Summary:
Implements the latest design of the Formula AI Assistant.
Also switches out brace to the latest build of ace.
Test Plan: Browser tests.
Reviewers: jarek
Reviewed By: jarek
Subscribers: jarek
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3949
Summary:
This uses a newer version of mocha in grist-core so that tests can be run in parallel. That allows more tests to be moved without slowing things down overall. Tests moved are venerable browser tests; only the ones that "just work" or worked without too much trouble to are moved, in order to keep the diff from growing too large. Will wrestle with more in follow up.
Parallelism is at the file level, rather than the individual test.
The newer version of mocha isn't needed for grist-saas repo; tests are parallelized in our internal CI by other means. I've chosen to allocate files to workers in a cruder way than our internal CI, based on initial characters rather than an automated process. The automated process would need some reworking to be compatible with mocha running in parallel mode.
Test Plan: this diff was tested first on grist-core, then ported to grist-saas so saas repo history will correctly track history of moved files.
Reviewers: jarek
Reviewed By: jarek
Subscribers: jarek
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3927
Not only GREP_TESTS can be assigned a single word like:
GREP_TESTS=DocApi yarn test
But also can be assigned a whole sentence part:
GREP_TESTS="supports ascending sort" yarn test
That's especially useful to run a single test (and not a whole test
suit)
Co-authored-by: Florent FAYOLLE <florent.fayolle@beta.gouv.fr>
Summary:
- Excel exports were awfully memory-inefficient, causing occasional docWorker
crashes. The fix is to use the "streaming writer" option of ExcelJS
https://github.com/exceljs/exceljs#streaming-xlsx-writercontents. (Empirically
on one example, max memory went down from 3G to 100M)
- It's also CPU intensive and synchronous, and can block node for tens of
seconds. The fix is to use a worker-thread. This diff uses "piscina" library
for a pool of threads.
- Additionally, adds ProcessMonitor that logs memory and cpu usage,
particularly when those change significantly.
- Also introduces request cancellation, so that a long download cancelled by
the user will cancel the work being done in the worker thread.
Test Plan:
Updated previous export tests; memory and CPU performance tested
manually by watching output of ProcessMonitor.
Difference visible in these log excerpts:
Before (total time to serve request 22 sec):
```
Telemetry processMonitor heapUsedMB=2187, heapTotalMB=2234, cpuAverage=1.13, intervalMs=17911
Telemetry processMonitor heapUsedMB=2188, heapTotalMB=2234, cpuAverage=0.66, intervalMs=5005
Telemetry processMonitor heapUsedMB=2188, heapTotalMB=2234, cpuAverage=0, intervalMs=5005
Telemetry processMonitor heapUsedMB=71, heapTotalMB=75, cpuAverage=0.13, intervalMs=5002
```
After (total time to server request 18 sec):
```
Telemetry processMonitor heapUsedMB=109, heapTotalMB=144, cpuAverage=0.5, intervalMs=5001
Telemetry processMonitor heapUsedMB=109, heapTotalMB=144, cpuAverage=1.39, intervalMs=5002
Telemetry processMonitor heapUsedMB=94, heapTotalMB=131, cpuAverage=1.13, intervalMs=5000
Telemetry processMonitor heapUsedMB=94, heapTotalMB=131, cpuAverage=1.35, intervalMs=5001
```
Note in "Before" that heapTotalMB goes up to 2GB in the first case, and "intervalMs" of 17 seconds indicates that node was unresponsive for that long. In the second case, heapTotalMB stays low, and the main thread remains responsive the whole time.
Reviewers: jarek
Reviewed By: jarek
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3906
Summary:
- when grist table is exported, currency is check and introduced in cell format in the form of "[currency symbol] [value]" (for example: zł 10000, $ 5000) . It's not what some cultures should display currences, but it's close enought
- when no symbol is defined for the currency, currency 3 letters code is used instead
- when currency is unknown, we are falling back to "$"
Test Plan: - nbrowser test scenario added for that purpose, please check Currences.xlsx to see output format exported.
Reviewers: georgegevoian
Reviewed By: georgegevoian
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3886
Summary:
This ports the useful parts of the test/home tests to test/nbrowser (a chunk of the DocMenu tests were already covered).
I ripped out a chunk of test/browser code that is now no longer used.
I made a few changes to unrelated tests that happened to fail.
Test Plan: ported tests
Reviewers: georgegevoian
Reviewed By: georgegevoian
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3888
Summary:
Documents can now be flagged as tutorials, which causes them to display
Markdown-formatted slides from a special GristDocTutorial table. Tutorial
documents are forked on open, and remember the last slide a user was on.
They can be restarted too, which prepares a new fork of the tutorial.
Test Plan: Browser tests.
Reviewers: jarek
Reviewed By: jarek
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3813
This sets up a framework for running tests in parallel.
It increases the total time taken (since some steps are
repeated) but reduces the turn-around time significantly
overall.
The main objective is to make it possible to release more
test batches to grist-core without bringing CI to a crawl.
The clever little test/split-test.js script is from the
Grist Labs mono-repo and is Dmitry's work.
I considered doing the build in one job, and copying
it to test jobs, since it feels wasteful to repeat it.
That may be worth trying, especially if we start getting
jobs backing up (total concurrent Linux jobs on free plan
is quoted at 20).
It might also be worth looking at doing some tests in
parallel on the same worker, perhaps using the relatively
new MOCHA_WORKER_ID feature, since the tests are often not
actually CPU or I/O bound.
* Replace `ormconfig.js` with a newer mechanism of configuring
TypeORM that can be included in the source code properly.
The path to `ormconfig.js` has always been awkward to handle,
and eliminating the file makes building different Grist setups
a bit simpler.
* Remove `electron` package. It is barely used, just for some old
remnants of an older attempt at electron packaging. It was used
for two types, which I left at `any` for now. More code pruning is
no doubt possible here, but I'd rather do it when Electron packaging
has solidified.
* Add a hook for replacing the login system, and for adding some
extra middleware the login system may need.
* Add support for some more possible locations of Python, which
arise when a standalone version of it is included in the Electron
package. This isn't very general purpose, just configurations
that I found useful.
* Support using grist-core within a yarn workspace - the only tweak
needed was webpack related.
* Allow an external ID to be optionally associated with documents.
Summary:
This uses a version of @gristlabs/sqlite3 which has prebuilt binaries for
lots of platforms (falling back to compilation if needed).
Test Plan: manually confirmed faster installs in various situations
Reviewers: georgegevoian
Reviewed By: georgegevoian
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3790
Summary:
New language selector on the Account page for logged-in users.
New icon for switching language for an anonymous user.
For anonymous users, language is stored in a cookie grist_user_locale.
Language is stored in user settings for authenticated users and takes
precedence over what is stored in the cookie.
Test Plan: New tests
Reviewers: paulfitz
Reviewed By: paulfitz
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3766
There was no script for updating typescript schema information after
a python-based document migration. Moving one in here, along with its
test. Tweaked the code slightly to work with grist-core's directory
structure. Also fixed a formatting error in mocha calls that was resulting
in some root tests not running.
Summary:
This is a first pass at snapshot support using the MinIO client, suitable
for use against a MinIO server or other S3-compatible storage (including
the original AWS S3).
In Grist Labs monorepo tests, it is run against AWS S3. It can be manually
configured to run again a MinIO server, and these tests pass. There are no
core tests just yet.
Next step would be to move external storage tests to core, and configure
workflow to run tests against a transient MinIO server.
Test Plan: applied same tests as for Azure and S3 (via AWS client)
Reviewers: georgegevoian
Reviewed By: georgegevoian
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3729
Summary:
Creating an API endpoint to cancel any queued webhook messages from
a document.
Test Plan: Updated
Reviewers: paulfitz, georgegevoian
Reviewed By: paulfitz, georgegevoian
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3713
Summary:
Moving bulk of nbrowser tests to core. Some tests were split and only part of them were moved.
Tests that are left are either: not suitable for grist-core (like billing) or are failing during browser tests (are not reliable).
Four fixtures directory (uploads, docs, exports-csv/excel) where completely moved to grist-core and are linked as folders.
Those changes allows to add an nbrowser test in grist-core or in the main test folder without any need to link it or link a fixture document.
Other changes:
- testrun.sh has been modified, now it runs tests from both folders (test and core/test),
- TestServer used in grist-core is now adding sample orgs and users (kiwi and others),
Test modified
- SelectionSummary: now it is run on a bigScreen, it was failing randomly
- Billing.ts: relative paths were used
- DateEditor: added waitForServer - it was failing in browser mode
- FrozenColumns, ImportFromGDrive, Printing: updated import paths
- UserManager.ts: was split into two parts (it assumed limited products)
- ViewLayoutResize.ts: this test is still in main repo, it is still failing in browser mode tests
Test Plan: Existing
Reviewers: paulfitz
Reviewed By: paulfitz
Subscribers: dsagal, paulfitz
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3664
Summary:
Version changes suggested by dependabot for security issues that
may or may not affect us (it is easier to apply the changes than
to figure out if the issues are relevant).
* understore 1.12.1
* ini 1.3.7, 1.3.8
* electron 19.0.9
* js-yaml 3.13.1, 3.14.1
* highlight.js 10.7.3
* file-type 16.5.4
Test Plan: existing tests pass
Reviewers: georgegevoian
Reviewed By: georgegevoian
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3629