* 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.
* web/add tooltip buttons to user details page
This commit wraps the command buttons on the UserDetailsPage with tooltips providing greater copy
explaining what each button does. It also ensures that every button is a minimum of 11ems in width
(The longest phrase, 'Reset Password', results in a width of 10.75ems; this makes them all
consistent.)
The technique for giving the `ak-action-button` objects a mininum width uses the CSS `::part()`
syntax, which is new. CanIUse shows that it's at 95.3% of global usage; our weak points remain Opera
Mini and UC Browser for Android.
Oh, and IE. But the various Powers That Be™ agree we're no longer tracking or caring about IE.
* I added some text, so it's my responibility to add the language files.
* fix text
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* rework
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
* web: enforce a max-width on the container for the buttons so that they don't look funky on ultrawide monitors.
* wbe: re-ran and confirmed prettier.
---------
Signed-off-by: Ken Sternberg <133134217+kensternberg-authentik@users.noreply.github.com>
Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer <jens@goauthentik.io>
Co-authored-by: Jens L. <jens@goauthentik.io>
* web: basic cleanup of buttons
This commit adds Storybook features to the Authentik four-stage button.
The four-stage button is used to:
- trigger an action
- show that the action is running
- show when the action has succeeded, then reset
- show when the action has failed, then reset
It is used mostly for fetching data from the server. The variants are:
- ak-spinner-button: The basic form takes a single property argument, `callAction` a function that
returns a Promise (an asynchronous function).
- ak-action-button: Takes an API request function (which are all asynchronous) and adapts it to the
`callAction`. The only difference in behavior with the Spinner button is that on failure the error
message will be displayed by a notification.
- ak-token-copy-button: A specialized button that, on success, pushes the content of the retrieved
object into the clipboard.
Cleanup consisted of:
- removing a lot of the in-line code from the HTML, decluttering it and making more explicit what
the behaviors of each button type are on success and on failure.
- Replacing the ad-hoc Promise management with Lit's own `Task` handler. The `Task` handler knows
how to notify a Lit-Element of its own internal state change, making it ideal for objects like
this button that need to change their appearance as a Promise'd task progresses from idle →
running → (success or failure).
- Providing JSDoc strings for all of the properties, slots, attributes, elements, and events.
- Adding 'pointer-events: none' during the running phases of the action, to prevent the user from
clicking the button multiple times and launching multiple queries.
- Emitting an event for every stage of the operation:
- `ak-button-click` when the button is clicked.
- `ak-button-success` when the action completes. The payload is included in `Event.detail.result`
- `ak-button-failure` when the action fails. The error message is included in `Event.detail.error`
- `ak-button-reset` when the button completes a notification and goes back to idle
**Storybook**
Since the API requests for both `ak-spinner-button` and `ak-action-button` require only that a
promise be returned, Storybooking them was straightforward. `ak-token-copy-button` is a
special-purpose derivative with an internal functionality that can't be easily mocked (yet), so
there's no Storybook for it.
All of the stories provide the required asynchronous function, in this cose one that waits three
seconds before emitting either a `response` or `reject` Promise.
`ak-action-button`'s Story has event handler code so that pressing on the button will result in a
message being written to a display block under the button.
I've added a new pair of class mixins, `CustomEmitterElement` and `CustomListenerElement`. These
each add an additional method to the classes they're mixed into; one provides a very easy way to
emit a custom event and one provides a way to receive the custom event while sweeping all of the
custom event type handling under the rug.
`emitCustomEvent` replaces this:
``` JavaScript
this.dispatchEvent(
new CustomEvent('ak-button-click', {
composed: true,
bubbles: true,
detail: {
target: this,
result: "Some result, huh?"
},
})
);
```
... with this:
``` JavaScript
this.dispatchCustomEvent('ak-button-click', { result: "Some result, huh?" });
```
The `CustomListenerElement` handler just ensures that the handler being passed to it takes a
CustomEvent, and then makes sure that any actual event passed to the handler has been type-guarded
to ensure it is a custom event.
**Observations**
*Composition vs Inheritance, Part 1*
The four-state button has three implementations. All three inherit from `BaseTaskButton`:
- `spinner`
- provides a default `callAction()`
- `action`
- provides a different name for `callAction`
- overrides `onError` to display a Notification.
- `token-copy`
- provides a custom `callAction`
- overrides `onSuccess` to copy the results to the keyboard
- overrides `onError` to display a Notification, with special handling for asynchronous
processing.
The *results* of all of these could be handled higher up as event handlers, and the button could be
just a thing that displays the states. As it is, the BaseStateToken has only one reason to change
(the Promise changes its state), so I'm satisfied that this is a suitable evolution of the product,
and that it does what it says it does.
*Developer Ergonomics*
The one thing that stands out to me time and again is just how *confusing* all of the Patternfly
stuff tends to be; not because it's not logical, but because it overwhelms the human 7±2 ability to
remember details like this without any imperative to memorize all of them. I would like to get them
under control by marshalling them under a semantic CSS regime, but I'm blocked by some basic
disconnects in the current development environment. We can't shake out the CSS as much as we'd like
because there's no ESPrima equivalent for Typescript, and the smallest bundle purgeCSS is capable of
making for just *one* button is about 55KB. That's a bit too much. It's a great system for getting
off the ground, but long-term it needs more love than we (can) give it.
* Prettier has opinions.
* Removed extraneous debugging code.
* Added comments to the BaseTaskButton parent class.
* web: fixed two build errors (typing) in the stories.
* web: prettier's got opinions
* web: refactor the buttons
This commit adds URL mocking to Storybook, which in turn allows us to
commit a Story for ak-token-copy-button.
I have confirmed that the button's algorithm for writing to the
clipboard works on Safari, Chrome, and Firefox. I don't know
what's up with IE.
* ONE BYTE in .storybook/main blocked integration.
With the repair of lit-analyze, it's time to fix the rule set
to at least let us pass for the moment.
* Still looking for the list of exceptions in lit-analyze that will let us pass once more.
* web: repair error in EnterpriseLicenseForm
This commit continues to find the right configuration for
lit-analyze. During the course of this repair, I discovered
a bug in the EnterpriseLicenseForm; the original usage could
result in the _string_ `undefined` being passed back as a
value. To handle the case where the value truly is undefined,
the `ifDefined()` directive must be used in the HTML template.
I have also instituted a case-by-case stylistic decision to allow
the HTML, and only the HTML, to be longer that 100 characters
when doing so reduces the visual "noise" of a function.