This reverts commit 66261f1cc. See parent commit for reason; here,
provision worked but `tools/run-dev.py` would give errors.
We need to figure out a test that reproduces these issues, then make a
version of these changes that keeps that test working, before we
re-merge them.
This function was extracted from build_user_sidebar(). We
also slightly streamlined it to not unnecessarily call
filter() when the filter text was blank. This extraction
also eliminated the need for us to have the two-line
filter_and_sort() function.
Also, we get to 100% coverage in this commit.
This causes `upgrade-zulip-from-git`, as well as a no-option run of
`tools/build-release-tarball`, to produce a Zulip install running
Python 3, rather than Python 2. In particular this means that the
virtualenv we create, in which all application code runs, is Python 3.
One shebang line, on `zulip-ec2-configure-interfaces`, explicitly
keeps Python 2, and at least one external ops script, `wal-e`, also
still runs on Python 2. See discussion on the respective previous
commits that made those explicit. There may also be some other
third-party scripts we use, outside of this source tree and running
outside our virtualenv, that still run on Python 2.
This new module tracks the recent topic names for any given
stream.
The code was pulled over almost verbatim from stream_data.js,
with minor renames to the function names.
We introduced a minor one-line function called stream_has_topics.
This mostly sets the stage for a subsequent commit to start
using client_message_id as the key into sent_messages.
It has the nice side effect of making it more explicit that
certain things should always happen when transmit_message()
succeeds.
This commit does regress our node test coverage a bit.
This is mostly straightforward moving of code out of compose.js.
The code that was moved currently supports sending time
reports for sent messages, but we intend to grow out the new
module to track more state about sent messages.
The following function names in this commit are new, but their
code was basically pulled over verbatim:
process_success (was process_send_time)
set_timer_for_restarting_event_loop
clear
initialize
All the code in the new module is covered by previous tests that
had been written for compose.js. This commit only modifies
a few things to keep those tests.
The new module has 100% node coverage, so we updated `enforce_fully_covered`.
This is mostly a straight port from bash to Python, but we
rename the coverage option to `--coverage` and we add checks
for being in a venv and being correctly provisioned.
Fixes#4009.
NVM takes a specific node version and installs the node package and
a corresponding compatible npm package.
We use it in a somewhat hackish way to install node/npm globally with
a pinned version, since that's how we actually want to consume node in
our development environment.
Other details:
- Travis CI now is configured to use the version of node installed by
provision; the easiest way to do this was to sabotage the existing node
installation.
- jsdom is upgraded to a current version, which both requires recent
node and also is required for the tests to pass with recent node.
This fixes running the node tests on Xenial.
Fixes#1498.
[tweaked by tabbott]
test-js-with-node: Move istanbul test coverage to var/node-coverage.
This commit moves js test coverage generated through istanbul to
var/node-coverage.
To use, make sure your Node installation is up to date and install
istanbul with npm:
sudo npm install -g istanbul # 'sudo' may be optional on OSX
Then run
tools/test-js-with-node cover
and navigate to coverage/lcov-report/js/index.html in a browser.
(imported from commit 2da4894d1725e2f9540b3895304246e3cd138f6c)
There are no functional changes; you can still use the shell script
tools/test-js-with-node. It just delegates now to the new index.js to
iterate through all the other .js files in the test directory and run
them. This sets the stage for Istanbul to correctly compute test
coverage.
(imported from commit 6f521c78b7a314d010fa113f9c2c971ab999b637)
util.enforce_arity takes a function and returns a new version which
throws an error if an incorrect number of arguments (as determined by
the function prototype) are passed.
(imported from commit 20e69a6dc7b6f8455726ab4fae8d5b7b04dc4103)
This needs to be deployed to both staging and prod at the same
off-peak time (and the schema migration run).
At the time it is deployed, we need to make a few changes directly in
the database:
(1) UPDATE django_content_type set app_label='zerver' where app_label='zephyr';
(2) UPDATE south_migrationhistory set app_name='zerver' where app_name='zephyr';
(imported from commit eb3fd719571740189514ef0b884738cb30df1320)
This follows up on extracting code to js/search_suggestion.js, and all
the search tests apply to the new module.
(imported from commit dec6c8614c25b4f82da57edeaddc7cfef28260a5)
I added our "static" directory to NODE_PATH for our JS unit tests.
This eliminates most of the verbosity in our require statements, but
it still requires us to explicitly call out "js" or "third"
subdirectories, which should make it a bit easier for folks reading
the tests to distinguish modules from js, third, or node itself.
(imported from commit b77a5283135d388d46f4b7e511acc59986f1a8ba)
Previously, when the first `which` failed, the entire script would
fail with exist status 1 because we pass `-e` to the interpreter.
(imported from commit 601de3b3e3edd90110fc478f7874e644009d1b62)
This covers most of the module's functionality, with special
emphasis on lines that use underscore.js (_.each and _.filter).
(imported from commit 074181a0273286a258504be634bdd1cead2eecd5)