Summary:
- We currently write every PHID we generate to a table. This was motivated by two concerns:
- **Understanding Data**: At Facebook, the data was sometimes kind of a mess. You could look at a random user in the ID tool and see 9000 assocs with random binary data attached to them, pointing at a zillion other objects with no idea how any of it got there. I originally created this table to have a canonical source of truth about PHID basics, at least. In practice, our data model has been really tidy and consistent, and we don't use any of the auxiliary data in this table (or even write it). The handle abstraction is powerful and covers essentially all of the useful data in the app, and we have human-readable types in the keys. So I don't think we have a real need here, and this table isn't serving it if we do.
- **Uniqueness**: With a unique key, we can be sure they're unique, even if we get astronomically unlucky and get a collision. But every table we use them in has a unique key anyway. So we actually get pretty much nothing here, except maybe some vague guarantee that we won't reallocate a key later if the original object is deleted. But it's hard to imagine any install will ever have a collision, given that the key space is 36^20 per object type.
- We also currently use PHIDs and Users in tests sometimes. This is silly and can break (see D2461).
- Drop the PHID database.
- Introduce a "Harbormaster" database (the eventual CI tool, after Drydock).
- Add a scratch table to the Harbormaster database for doing unit test meta-tests.
- Now, PHID generation does no writes, and unit tests are isolated from the application.
- @csilvers: This should slightly improve the performance of the large query-bound tail in D2457.
Test Plan: Ran unit tests. Ran storage upgrade.
Reviewers: btrahan, vrana, jungejason
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: csilvers, aran, nh, edward
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2466
Summary: D2492#6
Test Plan:
`user.query` of user which is away.
`user.query` of user which is not away.
`user.whoami` - no information there.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: btrahan, aran, Koolvin
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2502
Summary: There's no method for enabling users somewhat intentionally.
Test Plan: Disable myself (oops, this is probably my last diff ever).
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran, epriestley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2497
Summary:
I want to use this to warn user if he specifies reviewers that are away.
We can also implement a general query method but I think that this usage is the
most useful not only for me but also in general case.
Test Plan:
Call the method for user which is away and which is not away.
Add user status through Conduit.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran, epriestley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2492
Summary:
For package creation and deletion, send email to all the owners For
package modification, detect important fields such as owners and paths, and then
send out emails to all owners (including deleted owners and current owners)
Also start using transaction for package creation/deletion/modification.
Test Plan:
- tested mail creation and deletion
- tested modification to auditing enabled, primary owners, owners, paths
Reviewers: epriestley, nh, vrana
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: prithvi, aran, Koolvin
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2470
Summary: Prelminary, I want to test this a bit more when I'm better rested. Provide a "bulk" import mode for Mercurial so we can do initial discovery more quickly.
Test Plan: Imported the Mercurial repository in 2m45s, blocked on MySQL I/O rather than Mercurial I/O.
Reviewers: csilvers, btrahan
Reviewed By: csilvers
CC: aran
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2457
Summary:
Sorting by last commit date
Branch view limit to 25 branches
All branches table page with pagination on Git
Test Plan:
* Check repository view for expected behavior on branch table view
* Check all branches page & test pagination
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: aran, Koolvin
Maniphest Tasks: T1200
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2442
Summary:
- When you have an un-cloned repository, we currently throw random-looking Git/Hg exception. Instead, throw a useful error.
- When you have a cloned but undiscovered repository, we show no commits. This is crazy confusing. Instead, show commits as "importing...".
- Fix some warnings and errors for empty path table cases, etc.
Test Plan:
- Wiped database.
- Added Mercurial repo without running daemons. Viewed in Diffusion, got a good exception.
- Pulled Mercurial repo without discovering it. Got "Importing...".
- Discovered Mercurial repo without parsing it. Got "Importing..." plus date information.
- Parsed Mercurial repo, got everything working properly.
- Added Git repo without running daemons, did all the stuff above, same results.
- This doesn't improve SVN much but that's a trickier case since we don't actually make SVN calls and rely only on the parse state.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran
Maniphest Tasks: T776
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2439
Summary:
- Merge CommitTask daemon into PullLocal daemon. This is another artifact of past instability (and order-dependent parsers). We still publish to the timeline, although this was the last consumer. Long term we'll probably delete timeline and move to webhooks, since everyone who has asked about this stuff has been eager to trade away the durability and ordering of the timeline for the ease of use of webhooks. There's also no reason to timeline this anymore since parsing is no longer order-dependent.
- Add `phd start` to start all the daemons you need. Add `phd restart` to restart all the daemons you need. So cool~
- Simplify and improve phd and Diffusion daemon documentation.
Test Plan:
- Ran `phd start`.
- Ran `phd restart`.
- Generated/read documentation.
- Imported some stuff, got clean parses.
Reviewers: btrahan, csilvers
Reviewed By: csilvers
CC: aran, jungejason, nh
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2433
Summary:
See D2418. This merges the commit discovery daemon into the same single daemon, and applies all the same rules to it.
There are relatively few implementation changes, but a few things did change:
- I simplified/improved Mercurial importing, by finding full branch tip hashes with "--debug branches" and using "parents --template {node}" so we don't need to do separate "--debug id" calls.
- Added a new "--not" flag to exclude repositories, since I switched to real arg parsing anyway.
- I removed a web UI notification that you need to restart the daemons, this is no longer true.
- I added a web UI notification that no pull daemon is running on the machine.
NOTE: @makinde, this doesn't change anything from your perspective, but it something breaks this is the likely cause.
This implicitly resolves T792, because discovery no longer runs before pulling.
Test Plan:
- Swapped databases to a fresh install.
- Ran "pulllocal" in debug mode. Verified it correctly does nothing (fixed a minor issue with min() on empty array).
- Added an SVN repository. Verified it cloned and discovered correctly.
- Added a Mercurial repository. Verified it cloned and discovered correctly.
- Added a Git repository. Verified it cloned and discovered correctly.
- Ran with arguments to verify behaviors: "--not MTEST --not STEST", "P --no-discovery", "P".
Reviewers: btrahan, csilvers, Makinde
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran
Maniphest Tasks: T792
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2430
Summary:
also fix some bugs where we weren't properly capturing the expiry value or scope of access tokens.
This code isn't the cleanest as some providers don't confirm what scope you've been granted. In that case, assume the access token is of the minimum scope Phabricator requires. This seems more useful to me as only Phabricator at the moment really easily / consistently lets the user increase / decrease the granted scope so its basically always the correct assumption at the time we make it.
Test Plan: linked and unlinked Phabricator, Github, Disqus and Facebook accounts from Phabricator instaneces
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: zeeg, aran, Koolvin
Maniphest Tasks: T1110
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2431
Summary:
Allow the pull daemon to take a list of repositories. By default, pull all repositories.
Make some effort to respect pull frequencies, although we'll necessarily suffer a bit if running with only one process.
NOTE: We still launch one discovery daemon per working copy, so this only cuts the daemon count in half.
Test Plan:
- Ran `phd debug pulllocal`, verified behavior.
- Ran `pull.php P MTEST SVNTEST --trace`, verified it pulled the repos and ran the right commands.
- Ran `phd repository-launch-master`, verified the right daemons launched, checked daemon console.
- Ran `phd repository-launch-readonly`, verified the right daemon launched, checked daemon console.
Reviewers: btrahan, csilvers, davidreuss
Reviewed By: csilvers
CC: aran
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2418
Summary:
- Move email to a separate table.
- Migrate existing email to new storage.
- Allow users to add and remove email addresses.
- Allow users to verify email addresses.
- Allow users to change their primary email address.
- Convert all the registration/reset/login code to understand these changes.
- There are a few security considerations here but I think I've addressed them. Principally, it is important to never let a user acquire a verified email address they don't actually own. We ensure this by tightening the scoping of token generation rules to be (user, email) specific.
- This should have essentially zero impact on Facebook, but may require some minor changes in the registration code -- I don't exactly remember how it is set up.
Not included here (next steps):
- Allow configuration to restrict email to certain domains.
- Allow configuration to require validated email.
Test Plan:
This is a fairly extensive, difficult-to-test change.
- From "Email Addresses" interface:
- Added new email (verified email verifications sent).
- Changed primary email (verified old/new notificactions sent).
- Resent verification emails (verified they sent).
- Removed email.
- Tried to add already-owned email.
- Created new users with "accountadmin". Edited existing users with "accountadmin".
- Created new users with "add_user.php".
- Created new users with web interface.
- Clicked welcome email link, verified it verified email.
- Reset password.
- Linked/unlinked oauth accounts.
- Logged in with oauth account.
- Logged in with email.
- Registered with Oauth account.
- Tried to register with OAuth account with duplicate email.
- Verified errors for email verification with bad tokens, etc.
Reviewers: btrahan, vrana, jungejason
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran
Maniphest Tasks: T1184
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2393
Summary:
- We used to have connection-level caching, so we needed getTransactionKey() to make sure there was one transaction state per real connection. We now cache in Lisk and each Connection object is guaranteed to represent a real, unique connection, so we can make this a non-static.
- I kept the classes separate because it was a little easier, but maybe we should merge them?
- Also track/implement read/write locking.
- (The advantage of this over just writing LOCK IN SHARE MODE is that you can use, e.g., some Query class even if you don't have access to the queries it runs.)
Test Plan: Can you come up with a way to write unit tests for this? It seems like testing that it works requires deadlocking MySQL if the test is running in one process.
Reviewers: vrana, btrahan
Reviewed By: vrana
CC: aran
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2398
Summary: Primarily for @csilvers who has 92 million repositories or something. This is a touch hacky, but movitated by pragmatism.
Test Plan:
- Ran "repository.create" to create repositories, "repository.query" to list them.
- Tested most or maybe all of the error conditions, probably.
Reviewers: btrahan, vrana, csilvers
Reviewed By: csilvers
CC: aran
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2396
Summary:
I wanted to point someone on a file uploaded to Phabricator and the normal link is just too long.
I guess that this also improves security. Because pointing someone to the file directly reveals the secret key used in /data/ and it can be served without auth?
We already use `{F123}` so there will be no conflicts in future because we wouldn't want to reuse it for something else.
I promote the link on /file/ - it adds one redirect but I think it's worth it. I also considered making the link from the File ID column but there are already too many links (with some duplicity).
Test Plan:
/file/
/F123 (redirect)
/F9999999999 (404)
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: aran, Koolvin
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2380
Summary:
I will use it for highlighting users which are not currently available.
Maybe I will also use it in the nagging tool.
I don't plan creating a UI for it as API is currently enough for us.
Maybe I will visualize it at /calendar/ later.
I plan creating `user.deletestatus` method when this one will be done.
Test Plan:
`storage upgrade`
Call Conduit `user.addstatus`.
Verify DB.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: aran, Koolvin
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2382
Summary: I have a patch which makes uploads all fancy and adds progress bars, but document the landscape first since it's quite complicated.
Test Plan: Generated, read docs. Configured `storage.upload-size-limit` to various values.
Reviewers: btrahan, vrana
Reviewed By: vrana
CC: aran
Maniphest Tasks: T875
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2381
Summary: I will need it for nagging tool.
Test Plan:
None yet.
Please suggest me how to create a testing database (I need to insert some data in the table). I guess that it is now possible?
There is also probably some bug in `arc unit` - `setEnvConfig()` is not called before `getEnvConfig()` resulting in fatal error.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: aran, Koolvin
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2376
Summary:
We will need it for two purposes:
- Status tool.
- Nagging tool - @aran suggested using "3 business days" and I don't want it to fall on New Year's Eve or such.
I don't plan working on any interface for editing this as this kind of data should be always imported.
Test Plan:
`bin/storage upgrade`
`scripts/calendar/import_us_holidays.php`
/calendar/
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: aran, Koolvin
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2375
Summary:
- This is only slightly useful for updating Differential, since DiffQuery (vs RawDiffQuery) already gets you most of what you need. The only thing is that DiffQuery returns the diff for one path only right now(and the SVN version is very "special"). Should be easy to fix in the Git/HG cases at least, though (or maybe just use RawDiffQuery to avoid the SVN mess).
- Added a "download raw diff" link.
Test Plan: Viewed Diffusion and raw commits for SVN, Mercurial and Git repositories.
Reviewers: vrana, btrahan, jungejason
Reviewed By: vrana
CC: aran
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2350
Summary:
- Unit tests can request storage fixtures.
- We build one fixture across all tests in the process, which can quickstart (takes roughly 1s to build, 200ms to destroy for me). This is a one-time cost for running an arbitrary number of fixture-based tests.
- We isolate all the connections inside transactions for each test, so individual tests don't affect one another.
Test Plan: Ran unit tests, which cover the important properties of fixtures.
Reviewers: btrahan, vrana, jungejason, edward
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran, davidreuss
Maniphest Tasks: T140
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2345
Summary:
I think this improves things, let me know if you have feedback.
Also addresses T840.
Test Plan: See screenshots...
Reviewers: vrana, btrahan, jungejason
Reviewed By: vrana
CC: aran, zeeg
Maniphest Tasks: T840
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2357
Summary: basically by validating we have good user data when we set the user data.
Test Plan: simulated a failure from a phabricator on phabricator oauth scenario. viewed ui that correctly told me there was an error with the provider and to try again.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: aran, Koolvin
Maniphest Tasks: T1077
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2337
Summary:
This addresses three issues with the current patch management system:
# Two people developing at the same time often pick the same SQL patch number, and then have to go rename it. The system catches this, but it's silly.
# Second/third-party developers can't use the same system to manage auxiliary storage they may want to add.
# There's no way to build mock databases for unit tests that need to do reads.
To resolve these things, you can now name your patches whatever you want and conflicts are just merge conflicts, which are less of a pain to fix than filename conflicts.
Dependencies are now a DAG, with implicit dependencies created on the prior patch if no dependencies are specified. Developers can add new concrete subclasses of `PhabricatorSQLPatchList` to add storage management, and define the dependency branchpoint of their patches so they apply in the correct order (although, generally, they should not depend on the mainline patches, presumably).
The commands `storage upgrade --namespace test1234` and `storage destroy --namespace test1234` will allow unit tests to build and destroy MySQL storage.
A "quickstart" mode allows an upgrade from scratch in ~1200ms. Destruction takes about 200ms. These seem like fairily reasonable costs to actually use in tests. Building from scratch patch-by-patch takes about 6000ms.
Test Plan:
- Created new databases from scratch with and without quickstart in a separate test namespace. Pointed the webapp at the test namespaces, browsed around, everything looked good.
- Compared quickstart and no-quickstart dump states, they're identical except for mysqldump timestamps and a few similar things.
- Upgraded a legacy database to the new storage format.
- Destroyed / dumped storage.
Reviewers: edward, vrana, btrahan, jungejason
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran, nh
Maniphest Tasks: T140, T345
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2323
Summary:
This is mostly intended to simplify D2323.
We currently allow users to edit and customize the links on the homepage, but as far as I know no one actually does this (no one complained when we redid the homepage earlier this year) and it creates a lot of mess in the database patches and quickstart dump. After D2331, this is the only data we load in the patch files. The patch files are also a mess with respect to this data and have various different versions of it.
Also the current UI is just kind of bad, it stretches stuff across too many screens and is generally ungood. Nuking this lets us nuke a lot of code in general.
(In the long term, I think we'll move toward an "application" model anyway, and this stuff will go away sooner or later.)
I'll add a drop-database patch some time later, just in case anyone does actually use this, so they can get their data out of MySQL.
Test Plan: Looked at home page, clicked "More Stuff", got a single list of other apps/things.
Reviewers: btrahan, vrana, edward, jungejason
Reviewed By: jungejason
CC: aran
Maniphest Tasks: T345
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2332
Summary:
Also couple of small changes:
- Add method name to title.
- 404 for /conduit/method/x/.
- Remove utilities from side panel.
- Remove side panel from log.
Test Plan:
/conduit/
/conduit/method/x/
/conduit/method/user.whoami/
/conduit/log/
Reviewers: btrahan, epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: aran, Koolvin
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2326
Summary:
- When viewing a commit, show its tags.
- For commits with many tags, show a list of all tags on the tag list interface.
- Improve some handling of symbolic references.
- When tags contain content, show it on the browse view reached by clicking the tag name.
Test Plan: Looked at commits with and without tags, clicked "More tags...", clicked tag names.
Reviewers: btrahan, vrana, davidreuss, jungejason
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran
Maniphest Tasks: T1130
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2290
Summary:
- Track + message through file moves.
- Stop + message on file create.
- Stop + message on first commit.
Test Plan:
- Tested blaming through a move, through a create, and through the first commit.
- Verified this doesn't break anything in SVN / Mercurial.
Reviewers: vrana, btrahan, jungejason
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran
Maniphest Tasks: T1091
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2295
Summary: "Committed" is SVN-specific language, and confusing in Git and Mercurial. Use neutral language instead.
Test Plan: Inspection.
Reviewers: btrahan, Makinde, vrana, jungejason
Reviewed By: vrana
CC: aran
Maniphest Tasks: T909
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2087
Summary:
I have no idea what I'm doing, but here's part of an elasticsearch engine. These things work:
- Indexing stuff (??)
- Searching for text/type?
- Reconstructing things??
All the complicated stuff doesn't work. I'm having a hard time figuring out the best way to model things because elasticsearch's documentation is not exactly the most complete or illuminating.
@amckinley, does this look sane-ish so far? Particularly, the /phabricator/<type>/<phid>/ URI scheme and how I've set up the relationships and fields in the documents?
How should I model the relationship and field queries? I want, like, an "equal" query but it seems like I've got "text" or "term" to work with and neither are exact match? And "term" doesn't consider PHIDs to be terms since they have hyphens in them?
I'll keep kind of slogging my way forward here but if you have valuable wisdom to share it would probably get me to a better end state much faster. The whole query construction phase is pretty much black magic to me.
Test Plan: nyancat
Reviewers: amckinley, vrana
Reviewed By: vrana
CC: jungejason, tuomaspelkonen, aran, 20after4, vrana
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D790
Summary: Lists the 25 most recent tags on the "Repository" page.
Test Plan: Looked at a git repository with a tag, saw it. Looked at HG/SVN repos, they didn't break.
Reviewers: davidreuss, 20after4, btrahan, vrana, jungejason
Reviewed By: davidreuss
CC: aran
Maniphest Tasks: T1130
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2255
Summary: Introduces a scope-guarded way to override the env config, for unit tests which are sensitive to config values.
Test Plan: Ran unit tests.
Reviewers: btrahan, vrana, jungejason
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2237
Summary:
Provides a basic start for access policies. Objects expose various capabilities, like CAN_VIEW, CAN_EDIT, etc., and set a policy for each capability. We currently implement three policies, PUBLIC (anyone, including logged-out), USERS (any logged-in) and NOONE (nobody). There's also a way to provide automatic capability grants (e.g., the owner of an object can always see it, even if some capability is set to "NOONE"), but I'm not sure how great the implementation feels and it might change.
Most of the code here is providing a primitive for efficient policy-aware list queries. The problem with doing queries naively is that you have to do crazy amounts of filtering, e.g. to show the user page 6, you need to filter at least 600 objects (and likely more) before you can figure out which ones are 500-600 for them. You can't just do "LIMIT 500, 100" because that might have only 50 results, or no results. Instead, the query looks like "WHERE id > last_visible_id", and then we fetch additional pages as necessary to satisfy the request.
The general idea is that we move all data access to Query classes and have them do object filtering. The ID paging primitive allows efficient paging in most cases, and the executeOne() method provides a concise way to do policy checks for edit/view screens.
We'll probably end up with mostly broader policy UIs or configuration-based policies, but there are at least a few cases for per-object privacy (e.g., marking tasks as "Security", and restricting things to the members of projects) so I figured we'd start with a flexible primitive and the simplify it in the UI where we can.
Test Plan: Unit tests, played around in the UI with various policy settings.
Reviewers: btrahan, vrana, jungejason
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran
Maniphest Tasks: T603
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2210
Summary:
'cuz we need to be phamous!
V1 feature set
- posts
-- standard thing you'd expect - a title and a remarkup-powered body and...
-- "phame" title - a short string that can be used to reference the story. this gets auto-updated when you mess with the title.
-- configuration - for now, do you want Facebook, Disqus or no comments? this is a per-post thing but feeds from an instance-wide configuration
Please do toss out any must have features or changes.
Test Plan: played around with this bad boy like whoa
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: aran, vrana
Maniphest Tasks: T1111
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2202
Summary:
There have been a couple of requests for this since bookmarks are "out this year like woah" and "totally uncool dude".
Allow users to save named custom queries and make them the /maniphest/ default if they so desire.
A little messy. :/
Test Plan: Saved, edited, deleted custom queries. Made custom query default; made 'no default' default. Verified default behavior. Issued a modified search from a custom query.
Reviewers: btrahan
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran, epriestley, 20after4
Maniphest Tasks: T923, T1034
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D1964
Summary: See T1021. Raise configuration or implementation exceptions immediately. When all engines fail, raise an aggregate exception with details.
Test Plan: Forced all engines to fail, received an aggregate exception. Forced an engine to fail with a config exception, recevied it immediately.
Reviewers: btrahan, vrana, jungejason
Reviewed By: btrahan
CC: aran
Maniphest Tasks: T1021
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2157
Summary:
We don't use versioned URIs for images, so when they change users may get old versions.
This was a particular issue with the recent logo change, which several users reported cache-related issues from.
Instead, use Celerity to manage image URI versions in addition to CSS/JS.
This is complicated, because we need to rewrite image URIs inside of CSS, which means the hash of a CSS file has to be derived from the current image data. Otherwise, when we updated an image the CSS wouldn't update, so we wouldn't be any better off.
So basically we:
- Find all the "raw" files, and put them into the map.
- Find all the CSS/JS, perform content-altering transformations on it (i.e., not minification) based on the partial map, and then put it into the map based on transformed hashes.
(If we wanted, we could now do CSS variables or whatever for "free", more or less.)
Test Plan:
- Regenerated celerity map, browsed site, verified images generated with versioned URIs.
- Moved "blue" flag image over "green" flag image, regenerated map, verified "green" flag image and the associated CSS changed hashes.
- Added transformation unit tests; ran unit tests.
Reviewers: btrahan, vrana, jungejason
Reviewed By: vrana
CC: aran
Maniphest Tasks: T1073
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2146
Summary: These elements look heavy and out of place right now.
Test Plan: Looked at error views in uiexample page.
Reviewers: btrahan, vrana, jungejason
Reviewed By: jungejason
CC: aran
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2144
Summary: This separates common MySQL stuff (identifiers and comments escaping, error codes, connection retries) from PHP extension specific stuff (connect, query, fetch, errors, escape string).
Test Plan:
/
Use `AphrontMySQLiDatabaseConnection` in `PhabricatorLiskDAO`, load homepage, edit task, save task.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: nh, aran
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2113
Summary: ...also make the pager usage in ChatLog use the nice formatWhereClause functionality
Test Plan: set $page_size = 2 and paged around the data a bit
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: aran
Maniphest Tasks: T905
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2106
Summary:
various stripe stuff, including
- external stripe library
- payment form
- test controller to play with payment form, sample business logic
My main questions / discussion topics are...
- is the stripe PHP library too big? (ie should I write something more simple just for phabricator?)
-- if its cool, what is the best way to include the client? (ie should I make it a submodule rather than the flat copy here?)
- is the JS I wrote (too) ridiculous?
-- particularly unhappy with the error message stuff being in JS *but* it seemed the best choice given the most juicy error messages come from the stripe JS such that the overall code complexity is lowest this way.
- how should the stripe JS be included?
-- flat copy like I did here?
-- some sort of external?
-- can we just load it off stripe servers at request time? (I like that from the "if stripe is down, stripe is down" perspective)
- wasn't sure if the date control was too silly and should just be baked into the form?
-- for some reason I feel like its good to be prepared to walk away from Stripe / switch providers here, though I think this is on the wrong side of pragmatic
Test Plan: - played around with sample client form
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
CC: aran
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D2096