Summary:
This makes many small changes so that Grist is less fussy to run as a single instance behind a reverse proxy. Some users had difficulty with the self-connections Grist would make, due to internal network setup, and since these are unnecessary in any case in this scenario, they are now optimized away. Likewise some users had difficulties related to doc worker urls, which are now also optimized away. With these changes, users should be able to get a lot further on first try, at least far enough to open and edit documents.
The `GRIST_SINGLE_ORG` setting was proving a bit confusing, since it appeared to only work when set to `docs`. This diff
adds a check for whether the specified org exists, and if not, it creates it. This still depends on having a user email to make as the owner of the team, so there could be remaining difficulties there.
Test Plan: tested manually with nginx
Reviewers: jarek
Reviewed By: jarek
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3299
Summary:
* Tie build and run-time docker base images to a consistent version (buster)
* Extend the test login system activated by GRIST_TEST_LOGIN to ease porting tests that currently rely on cognito (many)
* Make org resets work in absence of billing endpoints
* When in-memory session caches are used, add missing invalidation steps
* Pass org information through sign-ups/sign-ins more carefully
* For CORS, explicitly trust GRIST_HOST origin when set
* Move some fixtures and tests to core, focussing on tests that cover existing failures or are in the set of tests run on deployments
* Retain regular `test` target to run the test suite directly, without docker
* Add a `test:smoke` target to run a single simple test without `GRIST_TEST_LOGIN` activated
* Add a `test:docker` target to run the tests against a grist-core docker image - since tests rely on certain fixture teams/docs, added `TEST_SUPPORT_API_KEY` and `TEST_ADD_SAMPLES` flags to ease porting
The tests ported were `nbrowser` tests: `ActionLog.ts` (the first test I tend to port to anything, out of habit), `Fork.ts` (exercises a lot of doc creation paths), `HomeIntro.ts` (a lot of DocMenu exercise), and `DuplicateDocument.ts` (covers a feature known to be failing prior to this diff, the CORS tweak resolves it).
Test Plan: Manually tested via `buildtools/build_core.sh`. In follow up, I want to add running the `test:docker` target in grist-core's workflows. In jenkins, only the smoke test is run. There'd be an argument for running all tests, but they include particularly slow tests, and are duplicates of tests already run (in different configuration admittedly), so I'd like to try first just using them in grist-core to gate updates to any packaged version of Grist (the docker image currently).
Reviewers: alexmojaki
Reviewed By: alexmojaki
Subscribers: alexmojaki
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D3176
Summary:
* Remove adjustSession hack, interfering with loading docs under saml.
* Allow the anonymous user to receive an empty list of workspaces for
the merged org.
* Behave better on first page load when org is in path - this used to
fail because of lack of cookie. This is very visible in grist-core,
as a failure to load localhost:8484 on first visit.
* Mark cookie explicitly as SameSite=Lax to remove a warning in firefox.
* Make errorPages available in grist-core.
This changes the default behavior of grist-core to now start off in
anonymous mode, with an explicit sign-in step available. If SAML is not configured,
the sign-in operation will unconditionally sign the user in as a default
user, without any password check or other security. The user email is
taken from GRIST_DEFAULT_EMAIL if set. This is a significant change, but
makes anonymous mode available in grist-core (which is convenient
for testing) and makes behavior with and without SAML much more consistent.
Test Plan: updated test; manual (time to start adding grist-core tests though!)
Reviewers: dsagal
Reviewed By: dsagal
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D2980
Summary:
SAML support had broken due to SameSite changes in browsers. This
makes it work again, and tests it against Auth0 (now owned by Okta).
Logging in and out works. The logged out state is confusing, and may
not be complete. The "Add Account" menu item doesn't work.
But with this, an important part of self-hosting becomes easier.
SAML support works also in grist-core, for site pages, but there
is a glitch on document pages that I'll look into separately.
Test Plan: tested manually
Reviewers: dsagal
Reviewed By: dsagal
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D2976
Summary:
In the past, Cognito sign-ins were intended to give authorization to some AWS
services (like SQS); various tokens were stored in the session for this
purpose. This is no longer used. Profiles from Cognito now serve a limited
purpose: first-time initialization of name and picture, and keeping track of
which login method was used. For these remaining needs, ScopedSession is
sufficient.
Test Plan:
Existing test pass. Tested manually that logins work with Google and
Email + Password. Tested manually that on a clean database, name and picture
are picked up from a Google Login.
Reviewers: paulfitz
Reviewed By: paulfitz
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D2907
Summary: Removed test/aws/, most of app/server/lib/, 3 dirs in app/lambda/, corresponding tests, and more!
Test Plan: a lot of this is quite the opposite...
Reviewers: dsagal, paulfitz
Reviewed By: dsagal
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D2894
Summary:
This changes how user attributes are loaded. They are now loaded
directly from sqlite, with per-session caching. Optimizations
considered but not addressed yet are (1) adding indexes to user attribute
tables and (2) swapping in a thinner sqlite wrapper.
The main benefit of this diff is that changes to user attribute
tables now work. Clients whose user attributes are not changed
see no effect; clients whose user attributes have changed have
their document reloaded.
For the purposes of testing, the diff includes a tweak to
GristWSConnection to be "sticky" to a specific user when reloading
(and support machinery on the server side to honor that). Until
now, if a GristWSConnection reloads, it uses whatever the current
default user is in the cookie-based session, which can change.
This was complicating a test where multiple users were accessing
the same document via different clients with occasional document
reloads.
Code for updating when schema or rule changes happen is moved
around but not improved in any meaningful way in this diff.
Test Plan: existing tests pass; extended test
Reviewers: dsagal
Reviewed By: dsagal
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D2685
Summary: This moves enough server material into core to run a home server. The data engine is not yet incorporated (though in manual testing it works when ported).
Test Plan: existing tests pass
Reviewers: dsagal
Reviewed By: dsagal
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D2552