally, and doing this makes using ApplicationTransactions a pain to get right, so get rid of it.
The only remaining field is `profileImagePHID`, which we can just move to the main Project object. This is custom enough that I think it's reasonable not to express it as a custom field.
Test Plan: Created a project, set profile, edited project, viewed in typeahead, ran migration, verified database results.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran
Maniphest Tasks: T4379
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8183