web: Clean up error handling. Prep for permission checks.
- Add clearer reporting for API and network errors.
- Tidy error checking.
- Partial type safety for events.
* wip
* wip
* try to make this work with ken's writeup
Signed-off-by: Dominic R <dominic@sdko.org>
* wip
---------
Signed-off-by: Dominic R <dominic@sdko.org>
* web: bug / licenseStatus is not defined on initial render
- Test if the licenseStatus is available before rendering the banner
- The banner is rendered correctly when the status becomes available.
The loading sequence is such that if the user reloads the page, the
first attempt to render the license banner fails because the
licenseStatus field is not yet populated; the result is an ugly
`licenseStatus is undefined` on the console.
Because the licenseStatus is a live context, when it is updated
any objects that subscribe to it are scheduled for a re-render.
This is why the system appears to behave correctly now.
While this is invisible to the user, it's still undesirable behavior.
Returning `nothing` requires that we remove the type declarations
as return values from the renderers. Typescript's inferers do
just fine.
* fix some other small things
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: provide a test framework
As is typical of a system where a new build engine is involved, this thing is sadly fragile. Use the
wrong import style in wdio.conf.js and it breaks; there are several notes in tsconfig.test.conf and
wdio.conf.ts to tell eslint or tsc not to complain, it's just a different build with different
criteria, the native criteria don't apply.
On the other hand, writing tests is easy and predictable. We can test behaviors at the unit and
component scale in a straightforward manner, and validate our expectations that things work the way
we believe they should.
* Rolling back a reversion.
* web: update storybook, storybook a few things, fix a few things
After examining how people like Adobe and Salesforce do things, I have updated the storybook
configuration to provide run-time configuration of light/dark mode (although right now nothing
happens), inject the correct styling into the page, and update the preview handling so that we can
see the components better. We'll see how this pans out.
I have provided stories for the AggregateCard, AggregatePromiseCard, and a new QuickActionsCard. I
also fixed a bug in AggregatePromiseCard where it would fail to report a fetch error. It will only
report that "the operation falied," but it will give the full error into the console.
**As an experiment**, I have changed the interpreter for `lint:precommit` and `build:watch` to use
[Bun](https://bun.sh/) instead of NodeJS. We have observed significant speed-ups and much better
memory management with Bun for these two operations. Those are both developer-facing operations, the
behavior of the system undur current CI/CD should not change.
And finally, I've switched the QuickActionsCard view in Admin-Overview to use the new component.
Looks the same. Reads *way* easier. :-)
* Slight revision in exception logic.
* Added a ton of documentation; made the failure message configurable.
* A few documentation changes.
* Adjusting paths to work with tests.
* add ci to test
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* linting shenanigans
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* web: patch spotlight on the fly to fix syntax issue that blocked storybook build
This should be a temporary hack. I have an [open
issue](https://github.com/getsentry/spotlight/issues/419) and [pull
request](https://github.com/getsentry/spotlight/pull/420) with the
Spotlight people already to fix the issue.
* Somehow missed these in the merge.
* Merge missed something.
* Fix for incorrect path to patch file; fix for running patch multiple times.
* Prettier is still havin' opinions.
---------
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.
* Intermediate; prepping for remove that may fail.
* web: provide a default table endpoint configuration
This commit finds 19 places where the exact same configuration is
used to describe a table's API endpoint, and replaces that configuration
with a provided default from a parent class.
While examining the logs for our build, I noted that this particular
sequence is duplicated multiple times throughout our code base,
accounting for a bloat of 169 lines or so of the estimated 5552
lines of bloat. By providing a default endpoint configuration and
substituting it (mechanically) wherever the default is required,
we reduce our code duplication issue from 9.26% of the codesabe
to 8.99%.
... which is a start.
* Didn't need the duplication.
* remove page argument while we're at it
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* actually use it everywhere
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* web: fix inconsistent method signature for LogViewer
Removed the `_page` parameter from LogViewer's apiEndpoint() method.
The `page: number` parameter is no longer a part of this method's signature.
* web: restore reduced page size to Overview:Recent Events card
---------
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: clean up and remove redundant alias '@goauthentik/app'
The path alias `@goauthentik/app` has been a thorn in our side for a long time, as it conflicts with
or is redundant with all the *other* aliases in `tsconfig.json`, such as `@goauthentik/elements` and
`@goauthentik/locales`.
This commit *replaces* `@goauthentik/app` with `@goauthentik/authentik` for a single use case: the
locale codes file in the project root. That also helps reserve the subproject name `authentik` in
case we ever do go the monorepo root.
Other than that, all the rest have been removed with the following mechanical refactor:
```
perl -pi.bak -e 's{\@goauthentik/app/}{\@goauthentik/}' $(rg -l '@goauthentik/app/' ./src/)
```
* web: separate the sizing enum from a specific component implementation (#8890)
The PFSizes enum is used by more than just the Spinner, but has been left inside the Spinner for all
this time, making refactoring the Spinner for Patternfly 5 a little harder (okay, an annoying amount
harder) than it should be.
This commit moves this UI-specific, widely-use enum into its own folder in `common`, and refactors
everything else to use it. As is often the case, the refactor is mechanical:
```
perl -pi.bak -e 's{import \{ PFSize \} from "\@goauthentik/elements/Spinner";}{import \{ PFSize \}
from "\@goauthentik/common/enums.js";}' \\
$(rg -l 'import.*PFSize')
```
**Note:** This commit is dependent upon the ["clean up and remove redundant alias `@goauthentik/app`" PR](https://github.com/goauthentik/authentik/pull/8889)
* core: show all applications a user can access in admin interface
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* minor adjustments
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* add relative time
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* use relative time in most places
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* improve admin dashboard scaling
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
---------
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* web/admin: fix duplicate RBAC preview banner on permission modal
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* switch non-embedded permission page to use vertical tabs
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* fix some leftover html?
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* move stuff into vertical subtab
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* show all of users permission tabs on one main tab
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* rework role page to match user page
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* use separate tabs
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* rename role permission tables to match user tables
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* rename to credentials and tokens
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* add country icon to session list
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* add oauth access token list
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* add helper to get relative time
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* use pfdivider
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* replace plain hr with pf-c-divider
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* use new logic for showing relative time in charts
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* use consistent relative time for event display
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* remove more leftovers
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* fix some alignment issues on the admin dashboard
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* update storybook map
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* add sanity check to event app lookup
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* make api drawer header fixed
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* fix table padding for toggle
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* fix notification drawer for user interface
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* enable system task search
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* fix formatting, exclude generated script from formatting
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* web: minor fixes
There's a renderer (it's not a component, not yet) for producing definition lists without
the risk of missing a class or tag.
Breaking conditionally rendered components out to make their use easier to identify.
* fix prettier
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* fix outpost form
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* fix more flaky tests
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* re-create locale
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* add some description for different permission views
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* fix system task search
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* update docs
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
---------
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
Co-authored-by: Ken Sternberg <ken@goauthentik.io>
* This commit abstracts access to the object `rootInterface()?.config?` into a single accessor,
`authentikConfig`, that can be mixed into any AKElement object that requires access to it.
Since access to `rootInterface()?.config?` is _universally_ used for a single (and repetitive)
boolean check, a separate accessor has been provided that converts all calls of the form:
``` javascript
rootInterface()?.config?.capabilities.includes(CapabilitiesEnum.CanImpersonate)
```
into:
``` javascript
this.can(CapabilitiesEnum.CanImpersonate)
```
It does this via a Mixin, `WithCapabilitiesConfig`, which understands that these calls only make
sense in the context of a running, fully configured authentik instance, and that their purpose is to
inform authentik components of a user’s capabilities. The latter is why I don’t feel uncomfortable
turning a function call into a method; we should make it explicit that this is a relationship
between components.
The mixin has a single single field, `[WCC.capabilitiesConfig]`, where its association with the
upper-level configuration is made. If that syntax looks peculiar to you, good! I’ve used an explict
unique symbol as the field name; it is inaccessable an innumerable in the object list. The debugger
shows it only as:
Symbol(): {
cacheTimeout: 300
cacheTimeoutFlows: 300
cacheTimeoutPolicies: 300
cacheTimeoutReputation: 300
capabilities: (5) ['can_save_media', 'can_geo_ip', 'can_impersonate', 'can_debug', 'is_enterprise']
}
Since you can’t reference it by identity, you can’t write to it. Until every browser supports actual
private fields, this is the best we can do; it does guarantee that field name collisions are
impossible, which is a win.
The mixin takes a second optional boolean; setting this to true will cause any web component using
the mixin to automatically schedule a re-render if the capabilities list changes.
The mixin is also generic; despite the "...into a Lit-Context" in the title, the internals of the
Mixin can be replaced with anything so long as the signature of `.can()` is preserved.
Because this work builds off the work I did to give the Sidebar access to the configuration without
ad-hoc retrieval or prop-drilling, it wasn’t necessary to create a new context for it. That will be
necessary for the following:
TODO:
``` javascript
rootInterface()?.uiConfig;
rootInterface()?.tenant;
me();
```
* web: Added a README with a description of the applications' "mental model," essentially an architectural description.
* web: prettier had opinions about the README
* web: Jens requested that subscription be by default, and it's the right call.
* This commit abstracts access to the object `rootInterface()?.config?` into a single accessor,
`authentikConfig`, that can be mixed into any AKElement object that requires access to it.
Since access to `rootInterface()?.config?` is _universally_ used for a single (and repetitive)
boolean check, a separate accessor has been provided that converts all calls of the form:
``` javascript
rootInterface()?.config?.capabilities.includes(CapabilitiesEnum.CanImpersonate)
```
into:
``` javascript
this.can(CapabilitiesEnum.CanImpersonate)
```
It does this via a Mixin, `WithCapabilitiesConfig`, which understands that these calls only make
sense in the context of a running, fully configured authentik instance, and that their purpose is to
inform authentik components of a user’s capabilities. The latter is why I don’t feel uncomfortable
turning a function call into a method; we should make it explicit that this is a relationship
between components.
The mixin has a single single field, `[WCC.capabilitiesConfig]`, where its association with the
upper-level configuration is made. If that syntax looks peculiar to you, good! I’ve used an explict
unique symbol as the field name; it is inaccessable an innumerable in the object list. The debugger
shows it only as:
Symbol(): {
cacheTimeout: 300
cacheTimeoutFlows: 300
cacheTimeoutPolicies: 300
cacheTimeoutReputation: 300
capabilities: (5) ['can_save_media', 'can_geo_ip', 'can_impersonate', 'can_debug', 'is_enterprise']
}
Since you can’t reference it by identity, you can’t write to it. Until every browser supports actual
private fields, this is the best we can do; it does guarantee that field name collisions are
impossible, which is a win.
The mixin takes a second optional boolean; setting this to true will cause any web component using
the mixin to automatically schedule a re-render if the capabilities list changes.
The mixin is also generic; despite the "...into a Lit-Context" in the title, the internals of the
Mixin can be replaced with anything so long as the signature of `.can()` is preserved.
Because this work builds off the work I did to give the Sidebar access to the configuration without
ad-hoc retrieval or prop-drilling, it wasn’t necessary to create a new context for it. That will be
necessary for the following:
TODO:
``` javascript
rootInterface()?.uiConfig;
rootInterface()?.tenant;
me();
```
* web: Added a README with a description of the applications' "mental model," essentially an architectural description.
* web: prettier had opinions about the README
* web: Jens requested that subscription be by default, and it's the right call.
* web: adjust RAC to point to the (now independent) Interface.
- Also, removed redundant check.
I'm conducting a more comprehensive survey of the UI in order to get a more holistic idea of the
changes that should be implemented. Along the way, I'm finding a few small details that annoy me.
Here are three.
It goes to "User statistics." I have changed both the text of the link and the page to read "User
Statistics" (it's a title, it should be capitalized).
Give people warning when you're about to take them out of the system, especially if you're opening a
new tab along the way.
Just a thing I spotted along the way.
* Web: Detangling some circular dependencies in Admin and User
Admin, User, and Flow should not dependend upon each other, at least
not in a circular way. If Admin and User depend on Flow, that's
fine, but Flow should not correspondingly depend upon elements of
either; if they have something in common, let's put them in
`@goauthentik/common` or find some other smart place to store them.
This commit refactors the intentToLabel and actionToLabel functions
into `@goauthentik/common/labels` and converts them to static tables
for maintenance purposes.
* web: "Consistency is the hobgoblin of small minds" - Ralph Waldo Emerson
* web: I found these confusing to look at, so I added comments.
* web: remove admin-to-user component reference(s)
There was only one: AppIcon. This has been moved to `components`.
Touching the LibraryApplications page triggered a cyclomatic
complexity check. Extracting the expansion block and streamlining
the class and style declarations with lit directives helped.
* web: remove admin from elements
This commit removes the two references from `elements` to `admin`: the list of UserEvents and a
reference to the FlowSearch type, used by the Forms manager to decide how to extract a value.
For FlowSearch, a different convention for detecting the type was implemented (instances of the
object have a unique fieldname for the value holder). UserEvents and ObjectChangelog have been
moved to `components` as they're clearly dependent upon the API.
This defers work on removing Admin from Components, as that is (again) references going the
wrong way, but that can happen later.
* web: remove admin-to-user component reference(s) (#6856)
There was only one: AppIcon. This has been moved to `components`.
Touching the LibraryApplications page triggered a cyclomatic
complexity check. Extracting the expansion block and streamlining
the class and style declarations with lit directives helped.
* This was supposed to be merged.
* web: remove `./element`⇢`./user` references
The offender here is UserDevicesList, which despite being in `elements` is only
used by the admin/user/UserViewPage. The problem is that UserDevicesList,
despite being in `admin`, inherits from `user`, so moving it would have created
a new admin⇢user reference, and the whole point of this exercise is to get rid
of references that point "up" from the foundational pieces to the views, or
that refer to components in sibling applications.
After examining UserDevicesList, I realized that *every feature* of MFADevicesList
had been overridden: the rows, the columns, the toolbar, and the endpoint all had
custom overrides. Nothing was left of MFADevicesList after that. Even the
property that the web component used had been completely changed. The only thing
they had in common was that they both inherited from `Table<Device>`.
Refactoring UserDevicesList so that it inherited directly from `Table<Device>` and
then moving it into `./admin/users` was the obvious and correct step.
Both used the same label table, so that went into the `common/labels` folder.
Along the way, I cleaned up a few minor details. Just little things, like the repeated invocation
of:
```
new AuthenticatorsApi(DEFAULT_CONFIG).authenticatorAdminMETHODDestroy({ id: device.pk });
```
This is repeated five times, once for each Method. By creating these:
```
const api = new AuthenticatorsApi(DEFAULT_CONFIG);
const id = { id: device.pk };
```
The method invocation could be just `api.authenticatorsMETHODDestroy(id)`, which is easier on the
eyes. See the MFADevicesPage for the full example.
Similarly,
```
return [
new TableColumn(msg("Name"), ""),
new TableColumn(msg("Type"), ""),
new TableColumn("")
];
```
is more straightforward as:
```
const headers = [msg("Name"), msg("Type"), ""];
return headers.map((th) => new TableColumn(th, ""));
```
We've labeled what we're working with, and web developers ought to know that `th` is the HTML code
for `table header`.
I've had to alter what files are scanned in pre-commit mode; it doesn't handle renamed files very well,
and at the moment a file that is renamed is not scanned, as its "new" name is not straightforwardly
displayed, not even by `git porcelain`.
* web: make the table of column headers look like a table
* web: detangle `common` from `elements`.
And just like that, `common` no longer has a reference to `elements`. I don't mind this little bit of
code duplication if it removes a cycle. What it does point out is that there are bits of `common` that
are predicated on the presence of the browser, and that there are bits of `elements` that, if they rely
on `common`, can't be disentangled from the application as a whole. Which seems to me that we have two
different things going on in common: things about an application, and things about elements that are
independent of the application.
I'll think about those later.
```
$ rg 'import.*@goauthentik' ./common/ | perl -ne 'm{"(@goauthentik[^"]*)"} && print "$1\n"' | sort | cut -d '/' -f1-2 | uniq | sort
@goauthentik/api
@goauthentik/common
$
```
* web: odd bug; merge-related? Gonna investigate.
* web: build failure thanks to local cache; fixed
* web: detangle `components` from `admin`.
This was the last inappropriate reference: something from `./components` referencing something in
`./admin`, in this case the `ak-event-info` component. Used by both Users and Admin, moving it
into `./components` was the obvious correct step.
`ak-event-info` is a lookup table relating specific events in the event log to rich, textual
representations; in the special case of model changes and email info, even more rich content is
available in a dl/dt format. I've tableized the model changes and email info renderer, and I've
extracted every event's textual representation into its own method, converting the `switch/case`
rendering statement into a `switch/case` dispatch switch. This has the virtue of isolating each
unique case and making the dispatch switch short and coherent.
The conversion was done mechanistically; I gave the refactorer (Tide, in this case) instructions to
duplicate the switch block and then convert every case into a method with a name patterned on the
`case`. Going back to the original switch block, it was easy to duplicate the pattern matching and
convert it into a dispatch switch.
And with this, there are zero cycles in the references between the different "packageable" sections
of the UI. The only thing left to do is figure out how to redistribute `./elements` and `./components`
in a way that makes sense for each.
* Changed function name from 'emailMessageBody' to 'githubIssueMessageBody' to better reflect its usage.
* web: added comments about length and purpose of githubIssueMessageBody.
* Update web/src/common/labels.ts
Co-authored-by: Jens L. <jens@goauthentik.io>
Signed-off-by: Ken Sternberg <133134217+kensternberg-authentik@users.noreply.github.com>
* Unwanted change.
---------
Signed-off-by: Ken Sternberg <133134217+kensternberg-authentik@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Jens L. <jens@goauthentik.io>
* Web: Detangling some circular dependencies in Admin and User
Admin, User, and Flow should not dependend upon each other, at least
not in a circular way. If Admin and User depend on Flow, that's
fine, but Flow should not correspondingly depend upon elements of
either; if they have something in common, let's put them in
`@goauthentik/common` or find some other smart place to store them.
This commit refactors the intentToLabel and actionToLabel functions
into `@goauthentik/common/labels` and converts them to static tables
for maintenance purposes.
* web: "Consistency is the hobgoblin of small minds" - Ralph Waldo Emerson
* web: I found these confusing to look at, so I added comments.
* web: remove admin-to-user component reference(s) (#6856)
There was only one: AppIcon. This has been moved to `components`.
Touching the LibraryApplications page triggered a cyclomatic
complexity check. Extracting the expansion block and streamlining
the class and style declarations with lit directives helped.
* \#\# 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".
* web: add storybook to test components
* 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.
* web: add storybook
The delta on this didn't make any sense; putting it back causes no behavioral
changes.
* web: add Storybook
Fixed a typo in the package.json that prevented the TSC check
from passing.
* web: incorporate storybook
This commit includes a number of type and definitional changes needed to make lit-analyze pass. In
most cases, it was a matter of reassuring Lit that we were using the right type and the right type
converter, or configuring the property such that it should never be called as an attribute.
The most controversial change is adding the 'no-incompatible-type-binding' to the LIT analyzer
configuration (found in `tsconfig.json`). This "routes around" lit-analyzer not doing very well
understanding that some HTML objects can have generic property types, as long as the renderer is
configured correctly.
The 'no-missing-import: off' setting is required as lit-analyzer also does not use the tsconfig
`paths` setting correctly and cannot find objects defined via aliases.
It's a shame JSON can't support comments; these should be in the tsconfig.json file directly. As it
is, I've started a README file that includes a section to record configuration decisions.
Deleted the lingui.config file as we're not using it anymore
* ignore storybook build in git
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
---------
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
Co-authored-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* \#\# 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>