1
0
Fork 0
mirror of https://we.phorge.it/source/phorge.git synced 2024-11-29 18:22:41 +01:00
Commit graph

16452 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
epriestley
f1a588c771 Add a basic profiler to Herald transcripts
Summary:
Ref T13298. Add a simple profiler as a starting point to catch any egregiously expensive rules or conditions.

This doesn't profile rule actions, so if "Add subscriber" (or whatever) is outrageously expensive it won't show up on the profile. Right now, actions get evaluated inside the Adapter so they're hard to profile. A future change could likely dig them out without too much trouble. I generally expect actions to be less expensive than conditions.

This also can't pin down a //specific// condition being expensive, but if you see that `H123` takes 20s to evaluate you can probably guess that the giant complicated regex is the expensive part.

Test Plan: {F6473407}

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13298

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20566
2019-06-05 08:50:41 -07:00
epriestley
b7aacaa4d3 Differentiate Remarkup header sizes more clearly
Summary:
Ref PHI1275. Previously, see T591. See also T7963. Headers are currently very visually similar to one another, and similar to the text size:

{F6485441}

I think the design intent was to make it hard to make bad-looking documents, but all the headers end up being very samey.

Differentiate the sizes of the headers better so they're much more obvious (e.g., when scrolling through a document) and the different levels are more distinct.

This might be a little overboard, but we can always pull it back a bit if it's too much, and I think giving users more control in Remarkup (in cases where it doesn't create some weird syntax/parsing nightmare) is generally a good thing.

Test Plan: {F6485447}

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20569
2019-06-04 16:03:32 -07:00
epriestley
d7890d08b8 Add "bin/herald rule ..." to modify Herald rules from the CLI
Summary:
Depends on D20566. Ref T13298. See PHI1280. Currently, there's no clean way to disable problematic personal rules. This comes up occasionally and sometimes isn't really the best approach to solving a problem, but is a generally reasonable capability to provide.

Allow Herald rules (including personal rules) to be disabled/enabled via `bin/herald rule ... --disable/--enable`.

Test Plan: Used the CLI to disable and enable a personal rule.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Subscribers: jmeador

Maniphest Tasks: T13298

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20567
2019-06-04 07:12:15 -07:00
epriestley
760406762a When a revision is closed, always promote it out of draft
Summary:
Fixes T13300. Currently, if you create a revision and then immediately land it (either using `--draft` or just beating Harbormaster to the punch) it can be stuck in "Draft" forever.

Instead, count landing changes like this as a publishing action.

Test Plan:
  - Used `arc diff --hold` to create a revision, then pushed the commit immediately.
  - Before change: revision closed, but was stuck in draft.
  - After change: revision closed and was promoted out of draft.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13300

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20565
2019-06-04 06:56:22 -07:00
epriestley
67f062b004 When triggering audits, count "Accepted" revisions as successfully reviewed
Summary:
See PHI1118. That issue may describe more than one bug, but the recent ordering changes to the import pipeline likely make this at least part of the problem.

Previously, commits would always close associated revisions before we made it to the "publish" step. This is no longer true, so we might be triggering audits on a commit before the associated revision actually closes.

Accommodate this by counting a revision in either "Accepted" or "Published (Was Previously Accepted)" as "reviewed".

Test Plan:
  - With commit C affecting paths in package P with "Audit Unreviewed Commits and Commits With No Owner Involvement", associated with revision R, with both R and C authored by the same user, and "R" in the state "Accepted", used `bin/repository reparse --publish <hash>` to republish the commit.
  - Before change: audit by package P triggered.
  - After change: audit by package P no longer triggered.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20564
2019-05-30 17:18:11 -07:00
epriestley
81134d7e7d After reloading transactions for the recipient while building transaction mail, put them in the input order
Summary:
Ref T13303. In D20525 I fixed an issue where transaction rendering could use cached values with the wrong viewer by reloading transactions.

However, reloading transactions may also reorder them as a side effect, since `withPHIDs(...)` does not imply an order. This can make transaction rendering order in mail wrong/inconsistent.

Instead, reorder the transactions before continuing so mail transaction order is consistent.

Test Plan: Applied a group of transactions to a task, saw a more consistent rendering order in mail after the change.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13303

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20563
2019-05-30 17:14:54 -07:00
epriestley
9a32a563f0 Add a "View Task" button to HTML mail from Maniphest
Summary:
See downstream <https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T1050>. Some time ago, we added a "View Revision" button to Differential mail. This hasn't created any problems and generally seems good / desirable.

It isn't trivial to just add everywhere since we need a translation string in each case, but at least add it to Maniphest for now. Going forward, we can fill in more applications as they come up.

Test Plan:
Used `bin/mail show-outbound --id <x> --dump-html`:

{F6470461}

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20561
2019-05-30 15:24:22 -07:00
epriestley
fb5dec4c03 Require valid comments to contain at least one non-whitespace character
Summary:
See downstream <https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T88655>. This is very marginal, but we currently allow comments consisting of //only// whitespace.

These are probably always mistakes, so treat them like completely empty comments.

(We intentionally do not trim leading or trailing whitespace from comments when posting them becuase leading spaces can be used to trigger codeblock formatting.)

Test Plan:
  - Posted empty, nonempty, and whitespace-only comments.
  - Whitespace-only comments now have the same behavior as truly empty comments (e.g., do not actually generate a transaction).

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20562
2019-05-30 15:15:24 -07:00
epriestley
8747204807 Clean up "phabricator.timezone" configuration instructions a little bit
Summary: These instructions are fairly old and can be a little fancier and more clear in the context of modern Phabricator. Drop the reference to "HPHP", link the actual timezone list, wordsmith a little.

Test Plan: d( O_o )b

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20560
2019-05-30 15:08:11 -07:00
epriestley
e5a1681903 Render timezone names more readably, with spaces rather than underscores ("America/Los Angeles", not "America/Los_Angeles").
Summary:
See downstream <https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T902>. Currently, timezones are rendered with their raw internal names (like `America/Los_Angeles`) which include underscores.

Replacing underscores with spaces is a more human-readable (and perhaps meaningfully better for things like screen readers, although this is pure speculation).

There's some vague argument against this, like "administrators may need to set a raw internal value in `phabricator.timezone` and this could mislead them", but we already give a pretty good error message if you do this and could improve hinting if necessary.

Test Plan: Viewed timezone list in {nav Settings} and the timezone "reconcile" dialog, saw a more-readable "Los Angeles".

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20559
2019-05-30 15:03:11 -07:00
epriestley
53b9acfb7d Test for "CAN_INTERACT" on comment edits in a way that survives objects which only implement "CAN_VIEW"
Summary:
Ref T13289. See D20551. In D20551, I implemented some "CAN_INTERACT" checks against certain edits, but these checks end up testing "CAN_INTERACT" against objects like Conpherence threads which do not support a distinct "CAN_INTERACT" permission. I misrembered how the "CAN_INTERACT" fallback to "CAN_VIEW" actually works: it's not fully automatic, and needs some explicit "interact, or view if interact is not available" checks.

Use the "interact" wrappers to test these policies so they fall back to "CAN_VIEW" if an object does not support "CAN_INTERACT". Generally, objects which have a "locked" state have a separate "CAN_INTERACT" permission; objects which don't have a "locked" state do not.

Test Plan: Created and edited comments in Conpherence (or most applications other than Maniphest).

Reviewers: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13289

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20558
2019-05-28 10:14:43 -07:00
epriestley
ce6fc5be90 Fix a looping workflow when trying to submit a partially-effectless transaction group
Summary:
Ref T13289. If you do this:

  - Subscribe to a task (so we don't generate a subscribe side-effect later).
  - Prepare a transaction group: sign with MFA, change projects (don't make any changes), add a comment.
  - Submit the transaction group.

...you'll get prompted "Some actions don't have any effect (the non-change to projects), apply remaining effects?".

If you confirm, you get MFA'd, but the MFA flow loses the "continue" confirmation, so you get trapped in a workflow loop of confirming and MFA'ing.

Instead, retain the "continue" bit through the MFA.

Also, don't show "You can't sign an empty transaction group" if there's a comment.

See also T13295, since the amount of magic here can probably be reduced. There's likely little reason for "continue" or "hisec" to be magic nowadays.

Test Plan:
  - Went through the workflow above.
  - Before: looping workflow.
  - After: "Continue" carries through the MFA gate.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13289

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20552
2019-05-23 19:16:17 -07:00
epriestley
719dd6d3f4 Remove the "search_documentfield" table
Summary: Ref T11741. See PHI1276. After the switch to "Ferret", this table has no remaining readers or writers.

Test Plan:
  - Ran `bin/storage upgrade -f`, no warnings.
  - Grepped for class name, table name, `stemmedCorpus` column; got no relevant hits.
  - Did a fulltext search.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam

Maniphest Tasks: T11741

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20549
2019-05-23 19:11:38 -07:00
epriestley
aacc62463d Prevent editing and deleting comments in locked conversations
Summary:
Ref T13289. This tightens up a couple of corner cases around locked threads.

Locking is primarily motivated by two use cases: stopping nonproductive conversations on open source installs (similar to GitHub's feature); and freezing object state for audit/record-keeping purposes.

Currently, you can edit or remove comments on a locked thread, but neither use case is well-served by allowing this. Require "CAN_INTERACT" to edit or remove a comment.

Administrators can still remove comments from a locked thread to serve "lock a flamewar, then clean it up", since "Remove Comment" on a comment you don't own is fairly unambiguously an administrative action.

Test Plan:
  - On a locked task, tried to edit and remove my comments as a non-administrator. Saw appropriate disabled UI state and error dialogs (actions were disallowed).
  - On a locked task, tried to remove another user's comments as an administrator. This works.
  - On a normal task, edited comments normally.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13289

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20551
2019-05-23 19:04:55 -07:00
epriestley
f838ad1827 Fix two straggling pagination issues in Drydock
Summary:
Ref T13289. See <https://discourse.phabricator-community.org/t/fatal-error-in-pagination-in-drydock-resources-host-logs-all-logs/2735>.

`bin/drydock lease` and the web UI for reviewing all object logs when there is more than one page of logs didn't get fully updated to the new cursors.

  - Use a cursor pager in `bin/drydock lease`.
  - Implement `withIDs()` in `LeaseQuery` so the default paging works properly.

Test Plan:
  - Ran `bin/drydock lease`, got a lease with log output along the way.
  - Set page size to 2, viewed host logs with multiple pages, paged to page 2.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam

Maniphest Tasks: T13289

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20553
2019-05-23 18:50:06 -07:00
epriestley
2e2dc47f07 In the Herald test console, don't consider transactions that Herald rules applied
Summary:
Depends on D20546. Ref T13283. Currently, if you do something (transactions "A", "B") and Herald does some things in response (transaction "C"), Herald acts only on the things you did ("A", "B") since the thing it did ("C") didn't exist yet, until it ran.

However, if you use the test console to test rules against the object we'll pick up all three transactions since they're all part of the same group. This isn't ideal.

To fix this, skip transactions which Herald applied, since it obviously didn't consider them when it was evaluating.

Test Plan:
  - Created a revision, in the presence of a Herald rule that adds reviewers.
  - Then, ran the revision through the test console.
  - Before: saw the "Herald added reviewers: ..." transaction in the transaction group Herald evaluated.
  - After: saw only authentic human transactions.

{F6464064}

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13283

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20547
2019-05-22 16:34:34 -07:00
epriestley
31e623afcc Use the same transaction group ID for transactions applied indirectly by a sub-editor
Summary:
Ref T13283. Currently, each Editor sets its own group ID, so if you create a revision and then Herald does some stuff, the two groups of transactions get different group IDs.

This means the test console is slightly misleading (it will only pick up the Herald transactions). It's going to be misleading anyway (Herald obviously can't evaluate Herald transactions) but this is at least a little closer to reality and stops Herald actions from masking non-Herald actions.

Test Plan:
  - Created a revision. Herald applied one transaction.
  - Used the test console.
  - Before: The test console only picked up the single most recent Herald transaction.
  - After: The test console picked up the whole transaction group.

{F6464059}

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13283

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20546
2019-05-22 16:33:03 -07:00
epriestley
f6af1c4374 When creating a Phriction document, mark initial transactions as "create" transactions to fix weird email
Summary:
Ref T13289. When you create a Phriction document, you currently get an email with the whole new content as a "diff".

You also get extra transactions in the email and on the page.

This is because Phriction isn't on EditEngine and doesn't mark "create" transactions in a modern way. Get them marked properly to fix these obviously-broken behaviors. This can all go away once Phriction switches to EditEngine, although I don't have any particular plans to do that in the immediate future.

Test Plan:
  - Created a new document, viewed email, no longer saw redundant "edited content" transaction or "CHANGES TO CONTENT" diff.
  - Updated a document, viewed email, got interdiff.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13289

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20548
2019-05-22 16:28:25 -07:00
epriestley
b95bf722d5 Drop the "update revision with commit diff" transaction if the revision is already closed
Summary:
Ref T13290. Prior to recent changes, if we parsed some commit C which was associated with a revision R, but R was already closed, we'd skip the whole set of updates because the "close the revision" transaction would fail and we'd throw because we did not `setContinueOnNoEffect()`.

We now continue on no effect so we can get the edge ("commit has revision" / "revision has commit"), since we want it in all cases, but this means we may also apply an extra "Updated revision to reflect committed changes" transaction and new diff. This can happen even if we're careful about not trying to apply this transaction to closed revisions, since two workers may race. (Today, we aren't too careful about this.)

To fix this, just make this transaction no-op itself if the revision is already closed by the time it tries to apply.

This happened on D20451 because a merge commit with the same hash as the last diff was pushed, but it's easiest to reproduce by just running `bin/repository reparse --message <commit>`, which updates related revisions with a new diff every time.

Test Plan:
  - Ran `bin/repository reparse --messsage <commit>` several times, on a commit with an associated revision.
  - Before: each run attached a new diff and created a new "updated to reflect committed changes" transaction.
  - After: repeated runs had no effects.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13290

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20545
2019-05-22 16:26:45 -07:00
epriestley
1eff4fdca3 Prevent "Differential Revision: ..." from counting as a mention in commit messages
Summary:
Ref T13290. Ref T13291. Now that a full URI is a "mention", the full URI in "Differential Revision: ..." also triggers a mention.

Stop it from doing that, since these mentions are silly/redundant/unintended.

The API here is also slightly odd; simplify it a little bit to get rid of doing "append" with "get + append + set".

Test Plan: Used `bin/repository reparse --publish` to republish commits with "Differential Revision: ..." and verified that the revision PHID was properly dropped from the mention list.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13291, T13290

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20544
2019-05-22 16:22:01 -07:00
epriestley
fa4dcaa3aa Stabilize sorting of feed stories with similar strength
Summary:
See PHI1222. When we publish several transactions to feed at once, we sort them by "action strength" to figure out which one gets to be the title story.

This sort currently uses `msort()`, which uses `asort()`, which is not a stable sort and has inconsistent behavior across PHP versions:

{F6463721}

Switch to `msortv()`, which is a stable sort. Previously, see also T6861.

If all transactions have the same strength, we'll now consistently pick the first one.

This probably (?) does not impact anything in the upstream, but is good from a consistency point of view.

Test Plan:
Top story was published after this change and uses the chronologically first transaction as the title story.

Bottom story was published before this change and uses the chronologically second transaction as the title story.

Both stories have two transactions with the same strength ("create" + "add reviewer").

{F6463722}

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20540
2019-05-22 15:50:59 -07:00
epriestley
f91bef64f1 Stack chart functions in a more physical way
Summary:
Ref T13279. See that task for some discussion.

The accumulations of some of the datasets may be negative (e.g., if more tasks are moved out of a project than into it) which can lead to negative area in the stacked chart.

Introduce `min(...)` and `max(...)` to separate a function into points above or below some line, then mangle the areas to pick the negative and positive regions apart so they at least have a plausible physical interpretation and none of the areas are negative.

This is presumably not a final version, I'm just trying to produce a chart that isn't a sequence of overlapping regions with negative areas that is "technically" correct but not really possible to interpret.

Test Plan: {F6439195}

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Subscribers: yelirekim

Maniphest Tasks: T13279

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20506
2019-05-22 05:40:39 -07:00
epriestley
f190c42bcd Store charts earlier and build them out a little later
Summary:
Ref T13279. Currently, we store a fairly low-level description of functions and datasets in a chart. This will create problems with (for example) translating function labels.

If you view a chart someone links you, it should say "El Charto" if you speak Spanish, not "The Chart" if the original viewer speaks English.

To support this, store a slightly higher level version of the chart: the chart engine key, plus configuration parameters. This is very similar to how SearchEngine works.

For example, the burndown chart now stores a list of project PHIDs, instead of a list of `[accumulate [sum [fact task.open <project-phid>]]]` functions.

(This leaves some serialization code with no callsites, but we may eventually have a "CustomChartEngine" which stores raw functions, so I'm leaving it for now.)

As a result, function labels provided by the chart engine are now translatable.

(Note that the actual chart is meaningless since the underlying facts can't be stacked like they're being stacked, as some are negative in some areas of their accumulation.)

Test Plan: {F6439121}

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Subscribers: yelirekim

Maniphest Tasks: T13279

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20504
2019-05-22 05:39:32 -07:00
epriestley
493a6b72c1 Automatically select the range for charts in a general way
Summary:
Ref T13279. Replace the hard-coded default range with a range computed by examining the chart data.

Instead of having a "Dataset" return a blob of wire data, "Dataset" now returns a structure with raw wire data plus a range. I expect to add more structured data here in future changes (tooltip/hover event data, maybe function labels).

Test Plan: {F6439101}

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Subscribers: yelirekim

Maniphest Tasks: T13279

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20503
2019-05-22 05:36:58 -07:00
epriestley
e90360c289 Wrap "<min, max>" chart domain pairs in an "Interval" class
Summary: Ref T13279. Slightly simplify domain handling by putting all the "[x, y]" stuff in an Interval class. I'm planning to do something similar for ranges next, so this should make that easierr.

Test Plan: Viewed chart, saw same chart as before.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Subscribers: yelirekim

Maniphest Tasks: T13279

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20502
2019-05-22 05:28:49 -07:00
epriestley
a80426b339 Provide chart function labels over the wire instead of making them up
Summary: Ref T13279. Makes charts incrementally more useful by allowing the server to provide labels and colors for functions.

Test Plan: {F6438872}

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Subscribers: yelirekim

Maniphest Tasks: T13279

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20501
2019-05-22 05:22:59 -07:00
epriestley
c6052b41a6 Label important data on charts
Summary:
Ref T13279. Adds client-side support for rendering function labels on charts, then labels every function as important data.

Works okay on mobile, although I'm not planning to target mobile terribly heavily for v0.

Test Plan: {F6438860}

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Subscribers: yelirekim

Maniphest Tasks: T13279

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20500
2019-05-22 05:21:26 -07:00
epriestley
81456db559 Roughly support stacked area charts
Summary:
Ref T13279. This adds support for:

  - Datasets can have types, like "stacked area".
  - Datasets can have multiple functions.
  - Charts can store dataset types and datasets with multiple functions.
  - Adds a "stacked area" dataset.
  - Makes D3 actually draw a stacked area chart.

Lots of rough edges here still, but the result looks slightly more like it's supposed to look.

D3 can do some of this logic itself, like adding up the area stacks on top of one another with `d3.stack()`. I'm doing it in PHP instead because I think it's a bit easier to debug, and it gives us more options for things like caching or "export to CSV" or "export to API" or rendering a data table under the chart or whatever.

Test Plan: {F6427780}

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Subscribers: yelirekim

Maniphest Tasks: T13279

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20498
2019-05-22 05:19:41 -07:00
epriestley
0776b5ca2c Update D3 to the current version
Summary:
Ref T13279. Old D3 seems perfectly fine, but most of the good references seem to have been written by people who update D3 more than once every 10 years (???).

This requires some minor API changes, see next diff.

Test Plan: See next diff.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13279

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20497
2019-05-22 05:16:00 -07:00
epriestley
5c1b91ab45 Consolidate burndown logic into a "BurndownChartEngine"
Summary:
Ref T13279. For now, we need to render burndowns from both Maniphest (legacy) and Projects (new prototype).

Consolidate this logic into a "BurndownChartEngine". I plan to expand this to work a bit like a "SearchEngine", and serve as a UI layer on top of the raw chart features.

The old "ChartEngine" is now "ChartRenderingEngine".

Test Plan:
  - Viewed burndowns ("burnups") in Maniphest.
  - Viewed burndowns in Projects.
  - Saw the same chart.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Subscribers: yelirekim

Maniphest Tasks: T13279

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20496
2019-05-22 05:10:42 -07:00
epriestley
0aee3da19e Add a "Reports" menu item to Projects
Summary:
Ref T13279. Since the use cases that have made it upstream are all for relatively complex charts (e.g., requiring aggregation and composition of multiple data series in nontrivial ways) I'm currently looking at an overall approach like this:

  - At least for now, Charts provides a low-level internal-only API for composing charts from raw datasets.
  - This is exposed to users through pre-built `SearchEngine`-like interfaces that provide a small number of more manageable controls (show chart from date X to date Y, show projects A, B, C), but not the full set of composition features (`compose(scale(2), cos())` and such).
  - Eventually, we may put more UI on the raw chart composition stuff and let you build your own fully custom charts by gluing together datasets and functions.
  - Or we may add this stuff in piecemeal to the higher-level UI as tools like "add goal line" or "add trend line" or whatever.

This will let the low-level API mature/evolve a bit before users get hold of it directly, if they ever do. Most requests today are likely satisfiable with a small number of chart engines plus raw API data access, so maybe UI access to flexible charting is far away.

Step toward this by adding a "Reports" section to projects. For now, this just renders a basic burnup for the current project. Followups will add an "Engine" layer above this and make the chart it produces more useful.

Test Plan: {F6426984}

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13279

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20495
2019-05-22 05:08:55 -07:00
epriestley
f87c1ac362 Start the fact daemon in "bin/phd start"
Summary:
Depends on D20488. Ref T13279. When installs run `bin/phd start`, start the fact daemon alongside other daemons.

Since "Reports" in Maniphest now relies on Facts data, populate it.

Test Plan: Ran `bin/phd start`, saw the Fact daemon start.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13279

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20489
2019-05-22 04:57:55 -07:00
epriestley
10afe1f2b5 Fix handling of "null" domain values in Charts
Summary: Depends on D20487. If you `min(1, 2, null)`, you get `null`. We want `1`.

Test Plan: Viewed a "burnup for project X" chart where one dataseries had no datapoints. Saw a sensible domain selected automatically.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Subscribers: yelirekim

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20488
2019-05-22 04:51:22 -07:00
epriestley
146317f2c4 Remove the legacy chart behavior from Maniphest
Summary: Depends on D20486. Ref T13279. Now that the "Reports" UI uses a panel to draw a real chart from Facts, throw away the copy of the old code.

Test Plan: `grep`

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13279

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20487
2019-05-22 04:48:24 -07:00
epriestley
f8ebc71b8f Replace the chart in Maniphest Reports with a chart driven by Facts
Summary:
Depends on D20485. Ref T13279. This removes the ad-hoc charting in Maniphest and replaces it with a Facts-based chart.

(To do this, we build a dashboard panel inline and render it.)

Test Plan: {F6412720}

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Subscribers: yelirekim

Maniphest Tasks: T13279

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20486
2019-05-22 04:44:10 -07:00
epriestley
ff6b13872c Add a rough "Chart" Dashboard Panel
Summary:
Depends on D20484. Ref T13279. Allows a chart to render as a panel.

Configuring these is currently quite low-level (you have to manually copy/paste a chart key in), but works well enough.

Test Plan: {F6412708}

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Subscribers: yelirekim

Maniphest Tasks: T13279

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20485
2019-05-22 04:36:09 -07:00
epriestley
c458b50b85 Render charts from storage instead of just one ad-hoc hard-coded chart
Summary:
Ref T13279. This changes the chart controller:

  - if we have no arguments, build a demo chart and redirect to it;
  - otherwise, load the specified chart from storage and render it.

This mostly prepares for "Chart" panels on dashboards.

Test Plan: Visited `/fact/chart/`, got redirected to a chart from storage.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Subscribers: yelirekim

Maniphest Tasks: T13279

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20483
2019-05-22 04:31:48 -07:00
epriestley
4180b337cf Add a "{src ...}" Remarkup rule to provide a more flexible way to reference source files in Diffusion
Summary: Depends on D20538. Ref T13291. We now recognize full source URIs, but encoding full URIs isn't super human-friendly and we can't do stuff like relative links with them. Add `{src ...}` as a way to get to this behavior that supports options and more flexible syntax.

Test Plan: {F6463607}

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13291

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20539
2019-05-21 13:12:28 -07:00
epriestley
56e7bde68d Recognize self-URI links to Diffusion files and give them special rendering behavior
Summary:
Depends on D20530. Ref T13291. When users paste links to files in Diffusion into remarkup contexts, identify them and specialize the rendering.

When the URIs are embedded with `{...}`, parse them in more detail.

This is a lead-up to a `{src ...}` rule which will use the same `View` but give users more options to customize presentation.

Test Plan: {F6463580}

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13291

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20538
2019-05-21 13:07:37 -07:00
epriestley
7c1f6519e0 Support "none()" in Differential to find revisions with no (un-resigned) reviewers
Summary:
Ref T13289. In Maniphest, you can currently search for "Owner: none()" to find tasks with no owner, but there's no way to search for "Reviewers: none()" in Differential right now.

Add support for this, since it's consistent and reasonable and doesn't seem too weird or niche.

Test Plan: Searched for "Reviewers: none()", found revisions with no reviewers. Searched for "Reviewers: alice, none()", "Reviewers: alice", and "Reviewers: <no constraint>" and got sensible results.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13289

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20537
2019-05-21 12:56:59 -07:00
epriestley
2f38695768 Support export of feed transactions to CSV/Excel/etc
Summary: Depends on D20534. Ref T13294. Add export support so you can dump these out, print them on paper, notarize them, and store them in a box under a tree or whatever.

Test Plan: Exported transactions to a flat file, read the file.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13294

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20535
2019-05-21 12:47:46 -07:00
epriestley
16537f7b32 Support filtering feed transactions by object type
Summary: Depends on D20533. Allow querying for transactions of a specific object type, so you can run queries like "Show all edits to Herald rules between date X and Y".

Test Plan: {F6463478}

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20534
2019-05-21 12:39:10 -07:00
epriestley
2e5b1885e7 Add support for querying feed transactions by author and date range
Summary: Depends on D20531. Ref T13294. Enable finding raw transactions in particular date ranges or with particular authors.

Test Plan: {F6463471}

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13294

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20533
2019-05-21 12:37:50 -07:00
epriestley
642113708a Build a rough transaction-level view of Feed
Summary:
Ref T13294. An install is interested in a way to easily answer audit-focused questions like "what edits were made to any Herald rule in Q1 2019?".

We can answer this kind of question with a more granular version of feed that focuses on being exhaustive rather than being human-readable.

This starts a rough version of it and deals with the two major tricky pieces: transactions are in a lot of different tables; and paging across them is not trivial.

To solve "lots of tables", we just query every table. There's a little bit of sleight-of-hand to get this working, but nothing too awful.

To solve "paging is hard", we order by "<dateCreated, phid>". The "phid" part of this order doesn't have much meaning, but it lets us put every transaction in a single, stable, global order and identify a place in that ordering given only one transaction PHID.

Test Plan: {F6463076}

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13294

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20531
2019-05-21 12:28:00 -07:00
epriestley
5305ebddda To improve wrapping behavior of rendered README files, don't use "PHUIDocumentView" in Diffusion
Summary:
See PHI1268. We currently do some weird width handling when rendering Diffusion readmes in a document directory view.

I think this came from D12330, which used `PHUIDocumentViewPro` to change the font, but we later reverted the font and were left with the `DocumentView`. Other changes after that modified `DocumentView` to have fixed-width behavior, but it doesn't make much sense here since the content panel is clearly rendered full-width.

Today, the `DocumentView` is a more structural element with methods like `setCurtain()`. Just get rid of it to simplify things, at least as a first step.

Test Plan:
Before:

{F6463493}

After:

{F6463492}

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20536
2019-05-21 12:18:18 -07:00
epriestley
2f0e655a9b Add a 15-second timeout to external service calls to fill Doorkeeper link tags
Summary:
Depends on D20528. Ref T13291. Ref T13285. Currently, we don't put a timeout on external service calls when enriching URIs for external Asana/JIRA tasks.

Add a 15-second timeout so we'll do something reasonable-ish in the face of a downed service provider. Later, I plan to healthcheck Asana/JIRA providers in a generic way (see T13287) so we can stop making calls if they time out / fail too frequently.

Test Plan:
  - Linked to JIRA and Asana tasks in comments.
  - Set timeout to 0.0001 seconds, saw requests time out.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13291, T13285

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20530
2019-05-21 12:17:12 -07:00
epriestley
f420159380 Implement Asana and JIRA external links via HyperlinkEngineExtension, not separate Remarkup rules
Summary:
Depends on D20527. Ref T13291. Now that we have more flexible support for URI rewriting, use it for Doorkeeper URIs.

These are used when you set up Asana or JIRA and include the URI to an Asana task or a JIRA issue in a comment.

Test Plan:
  - Linked up to Asana and JIRA.
  - Put Asana and JIRA URIs in comments.
  - Saw the UI update to pull task titles from Asana / JIRA using my OAuth credentials.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13291

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20528
2019-05-21 12:15:39 -07:00
epriestley
33688c8a41 When an object is referenced by URI, treat it like a mention
Summary:
Ref T13291. Currently, `T123` is a mention and adds an "alice mentioned this on Txxx." to `T123`, but `https://install.com/T123` is not a mention.

Make the full URI a mention.

Test Plan: Commented a full URI, saw the target object get a mention story in its timeline.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13291

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20527
2019-05-21 12:13:03 -07:00
epriestley
b8f6248e07 Fix an issue where handles could load with the incorrect viewer when building mail about changes to related objects
Summary:
See <https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T179591>. Some time ago, all handle rendering preloaded handles: things emitted a list of PHIDs they'd need handles for, then later used only those PHIDs.

Later, we introduced `HandlePool` and lazy/on-demand handle loading. Modern transactions mostly use this to render object PHIDs.

When we build mail, many newer transactions use an on-demand load to fetch handles to render transactions. This on-demand load may use the original viewer (the acting user) instead of the correct viewer (the mail recipient): we fetch and reset handles using the correct viewer, but do not overwrite the active viewer for on-demand loading. This could cause mail to leak the titles of related objects to users who don't have permission to see them.

Instead, just reload the transactions with the correct viewer when building mail instead of playing a bunch of `setViewer()` and `clone` games. Until we're 100% on modular transactions, several pieces of the stack cache viewer or state information.

Test Plan:
  - Created task A (public) with subtask B (private).
  - Closed subtask B as a user with access to it.
  - Viewed mail sent to subscribers of task A who can not see subtask B.
    - Before change: mail discloses title of subtask B.
    - After change: mail properly labels subtask B as "Restricted Task".

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20525
2019-05-21 12:12:13 -07:00
epriestley
06778ea550 Separate the "configuration" and "evaluation" phases of chart functions
Summary:
Depends on D20446. Currently, chart functions are both configured through arguments and evaluated through arguments. This sort of conflates things and makes some logic more difficult than it should be.

Instead:

  - Function arguments are used to configure function behavior. For example, `scale(2)` configures a function which does `f(x) => 2 * x`.
  - Evaluation is now separate, after configuration.

We can get rid of "sourceFunction" (which was basically marking one argument as "this is the thing that gets piped in" in a weird magical way) and "canEvaluate()" and "impulse".

Sequences of functions are achieved with `compose(u, v, w)`, which configures a function `f(x) => w(v(u(x)))` (note order is left-to right, like piping `x | u | v | w` to produce `y`).

The new flow is:

  - Every chartable function is `compose(...)` at top level, and composes one or more functions. `compose(x)` is longhand for `id(x)`. This just gives us a root/anchor node.
  - Figure out a domain, through various means.
  - Ask the function for a list of good input X values in that domain. This lets function chains which include a "fact" with distinct datapoints tell us that we should evaluate those datapoints.
  - Pipe those X values through the function.
  - We get Y values out.
  - Draw those points.

Also:

  - Adds `accumluate()`.
  - Adds `sum()`, which is now easy to implement.
  - Adds `compose()`.
  - All functions can now always evaluate everywhere, they just return `null` if they are not defined at a given X.
  - Adds repeatable arguments for `compose(f, g, ...)` and `sum(f, g, ...)`.

Test Plan: {F6409890}

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Subscribers: yelirekim

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20454
2019-05-19 16:54:53 -07:00