This checks for languages that have a special key translated.
Any that don't have the key translated, are not offered to the
user (unless GRIST_OFFER_ALL_LANGUAGES is set).
Co-authored-by: jarek <jaroslaw.sadzinski@gmail.com>
Summary:
This makes two small tweaks based on a user's questions about sharing
sites publicly for a self-managed installation:
* The support user `support@getgrist.com` is made configurable with
`GRIST_SUPPORT_EMAIL`. This came up because only the support user
can share material with the special "everyone" user. This restriction
was added to avoid spam.
* Regardless of public sharing settings, for our SaaS we had
decided not to list public sites to anonymous users. That is
somewhat a question of taste, so a `GRIST_LIST_PUBLIC_SITES` flag
is added to override this choice.
Public sharing isn't in a well polished state, and this diff doesn't
advance that, in fact it adds a new wrinkle :-/
Test Plan: existing tests pass; manual testing
Reviewers: jarek
Reviewed By: jarek
Subscribers: jarek
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3663
Summary:
For self-hosted Grist, forward auth has proven useful, where
some proxy wrapped around Grist manages authentication, and
passes on user information to Grist in a trusted header.
The current implementation is adequate when Grist is the
only place where the user logs in or out, but is confusing
otherwise (see https://github.com/gristlabs/grist-core/issues/207).
Here we take some steps to broaden the scenarios Grist's
forward auth support can be used with:
* When a trusted header is present and is blank, treat
that as the user not being logged in, and don't look
any further for identity information. Specifically,
don't look in Grist's session information.
* Add a `GRIST_IGNORE_SESSION` flag to entirely prevent
Grist from picking up identity information from a cookie,
in order to avoid confusion between multiple login methods.
* Add tests for common scenarios.
Test Plan: added tests
Reviewers: georgegevoian
Reviewed By: georgegevoian
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3482
Summary:
Adds a new environment variable that allows for custom
CSS to be included in all core static pages.
Test Plan: Tested manually in grist-core.
Reviewers: paulfitz
Reviewed By: paulfitz
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3419
Summary:
Currently, we have two ways that we deliver Grist. One is grist-core,
which has simple defaults and is relatively easy for third parties to
deploy. The second is our internal build for our SaaS, which is the
opposite. For self-managed Grist, a planned paid on-premise version
of Grist, I adopt the following approach:
* Use the `grist-core` build mechanism, extending it to accept an
overlay of extra code if present.
* Extra code is supplied in a self-contained `ext` directory, with
an `ext/app` directory that is of same structure as core `app`
and `stubs/app`.
* The `ext` directory also contains information about extra
node dependencies needed beyond that of `grist-core`.
* The `ext` directory is contained within our monorepo rather than
`grist-core` since it may contain material not under the Apache
license.
Docker builds are achieved in our monorepo by using the `--build-context`
functionality to add in `ext` during the regular `grist-core` build:
```
docker buildx build --load -t gristlabs/grist-ee --build-context=ext=../ext .
```
Incremental builds in our monorepo are achieved with the `build_core.sh` helper,
like:
```
buildtools/build_core.sh /tmp/self-managed
cd /tmp/self-managed
yarn start
```
The initial `ext` directory contains material for snapshotting to S3.
If you build the docker image as above, and have S3 access, you can
do something like:
```
docker run -p 8484:8484 --env GRIST_SESSION_SECRET=a-secret \
--env GRIST_DOCS_S3_BUCKET=grist-docs-test \
--env GRIST_DOCS_S3_PREFIX=self-managed \
-v $HOME/.aws:/root/.aws -it gristlabs/grist-ee
```
This will start a version of Grist that is like `grist-core` but with
S3 snapshots enabled. To release this code to `grist-core`, it would
just need to move from `ext/app` to `app` within core.
I tried a lot of ways of organizing self-managed Grist, and this was
what made me happiest. There are a lot of trade-offs, but here is what
I was looking for:
* Only OSS-code in grist-core. Adding mixed-license material there
feels unfair to people already working with the repo. That said,
a possible future is to move away from our private monorepo to
a public mixed-licence repo, which could have the same relationship
with grist-core as the monorepo has.
* Minimal differences between self-managed builds and one of our
existing builds, ideally hewing as close to grist-core as possible
for ease of documentation, debugging, and maintenance.
* Ideally, docker builds without copying files around (the new
`--build-context` functionality made that possible).
* Compatibility with monorepo build.
Expressing dependencies of the extra code in `ext` proved tricky to
do in a clean way. Yarn/npm fought me every step of the way - everything
related to optional dependencies was unsatisfactory in some respect.
Yarn2 is flexible but smells like it might be overreach. In the end,
organizing to install non-core dependencies one directory up from the
main build was a good simple trick that saved my bacon.
This diff gets us to the point of building `grist-ee` images conveniently,
but there isn't a public repo people can go look at to see its source. This
could be generated by taking `grist-core`, adding the `ext` directory
to it, and pushing to a distinct repository. I'm not in a hurry to do that,
since a PR to that repo would be hard to sync with our monorepo and
`grist-core`. Also, we don't have any licensing text ready for the `ext`
directory. So leaving that for future work.
Test Plan: manual
Reviewers: georgegevoian, alexmojaki
Reviewed By: georgegevoian, alexmojaki
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3415
It looks like making gvisor sandboxing the default in our docker image is causing people trouble, so this backs off from that change. We retain gvisor's runsc executable in the image so that turning on sandboxing is just an environment variable setting away.
Lack of sandboxing is not good for users opening untrusted documents, so it would be good to be aggressive about turning it on, or communicating about it, so there's follow-up work needed. In the meantime I've updated the documentation about it somewhat.
See https://github.com/gristlabs/grist-core/issues/177
Summary:
Adds a new Grist login page to the login app, and replaces the
server-side Cognito Google Sign-In flow with Google's own OAuth flow.
Test Plan: Browser and server tests.
Reviewers: jarek
Reviewed By: jarek
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3332
Summary:
Limits crafted for our SaaS product were getting applied to grist-core
users. This diff removes them. There will be limits on a future
self-managed product.
Test Plan: checked manually
Reviewers: georgegevoian
Reviewed By: georgegevoian
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3255
Summary:
This moves and prunes a list of environment variables into core.
It is not exhaustive, or as clean as it could be. Ideally, going
forward, this will be the common place to document environment
variables.
Test Plan: documentation only
Reviewers: jarek
Reviewed By: jarek
Subscribers: jarek
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3242
Summary:
This updates the grist-core README to list specific features of Grist,
to make it easier for a casual visitor to get a sense of its scope. Adds links
to some new resources (reviews, templates, grist v airtable post) that could
also help. Adds python3 to docker image so that templates work without fuss.
Test Plan: existing tests should pass
Reviewers: georgegevoian
Reviewed By: georgegevoian
Subscribers: dsagal, anaisconce
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3204
Summary: This is a documentation update, and version bump on grist-core.
Test Plan: No code changes.
Reviewers: dsagal
Reviewed By: dsagal
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D2982
Summary:
* adds a smoke test to grist-core
* fixes a problem with highlight.js failing to load correctly
* skips survey for default user
* freshens docker build
Utility files in test/nbrowser are moved to core/test/nbrowser, so that gristUtils are available there. This increased the apparent size of the diff as "./" import paths needed replacing with "test/nbrowser/" paths. The utility files are untouched, except for the code to start a server - it now has a small grist-core specific conditional in it.
Test Plan: adds test
Reviewers: dsagal
Reviewed By: dsagal
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D2768
Summary:
I worked through the README for grist-core, and the instructions
for setting it up and starting it. This change includes a small
simplification, and a few more instructions for getting started.
Test Plan: manual
Reviewers: dsagal
Reviewed By: dsagal
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D2619
Summary:
Apache-2.0 is a well-regarded free software license, and is suitable for Grist.
Add the license text, along with a NOTICE file advised in the license, and a
mention in the README.
Test Plan: No code changes.
Reviewers: paulfitz
Reviewed By: paulfitz
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D2575