Summary:
This makes the version shown when hovering on the Grist icon equal
the version set in package.json, for a grist-core build. Previously
the number shown was a hard-coded placeholder.
The Grist SaaS build has some build machinery dealing with the
version number that should be unaffected by this change for now.
Test Plan: tested manually with build_core.sh
Reviewers: jarek
Reviewed By: jarek
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3659
Summary: Also clarifies that only lowercase letters are accepted.
Test Plan: manual
Reviewers: jarek
Reviewed By: jarek
Subscribers: jarek
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3647
Summary:
upgrade typeorm version, so Grist can run against newer versions of postgres.
Dusted off some old benchmarking code to verify that important queries don't get slower. They don't appear to, unlike for some intermediate versions of typeorm I tried in the past.
Most of the changes are because `findOne` changed how it interprets its arguments, and the value it returns when nothing is found. For the return value, I stuck with limiting its impact by emulating old behavior (returning undefined rather than null) rather than propagating the change out to parts of the code unrelated to the database.
Test Plan: existing tests pass; manual testing with postgres 10 and 14
Reviewers: georgegevoian
Reviewed By: georgegevoian
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3613
Summary:
This adds rudimentary support for opening certain SQLite files in Grist.
If you have a file such as `landing.db` in Grist, you can convert it to Grist format by doing (either in monorepo or grist-core):
```
yarn run cli -h
yarn run cli sqlite -h
yarn run cli sqlite gristify landing.db
```
The file is now openable by Grist. To actually do so with the regular Grist server, you'll need to either import it, or convert some doc you don't care about in the `samples/` directory to be a soft link to it (and then force a reload).
This implementation is a rudimentary experiment. Here are some awkwardnesses:
* Only tables that happen to have a column called `id`, and where the column happens to be an integer, can be opened directly with Grist as it is today. That could be generalized, but it looked more than a Gristathon's worth of work, so I instead used SQLite views.
* Grist will handle tables that start with an uncapitalized letter a bit erratically. You can successfully add columns, for example, but removing them will cause sadness - Grist will rename the table in a confused way.
* I didn't attempt to deal with column names with spaces etc (though views could deal with those).
* I haven't tried to do any fancy type mapping.
* Columns with constraints can make adding new rows impossible in Grist, since Grist requires that a row can be added with just a single cell set.
Test Plan: added small test
Reviewers: georgegevoian
Reviewed By: georgegevoian
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3502