When we perform database queries in tests after the process running the
browser has started, we sometimes get failures in our test suite due to
both the tests and the browser accessing the database at the same time.
Furthermore, using `Poll.all` results in a database query, and doing so
after the process running the browser has started might result in
failures when running our test suite.
We were clicking on the "Sign in" link right after clicking on the "Sign
out" link, which might result in simultaneous requests and exceptions
when running our test suite.
So we're adding an expectation to make sure the first request has
finished before starting the following one.
We were doing a `mappable.map_location` call in an `expect` which might
result in a database queries. Doing database queries in a test after the
process running the browser has started might result in exceptions while
running our test suite.
There were cases where we clicked the button to submit the form and
immediately we visited a different page.
In the past, we've had similar code produce PG::ProtocolViolation errors
in similar situations. Since we've had these errors a few times in the
nested imageable specs, there's a chance they're related to the absence
of the expectation.
Although I'm not even remotely sure this will fix these issues, at least
we now follow the convention of making expectations after every request.
Note we're changing both the nested imageable and nested documentable
specs. Only the nested imageable would need to be changed because it's
the one where there's a `visit` inside the
`imageable_redirected_to_resource_show_or_navigate_to` method. I'm
changing both for consistency.
We were missing a notice in this case. Not only this caused
inconsistencies in the user experience, but it also made it hard to add
an expectation in the test checking the request had finished before
making a new one. Simultaneous requests sometimes cause failures in our
test suite.
In the mail section we have very different indentations and formatting in
texts with sanitize, links and texts with interpolations. In my opinion it
helps a lot to have clearer indentations in these cases.
This may not be the best way to indent them, but at least I think it is
clearer than it was and at least relatively unified.
The idea to show the status of the existing features was done in commit
7339a98b74. Back then, we didn't have the separate `process.` prefix,
and so processes were enabled/disabled using settings like
`feature.debates` instead of `process.debates`.
IMHO making the information about the enabled features public could
potentially be a bit risky since it gives too much information about the
current status of the application.
Showing which processes are enabled, on the other hand, is pretty
harmless, and it's the reason why this feature was added in the first
place.
These modules are used by default in version 1.12.14 and so we were
getting deprecation warnings:
```
DEPRECATION WARNING: GraphQL::Execution::Interpreter is now the
default; remove `use GraphQL::Execution::Interpreter` from the schema
definition (app/graphql/consul_schema.rb:6)
DEPRECATION WARNING: GraphQL::Analysis::AST is now the default; remove
`use GraphQL::Analysis::AST` from the schema definition
(app/graphql/consul_schema.rb:7)
DEPRECATION WARNING: GraphQL::Pagination::Connections is now the
default, remove `use GraphQL::Pagination::Connections` from
app/graphql/consul_schema.rb:10
```
The notification digest title did not look the same as other mail. We
removed the table for the title to make it more consistent with the rest of
the emails.
Currently with both seeds and dev_seeds, not only was this email not
displayed from the system emails section, but it also caused an error in
the application.
@email_to had an empty value and in the view we tried to access
@email_to.name which caused the error. We kept the same logic but
added the current_user to make sure it always has a valid value. We add
the current_user because the current_user is always present in this controller..
"Participate in the final voting" was a concept which was hard to
understand since many people would think it was related to the
voting/polls section and that somehow there was going to be a "final"
poll.
So we use "Vote for budget projects" instead.
Thanks Pomerange for the suggestion.
We had the same texts four times, with slight variations in the case of
the management section.
We're unifying them under the "verification" i18n namespace, since the
texts are about actions which can be done depending on whether users are
verified or not.
Note the names of the i18n keys aren't very consistent, since we use
"debates" in plural but "proposal" in singular. We're leaving it like
this so existing translations aren't affected.
We were saying that actions marked with an asterisk were only possible
when users were verified. However, there were no actions marked with an
asterisk; instead, we didn't show these actions to non-verified users.
Besides, the concept of Census doesn't exist in many CONSUL
installations, where verification is done through other means, so the
text saying that only users on Census could do certain things wasn't
correct in these cases.
Due to that, we're removing the asterisk in the Spanish version as well.
We're also removing the asterisk in the default welcome pages, since
we're already saying which action can't be done until the account is
verified.
In the case of the residence verification page, we had asterisks but we
didn't explain what the asterisk stood for, so we're also removing it.
We used "retire" because we translated it literally from the Spanish
verb "retirar" which can mean both "retire" and "withdraw".
Note we're still using "retire" in database fields and method names;
changing that might make it harder to upgrade from a previous version of
CONSUL.
Foundation was using `!global` for non-existing variables, which
generated a warning on our current version of Sass.
This is (mostly) fixed on the latest version of Foundation. However,
this latest version isn't included in the `foundation-rails` gem, so we
can't upgrade yet.
So we're defining these variables before Foundation does so.
See issue 12080 in the foundation/foundation-sites repository for more
information.
The current consul GraphQL API has two problems.
1) It uses some unnecessary complicated magic to automatically create
the GraphQL types and querys using an `api.yml` file. This approach
is over-engineered, complex and has no benefits. It's just harder to
understand the code for people which are not familiar with the
project (like me, lol).
2) It uses a deprecated DSL [1] that is soon going to be removed from
`graphql-ruby` completely. We are already seeing deprecation warning
because of this (see References).
There was one problem. I wanted to create the API so that it is fully
backwards compatible with the old one, BUT the old one uses field names
which are directly derived from the ruby code, which results in
snake_case field names - not the GraphQL way. When I'm using the
graphql-ruby Class-based syntax, it automatically creates the fields in
camelCase, which breaks backwards-compatibility.
So I've added deprecated snake_case field names to keep it
backwards-compatible.
[1] https://graphql-ruby.org/schema/class_based_api.html
On the Configuration settings page three settings appeared without
description:
* Comments Summary: No description.
* Related Content: No description.
* Tags: No description.
These settings are related with the AI / Machine learning feature. They
only should appear on AI / Machine learning setting page when the
feature is enabled.
It looks like these lines were added on a branch which didn't include
commit 3da4ee00b but were merged after that commit was merged.
In any case, since we're already using the `:admin` tag in the whole
file, these lines aren't necessary.