* 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: replace multi-select with dual-select for all propertyMapping invocations
All of the uses of <select> to show propertyMappings have been replaced with an invocation to a
variant of dual select that allows for dynamic production of the "selected" list. Instead of giving
a "selected" list of elements, a "selector" function is passed that can, given the elements listed
by the provider, generated the "selected" list dynamically.
This feature is required for propertyMappings because many of the propertyMappings have an alternative
"default selected" feature whereby an object with no property mappings is automatically granted some
by the `.managed` field of the property mapping. The `DualSelectPair` type is now tragically
mis-named, as it it's now a 4-tuple, the fourth being whatever object or field is necessary to
figure out what the default value might be. For example, the Oauth2PropertyMappingsSelector looks
like this:
```
export function makeOAuth2PropertyMappingsSelector(instanceMappings: string[] | undefined) {
const localMappings = instanceMappings ? new Set(instanceMappings) : undefined;
return localMappings
? ([pk, _]: DualSelectPair) => localMappings.has(pk)
: ([_0, _1, _2, scope]: DualSelectPair<ScopeMapping>) =>
scope?.managed?.startsWith("goauthentik.io/providers/oauth2/scope-") &&
scope?.managed !== "goauthentik.io/providers/oauth2/scope-offline_access";
}
```
If there are instanceMappings, we create a Set of them and just look up the pk for "is this
selected" as we generate the component.
If there is not, we look at the `scope` object itself (Oauth2PropertyMappings were called "scopes"
in the original source) and perform a token analysis.
It works well, is reasonably fast, and reasonably memory-friendly.
In the case of RAC, OAuth2, and ProxyProviders, I've also provided external definitions of the
MappingProvider and MappingSelector, so that they can be shared between the Provider and the
ApplicationWizard.
The algorithm for finding the "alternative (default) selections" was *different* between the two
instances of both Oauth and Proxy. I'm not marking this as "ready" until Jens (@BeryJu) and I can go
over why that might have been so, and decide if using a common implementation for both is the
correct thing to do.
Also, a lot of this is (still) cut-and-paste; the dual-select invocation, and the definitions of
Providers and Selectors have a bit of boilerplate that it just didn't make sense to try and abstract
away; the code is DAMP (Descriptive and Meaningful Phrases), and I can live with it. Unfortunately,
that also points to the possibility of something being off; the wrong default token, or the wrong
phrase to describe the "Available" and "Selected" columns. So this is not (yet) ready for a full
pull review.
On the other hand, if this passes muster and we're happy with it, there are 11 more places to put
DualSelect, four of which are pure cut-and-paste lookups of the PaginatedOauthSourceList, plus a
miscellany of Prompts, Sources, Stages, Roles, EventTransports and Policies.
Despite the churn, the difference between the two implementations is 438 lines removed, 231 lines
added, 121 lines new. 86 LOC deleted. Could be better. :-)
* web: make the ...Selector semantics uniform across the definition set.
* web: fix proxy property mapping default criteria
* web: restoring dropped message to user.
* Completed one. Stashing momentarily.
* Ensuring the neccessary components are imported.
* I hate trying to coax MacOS into accepting case changes.
* Still trying to rename that thing.
* OAuth2 Sources multiple implementation completed.
* web: replace remaining multi-selects with dual-selects
This commit replaces the remaining multi-selects with their dual-select equivalents.
* web: fix problem with 'selector' overselecting
The 'selector' feature was overselecting, preventing items from
being removed from the "selected" list if they were part of the
host object. This has the shortcoming that `default` items *must*
be in the first page of options from the server, or they probably
won't be registered. Fortunately, that's currently the case.
* fix a
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* fix b
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* migrate new providers
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* remove old incorrect help message
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* fix incorrect copy paste
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* fix status label for gorups
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
---------
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
Co-authored-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* 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!
```
* 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: replace multi-select with dual-select for all propertyMapping invocations
All of the uses of <select> to show propertyMappings have been replaced with an invocation to a
variant of dual select that allows for dynamic production of the "selected" list. Instead of giving
a "selected" list of elements, a "selector" function is passed that can, given the elements listed
by the provider, generated the "selected" list dynamically.
This feature is required for propertyMappings because many of the propertyMappings have an alternative
"default selected" feature whereby an object with no property mappings is automatically granted some
by the `.managed` field of the property mapping. The `DualSelectPair` type is now tragically
mis-named, as it it's now a 4-tuple, the fourth being whatever object or field is necessary to
figure out what the default value might be. For example, the Oauth2PropertyMappingsSelector looks
like this:
```
export function makeOAuth2PropertyMappingsSelector(instanceMappings: string[] | undefined) {
const localMappings = instanceMappings ? new Set(instanceMappings) : undefined;
return localMappings
? ([pk, _]: DualSelectPair) => localMappings.has(pk)
: ([_0, _1, _2, scope]: DualSelectPair<ScopeMapping>) =>
scope?.managed?.startsWith("goauthentik.io/providers/oauth2/scope-") &&
scope?.managed !== "goauthentik.io/providers/oauth2/scope-offline_access";
}
```
If there are instanceMappings, we create a Set of them and just look up the pk for "is this
selected" as we generate the component.
If there is not, we look at the `scope` object itself (Oauth2PropertyMappings were called "scopes"
in the original source) and perform a token analysis.
It works well, is reasonably fast, and reasonably memory-friendly.
In the case of RAC, OAuth2, and ProxyProviders, I've also provided external definitions of the
MappingProvider and MappingSelector, so that they can be shared between the Provider and the
ApplicationWizard.
The algorithm for finding the "alternative (default) selections" was *different* between the two
instances of both Oauth and Proxy. I'm not marking this as "ready" until Jens (@BeryJu) and I can go
over why that might have been so, and decide if using a common implementation for both is the
correct thing to do.
Also, a lot of this is (still) cut-and-paste; the dual-select invocation, and the definitions of
Providers and Selectors have a bit of boilerplate that it just didn't make sense to try and abstract
away; the code is DAMP (Descriptive and Meaningful Phrases), and I can live with it. Unfortunately,
that also points to the possibility of something being off; the wrong default token, or the wrong
phrase to describe the "Available" and "Selected" columns. So this is not (yet) ready for a full
pull review.
On the other hand, if this passes muster and we're happy with it, there are 11 more places to put
DualSelect, four of which are pure cut-and-paste lookups of the PaginatedOauthSourceList, plus a
miscellany of Prompts, Sources, Stages, Roles, EventTransports and Policies.
Despite the churn, the difference between the two implementations is 438 lines removed, 231 lines
added, 121 lines new. 86 LOC deleted. Could be better. :-)
* web: make the ...Selector semantics uniform across the definition set.
* web: fix proxy property mapping default criteria
* web: restoring dropped message to user.
* Ensuring the neccessary components are imported.
* web: fix problem with 'selector' overselecting
The 'selector' feature was overselecting, preventing items from
being removed from the "selected" list if they were part of the
host object. This has the shortcoming that `default` items *must*
be in the first page of options from the server, or they probably
won't be registered. Fortunately, that's currently the case.
* web: expressing success
Ever see an idiom that just, I dunno, *annoyed* you?
Automated tools for the win.
* web: repetition, repetition, repetition! [throws chair]
* web: giving the de-duplication treatment to policy mappings.
* Created a BaseStageForm with success message and canonical primary key type for for Providers, Sources, and Stages.
* web: break circular dependency between AKElement & Interface.
This commit changes the way the root node of the web application shell is
discovered by child components, such that the base class shared by both
no longer results in a circular dependency between the two models.
I've run this in isolation and have seen no failures of discovery; the identity
token exists as soon as the Interface is constructed and is found by every item
on the page.
* web: fix broken typescript references
This built... and then it didn't? Anyway, the current fix is to
provide type information the AkInterface for the data that consumers
require.
* \# Details
Extra `>` symbol screwed up the reading of the rest of the component. Unfortunately,
too many fields in an input are optional, so it was easy for this bug to bypass any
checks by the validators. I should have caught it myself, though.
* web/elements: rename renderInlineForm to renderForm set submit handler to empty function
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* fix all kinds of forms not using the form inheritance correctly
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
---------
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* web: laying the groundwork for future expansion
This commit is a hodge-podge of updates and changes to the web. Functional changes:
- Makefile: Fixed a bug in the `help` section that prevented the WIDTH from being accurately
calculated if `help` was included rather than in-lined.
- ESLint: Modified the "unused vars" rule so that variables starting with an underline are not
considered by the rule. This allows for elided variables in event handlers. It's not a perfect
solution-- a better one would be to use Typescript's function-specialization typing, but there are
too many places where we elide or ignore some variables in a function's usage that switching over
to specialization would be a huge lift.
- locale: It turns out, lit-locale does its own context management. We don't need to have a context
at all in this space, and that's one less listener we need to attach t othe DOM.
- ModalButton: A small thing, but using `nothing` instead of "html``" allows lit better control over
rendering and reduces the number of actual renders of the page.
- FormGroup: Provided a means to modify the aria-label, rather than stick with the just the word
"Details." Specializing this field will both help users of screen readers in the future, and will
allow test suites to find specific form groups now.
- RadioButton: provide a more consistent interface to the RadioButton. First, we dispatch the
events to the outside world, and we set the value locally so that the current `Form.ts` continues
to behave as expected. We also prevent the "button lost value" event from propagating; this
presents a unified select-like interface to users of the RadioButtonGroup. The current value
semantics are preserved; other clients of the RadioButton do not see a change in behavior.
- EventEmitter: If the custom event detail is *not* an object, do not use the object-like semantics
for forwarding it; just send it as-is.
- Comments: In the course of laying the groundwork for the application wizard, I throw a LOT of
comments into the code, describing APIs, interfaces, class and function signatures, to better
document the behavior inside and as signposts for future work.
* web: permit arrays to be sent in custom events without interpolation.
* actually use assignValue or rather serializeFieldRecursive
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* web: package up horizontal elements into their own components.
This commit introduces a number of "components." Jens has this idiom:
```
<ak-form-element-horizontal label=${msg("Name")} name="name" ?required=${true}>
<input
type="text"
value="${ifDefined(this.instance?.name)}"
class="pf-c-form-control"
required
/>
</ak-form-element-horizontal>
```
It's a very web-oriented idiom in that it's built out of two building blocks, the "element-horizontal" descriptor,
and the input object itself. This idiom is repeated a lot throughout the code. As an alternative, let's wrap
everything into an inheritable interface:
```
<ak-text-input
name="name"
label=${msg("Name")}
value="${ifDefined(this.instance?.name)}
required
>
</ak-text-input>
```
This preserves all the information of the above, makes it much clearer what kind of interaction we're having
(sometimes the `type=` information in an input is lost or easily missed), and while it does require you know
that there are provided components rather than the pair of layout-behavior as in the original it also gives
the developer more precision over the look and feel of the components.
*Right now* these components are placed into the LightDOM, as they are in the existing source code, because
the Form handler has a need to be able to "peer into" the "element-horizontal" component to find the values
of the input objects. In a future revision I hope to place the burden of type/value processing onto the
input objects themselves such that the form handler will need only look for the `.value` of the associated
input control.
Other fixes:
- update the FlowSearch() such that it actually emits an input event when its value changes.
- Disable the storybook shortcuts; on Chrome, at least, they get confused with simple inputs
- Fix an issue with precommit to not scan any Python with ESLint! :-)
* web: provide storybook stories for the components
This commit provides storybook stories for the ak-horizontal-element wrappers. A few
bugs were found along the way, including one rather nasty one from Radio where we
were still getting the "set/unset" pair in the wrong order, so I had to knuckle down
and fix the event handler properly.
* web: test oauth2 provider "guinea pig" for new components
I used the Oauth2 provider page as my experiment in seeing if the
horizontal-element wrappers could be used instead of the raw wrappers
themselves, and I wanted to make sure a test existed that asserts
that filling out THAT form in the ProvidersList and ProvidersForm
didn't break anything.
This commit updates the WDIO tests to do just that; the test is
simple, but it does exercise the `name` field of the Provider,
something not needed in the Wizard because it's set automatically
based on the Application name, and it even asserts that the new
Provider exists in the list of available Providers when it's done.
* web: making sure ESlint and Prettier are happy
* "fix" lint
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
---------
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
Co-authored-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* web: fix 6742: empty web certificate request needs to return null, not undefined
This replaces the `undefined` setting of the certificate search wrapper to
`null` when the admin requests no certificate.
* only set singleton if we don't have an instance
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
---------
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
Co-authored-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* web: Replace ad-hoc toggle control with ak-toggle-group
This commit replaces various ad-hoc implementations of the Patternfly Toggle Group HTML with a web
component that encapsulates all of the needed behavior and exposes a single API with a single event
handler, return the value of the option clicked.
The results are: Lots of visual clutter is eliminated. A single link of:
```
<div class="pf-c-toggle-group__item">
<button
class="pf-c-toggle-group__button ${this.mode === ProxyMode.Proxy
? "pf-m-selected"
: ""}"
type="button"
@click=${() => {
this.mode = ProxyMode.Proxy;
}}>
<span class="pf-c-toggle-group__text">${msg("Proxy")}</span>
</button>
</div>
<div class="pf-c-divider pf-m-vertical" role="separator"></div>
```
Now looks like:
```
<option value=${ProxyMode.Proxy}>${msg("Proxy")}</option>
```
This also means that the three pages that used the Patternfly Toggle Group could eliminate all of
their Patternfly PFToggleGroup needs, as well as the `justify-content: center` extension, which also
eliminated the `css` import.
The savings aren't as spectacular as I'd hoped: removed 178 lines, but added 123; total savings 55
lines of code. I still count this a win: we need never write another toggle component again, and
any bugs, extensions or features we may want to add can be centralized or forked without risking the
whole edifice.
* web: minor code formatting issue.
* web: adding a storybook for the ak-toggle-group component
* Bugs found by CI/CD.
* web: Replace ad-hoc search for CryptoCertificateKeyPairs with crypto-certificate-search (#6475)
* web: Replace ad-hoc search for CryptoCertificateKeyPairs with ak-crypto-certeficate-search
This commit replaces various ad-hoc implementations of `search-select` for CryptoCertificateKeyPairs
with a web component that encapsulates all of the needed behavior and exposes a single API.
The results are: Lots of visual clutter is eliminated. A single search of:
```HTML
<ak-search-select
.fetchObjects=${async (query?: string): Promise<CertificateKeyPair[]> => {
const args: CryptoCertificatekeypairsListRequest = {
ordering: "name",
hasKey: true,
includeDetails: false,
};
if (query !== undefined) {
args.search = query;
}
const certificates = await new CryptoApi(
DEFAULT_CONFIG,
).cryptoCertificatekeypairsList(args);
return certificates.results;
}}
.renderElement=${(item: CertificateKeyPair): string => {
return item.name;
}}
.value=${(item: CertificateKeyPair | undefined): string | undefined => {
return item?.pk;
}}
.selected=${(item: CertificateKeyPair): boolean => {
return this.instance?.tlsVerification === item.pk;
}}
?blankable=${true}
>
</ak-search-select>
```
Now looks like:
```HTML
<ak-crypto-certificate-search certificate=${this.instance?.tlsVerification}>
</ak-crypto-certificate-search>
```
There are three searches that do not require there to be a valid key with the certificate; these are
supported with the boolean property `nokey`; likewise, there is one search (in SAMLProviderForm)
that states that if there is no current certificate in the SAMLProvider and only one certificate can
be found in the Authentik database, use that one; this is supported with the boolean property
`singleton`.
These changes replace 382 lines of object-oriented invocations with 36 lines of declarative
configuration, and 98 lines for the class. Overall, the code for "find a crypto certificate" has
been reduced by 46%.
Suggestions for a better word than `singleton` are welcome!
* web: display tests for CryptoCertificateKeypair search
This adds a Storybook for the CryptoCertificateKeypair search, including
a mock fetch of the data. In the course of running the tests, we discovered
that including the SearchSelect _class_ won't include the customElement declaration
unless you include the whole file! Other bugs found: including the CSS from
Storybook is different from that of LitElement native, so much so that the
adapter needed to be included. FlowSearch had a similar bug. The problem
only manifests when building via Webpack (which Storybook uses) and not
Rollup, but we should support both in distribution.
* web: weightloss program, part 1: FlowSearch
This commit extracts the multiple uses of SearchSelect for Flow lookups in the `providers`
collection and replaces them with a slightly more legible format, from:
```HTML
<ak-search-select
.fetchObjects=${async (query?: string): Promise<Flow[]> => {
const args: FlowsInstancesListRequest = {
ordering: "slug",
designation: FlowsInstancesListDesignationEnum.Authentication,
};
if (query !== undefined) {
args.search = query;
}
const flows = await new FlowsApi(DEFAULT_CONFIG).flowsInstancesList(args);
return flows.results;
}}
.renderElement=${(flow: Flow): string => {
return RenderFlowOption(flow);
}}
.renderDescription=${(flow: Flow): TemplateResult => {
return html`${flow.name}`;
}}
.value=${(flow: Flow | undefined): string | undefined => {
return flow?.pk;
}}
.selected=${(flow: Flow): boolean => {
return flow.pk === this.instance?.authenticationFlow;
}}
>
</ak-search-select>
```
... to:
```HTML
<ak-flow-search
flowType=${FlowsInstancesListDesignationEnum.Authentication}
.currentFlow=${this.instance?.authenticationFlow}
required
></ak-flow-search>
```
All of those middle methods, like `renderElement`, `renderDescription`, etc, are *completely the
same* for *all* of the searches, and there are something like 25 of them; this commit only covers
the 8 in `providers`, but the next commit should carry all of them.
The topmost example has been extracted into its own Web Component, `ak-flow-search`, that takes only
two arguments: the type of `FlowInstanceListDesignation` and the current instance of the flow.
The static methods for `renderElement`, `renderDescription` and `value` (which are all the same in
all 25 instances of `FlowInstancesListRequest`) have been made into standalone functions.
`fetchObjects` has been made into a method that takes the parameter from the `designation` property,
and `selected` has been turned into a method that takes the comparator instance from the
`currentFlow` property. That's it. That's the whole of it.
`SearchSelect` now emits an event whenever the user changes the field, and `ak-flow-search`
intercepts that event to mirror the value locally.
`Form` has been adapted to recognize the `ak-flow-search` element and extract the current value.
There are a number of legibility issues remaining, even with this fix. The Authentik Form manager
is dependent upon a component named `ak-form-element-horizontal`, which is a container for a single
displayed element in a form:
```HTML
<ak-form-element-horizontal
label=${msg("Authorization flow")}
?required=${true}
name="authorizationFlow"
>
<ak-flow-search
flowType=${FlowsInstancesListDesignationEnum.Authorization}
.currentFlow=${this.instance?.authorizationFlow}
required
></ak-flow-search>
<p class="pf-c-form__helper-text">
${msg("Flow used when authorizing this provider.")}
</p>
</ak-form-element-horizontal>
```
Imagine, instead, if we could write:
```HTML
<ak-form-element-flow-search
flowType=${FlowsInstancesListDesignationEnum.Authorization}
.currentFlow=${this.instance?.authorizationFlow}
required
name="authorizationFlow">
<label slot="label">${msg("Authorization flow")}</label>
<span slot="help">${msg("Flow used when authorizing this provider.")}</span>
<ak-form-element-flow-search>
```
Starting with a superclass that understands the need for `label` and `help` slots, it would
automatically configure the input object that would be used. We've already specified multiple
identical copies of this thing in multiple different places; centralizing their definition and then
re-using them would be classic code re-use.
Even better, since the Authorization flow is used 10 times in the whole of our code base, and the
Authentication flow 8 times, and they are *all identical*, it would be fitting if we just created
wrappers:
```HTML
<ak-form-element-flow-search
flowType=${FlowsInstancesListDesignationEnum.Authorization}>
<ak-form-element-flow-search>
```
That's really all that's needed. There are *hundreds* (about 470 total) cases where nine or more
lines of repetitious HTML could be replaced with a one-liner like the above.
A "narrow waist" design is one that allows for a system to communicate between two different
components through a small but consistent collection of calls. The Form manager needs to be narrowed
hard. The `ak-form-element-horizontal` is a wrapper around an input object, and it has this at its
core for extracting that information. This forwards the name component to the containing input
object so that when the input object generates an event, we can identify the field it's associated
with.
```Javascript
this.querySelectorAll("*").forEach((input) => {
switch (input.tagName.toLowerCase()) {
case "input":
case "textarea":
case "select":
case "ak-codemirror":
case "ak-chip-group":
case "ak-search-select":
case "ak-radio":
input.setAttribute("name", this.name);
break;
default:
return;
}
```
A *temporary* variant of this is in the `ak-flow-search` component, to support this API without
having to modify `ak-form-element-horizontal`.
And then `ak-form` itself has this:
```Javascript
if (
inputElement.tagName.toLowerCase() === "select" &&
"multiple" in inputElement.attributes
) {
const selectElement = inputElement as unknown as HTMLSelectElement;
json[element.name] = Array.from(selectElement.selectedOptions).map((v) => v.value);
} else if (
inputElement.tagName.toLowerCase() === "input" &&
inputElement.type === "date"
) {
json[element.name] = inputElement.valueAsDate;
} else if (
inputElement.tagName.toLowerCase() === "input" &&
inputElement.type === "datetime-local"
) {
json[element.name] = new Date(inputElement.valueAsNumber);
}
// ... another 20 lines removed
```
This ought to read:
```Javascript
const json = elements.filter((element => element instanceof AkFormComponent)
.reduce((acc, element) => ({ ...acc, [element.name]: element.value] });
```
Where, instead of hand-writing all the different input objects for date and datetime and checkbox
into our forms, and then having to craft custom value extractors for each and every one of them,
just write *one* version of each with all the wrappers and bells and whistles already attached, and
have each one of them have a `value` getter descriptor that returns the value expected by our form
handler.
A back-of-the-envelope estimation is that there's about four *thousand* lines that could disappear
if we did this right.
More importantly, it would be possible to create new `AkFormComponent`s without having to register
them or define them for `ak-form`; as long as they conformed to the AkFormComponent's expectations
for "what is a source of values for a Form", `ak-form` would understand how to handle it.
Ultimately, what I want is to be able to do this:
``` HTML
<ak-input-form
itemtype="ak-search"
itemid="ak-authentication"
itemprop=${this.instance}></ak-inputform>
```
And it will (1) go out and find the right kind of search to put there, (2) conduct the right kind of
fetch to fill that search, (3) pre-configure it with the user's current choice in that locale.
I don't think this is possible-- for one thing, it would be very expensive in terms of development,
and it may break the "narrow waist" ideal by require that the `ak-input-form` object know all the
different kinds of searches that are available. The old Midgardian dream was that the object would
have *just* the identity triple (A table, a row of that table, a field of that row), and the
Javascript would go out and, using the identity, *find* the right object for CRUD (Creating,
Retrieving, Updating, and Deleting) it.
But that inspiration, as unreachable as it is, is where I'm headed. Where our objects are both
*smart* and *standalone*. Where they're polite citizens in an ordered universe, capable of
independence sufficient to be tested and validated and trusted, but working in concert to achieve
our aims.
* web: unravel the search-select for flows completely.
This commit removes *all* instances of the search-select
for flows, classifying them into four different categories:
- a search with no default
- a search with a default
- a search with a default and a fallback to a static default if non specified
- a search with a default and a fallback to the tenant's preferred default if this is a new instance
and no flow specified.
It's not humanly possible to test all the instances where this has been committed, but the linters
are very happy with the results, and I'm going to eyeball every one of them in the github
presentation before I move this out of draft.
* web: several were declared 'required' that were not.
* web: I can't believe this was rejected because of a misspelling in a code comment. Well done\!
* web: another codespell fix for a comment.
* web: adding 'codespell' to the pre-commit command. Fixed spelling error in eventEmitter.
* \#\# Details
web: replace lingui with lit/localize
\#\# Changes
This rather massive shift replaces the lingui and `t()` syntax with lit-localize, XLIFF, and the `msg()`
syntax used by lit-localize. 90% of this work was mechanized; simple perl scripts found and replaced
all uses of `t()` with the appropriate corresponding syntax for `msg()` and `msg(str())`.
The XLIFF files were auto-generated from the PO files. They have not been audited, and they should be
checked over by professional translators. The actual _strings_ have not been changed, but as this was
a mechanized change there is always the possibility of mis-translation-- not by the translator, but by
the script.
* web: revise lit/localize: fix two installation issues.
* web: revise localization
TL;DR:
- Replaced all of Lingui's `t()` syntax with `msg()` syntax.
- Mechanically (i.e with a script) converted all of the PO files to XLIFF files
- Refactored the localization code to be a bit smarter:
- the function `getBestMatchLocale` takes the locale lists and a requested locale, and returns the
first match of:
- The locale's code exactly matches the requested locale
- The locale code exactly matches the prefix of the requested locale (i.e the "en" part of "en-US")
- the locale code's prefix exactly matches the prefix of the requested locale
This function is passed to lit-locate's `loadLocale()`.
- `activateLocale()` just calls `loadLocale()` now.
- `autodetectLanguage` searches the following, and picks the first that returns a valid locale
object, before passing it to `loadLocale()`:
- The User's settings
- A `?locale=` component found in `window.location.search`
- The `window.navigator.language` field
- English
The `msg()` only runs when it's run. This seems obvious, but it means that you cannot cache
strings at load time; they must be kept inside functions that are re-run so that the `msg()` engine
can look up the strings in the preferred language of the user at that moment.
You can use thunks-of-strings if you really need them that way.
* Including the 'xliff-converter' in case anyone wants to review it.
* The xliff-converter is tagged as 'xliff-converter', but has been
deleted.
\#\# Details
- Resolves#5171
\#\# Changes
\#\#\# New Features
- Adds a "Add an Application" to the LibraryView if there are no applications and the user is an administrator.
\#\#\# Breaking Changes
- Adds breaking change which causes \<issue\>.
\#\# Checklist
- [ ] Local tests pass (`ak test authentik/`)
- [ ] The code has been formatted (`make lint-fix`)
If an API change has been made
- [ ] The API schema has been updated (`make gen-build`)
If changes to the frontend have been made
- [ ] The code has been formatted (`make web`)
- [ ] The translation files have been updated (`make i18n-extract`)
If applicable
- [ ] The documentation has been updated
- [ ] The documentation has been formatted (`make website`)
* web: fix redundant locales for zh suite.
* web: prettier pass for locale update
* web: localization moderization
Changed the names of the lit-localize commands to make it clear they're
part of the localization effort, and not just "build" and "extract".
* update transifex config
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* fix package lock?
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* use build not compile
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* web: conversion to lit-localize
The CI produced a list of problems that I hadn't caught earlier,
due to a typo ("localize build" is correct, "localize compile" is
not) I had left in package.json. They were minor and linty, but
it was still wise to fix them.
* web: replace lingui with lit/locale
This commit fixes some minor linting issues that were hidden by a typo in package.json. The
issues were not apparently problematic from a Javascript point of view, but they pointed
to sloppy thinking in the progression of types through the system, so I cleaned them
up and formalized the types from LocaleModule to AkLocale.
* web: replace lingui with lit/localize
One problem that has repeatedly come up is that localize's templates do not produce
JavaScript that conforms with our shop style. I've replaced `build-locale` with
a two-step that builds the locale *and* ensures that it conforms to the shop style
via `prettier` every time.
* web: replace lingui with lit-locale
This commit applies the most recent bundle of translations to the
new lit-locale aspect component. It also revises the algorithm
for *finding* the correct locale, replacing the complex fall-back
with some rather straightforward regular expressions.
In the case of Chinese, the fallback comes at the end of the
selection list, which may not be, er, politically valuable
(since Taiwan and Hong Kong come before, being exceptions that
need to be tested). If we need a different order for presentation,
that'll be a future feature.
* web: replace lingui with lit/locale
Well, that was embarassing.
---------
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
Co-authored-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* web/admin: use radio for client type
also fix search select not correctly passing all items in .selected callback
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* include unrelated typo fix
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
---------
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* use simpler char set for client secret
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* also adjust radius
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* use similar logic in web to generate ids and secrets
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* dont use math.random
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
---------
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* core: add ability to choose a default authentication flow for a provider
Signed-off-by: Marc 'risson' Schmitt <marc.schmitt@risson.space>
* update web to use correct ak-search-select
I don't think this element existed when the PR was initially created, lol
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* only use provider authentication flow for authentication designation
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* add tests
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* fix tests
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
---------
Signed-off-by: Marc 'risson' Schmitt <marc.schmitt@risson.space>
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
Co-authored-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* web/elements: only render form once instance is loaded
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* use radio for transport
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* only wait for instance to be loaded if set
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* add hook to load additional data in form
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* make send an abstract function instead of attribute
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* ensure form is updated after data is loaded
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* remove until for select and multi-selects in forms
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* don't use until for file uploads
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* remove last until from form
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* remove deprecated import
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* prevent form double load, add error handling for PreventFormSubmit
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* fix double creation of inner element in proxy form
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* make PreventFormSubmit work correctly
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
---------
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>