Commit Graph

3 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
ee58cf0c1c web: add HTMLTagNameElementMaps to everything to activate lit analyzer (#10217)
* web: fix esbuild issue with style sheets

Getting ESBuild, Lit, and Storybook to all agree on how to read and parse stylesheets is a serious
pain. This fix better identifies the value types (instances) being passed from various sources in
the repo to the three *different* kinds of style processors we're using (the native one, the
polyfill one, and whatever the heck Storybook does internally).

Falling back to using older CSS instantiating techniques one era at a time seems to do the trick.
It's ugly, but in the face of the aggressive styling we use to avoid Flashes of Unstyled Content
(FLoUC), it's the logic with which we're left.

In standard mode, the following warning appears on the console when running a Flow:

```
Autofocus processing was blocked because a document already has a focused element.
```

In compatibility mode, the following **error** appears on the console when running a Flow:

```
crawler-inject.js:1106 Uncaught TypeError: Failed to execute 'observe' on 'MutationObserver': parameter 1 is not of type 'Node'.
    at initDomMutationObservers (crawler-inject.js:1106:18)
    at crawler-inject.js:1114:24
    at Array.forEach (<anonymous>)
    at initDomMutationObservers (crawler-inject.js:1114:10)
    at crawler-inject.js:1549:1
initDomMutationObservers @ crawler-inject.js:1106
(anonymous) @ crawler-inject.js:1114
initDomMutationObservers @ crawler-inject.js:1114
(anonymous) @ crawler-inject.js:1549
```

Despite this error, nothing seems to be broken and flows work as anticipated.

* web: add more linting

* A reliable test for the extra code needed in analyzer, passing shellcheck

* web: re-enable custom-element-manifest and enable component checking in Typescript

This commit includes a monkeypatch to allow custom-element-manifest (CEM) to work correctly again
despite our rich collection of mixins, reactive controllers, symbol-oriented event handlers, and the
like. With that monkeypatch in place, we can now create the CEM manifest file and then exploit it so
that IDEs and the Typescript compilation pass can tell when a component is being used incorrectly;
when the wrong types are being passed to it, or when a required attribute is not initialized.

* Added building the manifest to the build process, rather than storing it.  It is not appreciably slow.

* web: the most boring PR in the universe: Add HTMLTagNameElementMap to everyhing

This commit adds HTMLTagNameElementMap entries to every web component in the front end. Activating
and associating the HTMLTagNamElementMap with its class has enabled
[LitAnalyzer](https://github.com/runem/lit-analyzer/tree/master/packages/lit-analyzer) to reveal a
*lot* of basic problems within the UI, the most popular of which is "missing import." We usually get
away with it because the object being imported was already registered with the browser elsewhere,
but it still surprises me that we haven't gotten any complaints over things like:

```
./src/flow/stages/base.ts
Missing import for <ak-form-static>
96:  <ak-form-static
no-missing-import
```

Given how early and fundamental that seems to be in our code, I'd have expected to hear _something_
about it.

I have not enabled most of the possible checks because, well, there are just a ton of warnings when
I do.  I'd like to get in and fix those.

Aside from this, I have also _removed_ `customElement` declarations from anything declared as an
`abstract class`. It makes no sense to try and instantiate something that cannot, by definition, be
instantiated.  If the class is capable of running on its own, it's not abstract, it just needs to be
overridden in child classes.  Before removing the declaration I did check to make sure no other
piece of code was even *trying* to instantiate it, and so far I have detected no failures.  Those
elements were:

- elements/forms/Form.ts
- element-/wizard/WizardFormPage.ts

The one that blows my mind, though, is this:

```
src/elements/forms/ProxyForm.ts
6-@customElement("ak-proxy-form")
7:export abstract class ProxyForm extends Form<unknown> {
```

Which, despite being `abstract`, is somehow instantiable?

```
src/admin/outposts/ServiceConnectionListPage.ts:    <ak-proxy-form
src/admin/providers/ProviderListPage.ts:    <ak-proxy-form
src/admin/sources/SourceWizard.ts:    <ak-proxy-form
src/admin/sources/SourceListPage.ts:    <ak-proxy-form
src/admin/providers/ProviderWizard.ts:    <ak-proxy-form type=${type.component}></ak-proxy-form>
src/admin/stages/StageListPage.ts:    <ak-proxy-form
```

I've made a note to investigate.

I've started a new folder where all of my one-off tools for *how* a certain PR was run.  It has a
README describing what it's for, and the first tool, `add-htmlelementtagnamemaps-to-everything`, is
its first entry.  That tool is also documented internally.

``` Gilbert & Sullivan

I've got a little list,
I've got a little list,
Of all the code that would never be missed,
The duplicate code of cute-and-paste,
The weak abstractions that lead to waste,
The embedded templates-- you get the gist,
There ain't none of 'em that will ever be missed,
And that's why I've got them on my list!

```
2024-07-15 10:54:22 -07:00
ef2a40ed7d web: fix value handling inside controlled components (#9648)
* web: fix esbuild issue with style sheets

Getting ESBuild, Lit, and Storybook to all agree on how to read and parse stylesheets is a serious
pain. This fix better identifies the value types (instances) being passed from various sources in
the repo to the three *different* kinds of style processors we're using (the native one, the
polyfill one, and whatever the heck Storybook does internally).

Falling back to using older CSS instantiating techniques one era at a time seems to do the trick.
It's ugly, but in the face of the aggressive styling we use to avoid Flashes of Unstyled Content
(FLoUC), it's the logic with which we're left.

In standard mode, the following warning appears on the console when running a Flow:

```
Autofocus processing was blocked because a document already has a focused element.
```

In compatibility mode, the following **error** appears on the console when running a Flow:

```
crawler-inject.js:1106 Uncaught TypeError: Failed to execute 'observe' on 'MutationObserver': parameter 1 is not of type 'Node'.
    at initDomMutationObservers (crawler-inject.js:1106:18)
    at crawler-inject.js:1114:24
    at Array.forEach (<anonymous>)
    at initDomMutationObservers (crawler-inject.js:1114:10)
    at crawler-inject.js:1549:1
initDomMutationObservers @ crawler-inject.js:1106
(anonymous) @ crawler-inject.js:1114
initDomMutationObservers @ crawler-inject.js:1114
(anonymous) @ crawler-inject.js:1549
```

Despite this error, nothing seems to be broken and flows work as anticipated.

* web: fix value handling inside controlled components

This is one of those stupid bugs that drive web developers crazy. The basics are straightforward:
when you cause a higher-level component to have a "big enough re-render," for some unknown
definition of "big enough," it will re-render the sub-components. In traditional web interaction,
those components should never be re-rendered while the user is interacting with the form, but in
frameworks where there's dynamic re-arrangement, part or all of the form could get re-rendered at
any mmoment. Since neither the form nor any of its intermediaries is tracking the values as they're
changed, it's up to the components themselves to keep the user's input-- and to be hardened against
property changes coming from the outside world.

So static memoization of the initial value passed in, and aggressively walling off the values the
customer generates from that field, are needed to protect the user's work from any framework's
dynamic DOM management. I remember struggling with this in React; I had hoped Lit was better, but in
this case, not better enough.

The protocol for "is it an ak-data-control" is "it has a `json()` method that returns the data ready
to be sent to the authentik server."  I missed that in one place, so that's on me.

* Eslint had opinions.

* Added comments to explain something.
2024-05-10 09:50:07 -07:00
fcf752905b web: ak-checkbox-group for short, static, multi-select events (#9138)
* web: fix esbuild issue with style sheets

Getting ESBuild, Lit, and Storybook to all agree on how to read and parse stylesheets is a serious
pain. This fix better identifies the value types (instances) being passed from various sources in
the repo to the three *different* kinds of style processors we're using (the native one, the
polyfill one, and whatever the heck Storybook does internally).

Falling back to using older CSS instantiating techniques one era at a time seems to do the trick.
It's ugly, but in the face of the aggressive styling we use to avoid Flashes of Unstyled Content
(FLoUC), it's the logic with which we're left.

In standard mode, the following warning appears on the console when running a Flow:

```
Autofocus processing was blocked because a document already has a focused element.
```

In compatibility mode, the following **error** appears on the console when running a Flow:

```
crawler-inject.js:1106 Uncaught TypeError: Failed to execute 'observe' on 'MutationObserver': parameter 1 is not of type 'Node'.
    at initDomMutationObservers (crawler-inject.js:1106:18)
    at crawler-inject.js:1114:24
    at Array.forEach (<anonymous>)
    at initDomMutationObservers (crawler-inject.js:1114:10)
    at crawler-inject.js:1549:1
initDomMutationObservers @ crawler-inject.js:1106
(anonymous) @ crawler-inject.js:1114
initDomMutationObservers @ crawler-inject.js:1114
(anonymous) @ crawler-inject.js:1549
```

Despite this error, nothing seems to be broken and flows work as anticipated.

* web: ak-checkbox-group for short, static, multi-select events

Implements a checkbox groups web component, wholly independent of the API
(although it does implement the 'data-ak-control' protocol, including the
`json()` method that makes it easier to send the data to the Form handler).  The
controller works much like multi-select: `value` returns an array of strings,
the `name` attribute associated with whatever it is you're asking about.

The `required` property only works if you give the whole item a name, as if it
were an input.  Otherwise, it does nothing.

Giving it a `name` also activates the browser standard `formAssociated`
protocol; it works just fine for ordinary HTML forms, and presents to that
protocol the `FormValue` type, so any form using it will automagically convert
it into the CGI (Common Gateway Interface) format of, to use the example from
Storybook:

```
ak-test-checkgroup-input=funky&ak-test-checkgroup-input=invalid
```

Note that the classic CGI format is not automatically key/value; keys can appear
multiple times, and indicate that the value is an array of strings.  Most modern
appservers understand this format. Some do not.

There's a full and complete JSDOC-like comment documenting the component.  I
have even provided CSSPart sections for everything: the wrapper, each line, the
input and its associated label.  The brave or foolhardy can mangle the CSS to
their hearts' content without having to know a thing about Patternfly.

* fix styling alignment with top line

Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>

---------

Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
Co-authored-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
2024-04-05 09:47:38 -07:00