| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age |
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build` fails.
This was missed in 4396c912771f136f7d397a67f247c81532520b85.
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From its documentation:
> This command is similar to `npm install`, except it's meant to be used in automated environments such as test platforms, continuous integration, and deployment -- or any situation where you want to make sure you're doing a clean install of your dependencies.
We don't need a clean install, necessarily - just a complete one that matches the package configuration. However, this command is clearly documented as being used for automated environments, and I think integration with another build tool is close enough to that intention to fit.
It also promises not to rewrite `package.json` or `package-lock.json`. (`npm install`, on the other hand, rewrites `package-lock.json` regularly.) As we do not intend to change the source tree when building it, this is the preferred behaviour.
Finally, this fixes a behaviour I encountered where certain `cargo` commands - sometimes including `cargo build` - could completely reformat `package-lock.json` without any warning and without any user-visible rationale for it.
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There isn't a corresponding fix script for this as the lockfiles are rebuilt every time you run a command that resolves dependencies, in either `cargo` or `npm`. Furthermore, `cargo build` (and anything else that runs `build.rs`) will implicitly run `npm install` and update `package-lock.json` in the process.
This was originally part of [another proposal][pr-6]. I've broken it out to make the intent clearer, and to make the proposal easier to get a handle on in isolation from other, related changes. Thanks to @wlonk for their input on this!
[pr-6]: https://codeberg.org/ojacobson/pilcrow/pulls/6
Merges prop/lockfile-checks into main.
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There isn't a corresponding fix script for this as the lockfiles are rebuilt every time you run a command that resolves dependencies, in either `cargo` or `npm`. Furthermore, `cargo build` (and anything else that runs `build.rs`) will implicitly run `npm install` and update `package-lock.json` in the process.
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The new `tools/check-lint` script checks lints across _all_ lintable files - JS (through `eslint`), and Rust (through `clippy` and `cargo check`). It also checks `eslint` against the whole project, not just against what's in the `ui` subdir, which means it now catches lintable issues in various JS config files.
This was originally part of [another proposal][pr-6]. I've broken it out to make the intent clearer, and to make the proposal easier to get a handle on in isolation from other, related changes. Thanks to @wlonk for their input on this!
[pr-6]: https://codeberg.org/ojacobson/pilcrow/pulls/6
Merges prop/lint-checks into main.
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This is entirely mechanical; we don't consider coverage reports to be "part of the project," and there's no point in wasting `eslint`'s time (or ours) in reviewing lints there.
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The new `tools/check-lint` script checks lints across _all_ lintable files - JS (through `eslint`), and Rust (through `clippy` and `cargo check`). It also checks `eslint` against the whole project, not just against what's in the `ui` subdir, which means it now catches lintable issues in various JS config files.
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* Changes JS formatting policy to expect trailing commas in most of the places they're allowed.
* Moves format checking out of `npm` and into tool scripts.
* _Documents_ formatting tools, as well as a shot at a policy for format-only changes designed to alleviate low-value review.
This was originally part of [another proposal][pr-6]. I've broken it out to make the intent clearer, and to make the proposal easier to get a handle on in isolation from other, related changes. Thanks to @wlonk for their input on this!
[pr-6]: https://codeberg.org/ojacobson/pilcrow/pulls/6
Merges prop/project-formatting into main.
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These are ephemeral, and should not even be _considered_ by `prettier`.
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This is purely a stylistic preference. However, it has helped keep diffs smaller (since diffs at the end of an object or array don't require changing the last line of the array), and it's something a lot of tools and IDEs now default to expecting to.
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The new `tools/check-format` script checks _all_ project formatting - JS (through `prettier`), and Rust (through `rustfmt`). It also checks `prettier` against the whole project, not just against what's in the `ui` subdir, which means it now catches formatting issues in various JS config files (like `.prettierrc` itself).
This commit does not include style _fixes_, which means that it does not pass its own `tools/check-format` script. This is intentional, and is intended to make the Git history a bit easier to reason about; a future commit will include format fixes.
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* It no longer mentions files that do not exist in this project.
* It now _does_ mention files that do exist, that `prettier` should never touch, like sqlx's query- metadata JSON files, `package-lock.json`, or our bundled copies of Mermaid.
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The added suppression for `manual_ok_err` is a mixed choice; I'd prefer `r.ok()` in most senses, but `BroadcastStream` is still new enough that I wouldn't be entirely surprised if the Tokio team added new error variants, that we'd want to expressly handle.
I do feel a bit better suppressing individual [`clippy::pedantic`][pedantic] lints; they're allow-by-default for this reason anyways, and I opted into them (see 452c8d0d9edb9894c108b6d577806c7c9d0071dd) knowing that not all of them would be perfectly appropriate.
[pedantic]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/clippy/
Merges prop/missed-lints into main.
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The added suppression for `manual_ok_err` is a mixed choice; I'd prefer `r.ok()` in most senses, but `BroadcastStream` is still new enough that I wouldn't be entirely surprised if the Tokio team added new error variants, that we'd want to expressly handle.
I do feel a bit better suppressing individual [`clippy::pedantic`][pedantic] lints; they're allow-by-default for this reason anyways, and I opted into them (see 452c8d0d9edb9894c108b6d577806c7c9d0071dd) knowing that not all of them would be perfectly appropriate.
[pedantic]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/clippy/
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I've opted to run with `--coverage` to ensure that we continue exercising coverage support. Hat tip to @wlonk for holding me accountable on this - I had thought coverage was broken, but I was holding it wrong.
Also adjusts the code coverage failure thresholds to match here-and-now reality. I'm not offering a policy thought here, just making sure we
1. use the coverage checking we have, and
2. set standards we are actually achieving.
This was originally part of [another proposal][pr-6]. I've broken it out to make the intent clearer, and to make the proposal easier to get a handle on in isolation from other, related changes. Thanks to @wlonk for their input on this!
[pr-6]: https://codeberg.org/ojacobson/pilcrow/pulls/6
Merges prop/test-tool into main.
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These values were drawn from `npx vitest --run --coverage` as of this commit. I offer no opinion on whether they are _desireable_ coverage thresholds, only that they are what we are actually achieving, and what we are accepting in practice.
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I've opted to run with `--coverage` to ensure that we continue exercising coverage support. Hat tip to @wlonk for holding me accountable on this - I had thought coverage was broken, but I was holding it wrong.
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Calling through `npm` wasn't adding anything other than complexity, and it made it somewhat harder to follow what tools did what.
I'm also pretty sure `tools/build-ui` was totally unused.
This was originally part of [another proposal][pr-6]. I've broken it out to make the intent clearer, and to make the proposal easier to get a handle on in isolation from other, related changes. Thanks to @wlonk for their input on this!
[pr-6]: https://codeberg.org/ojacobson/pilcrow/pulls/6
Merges prop/build-without-npm into main.
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Calling through `npm` wasn't adding anything other than complexity, and it made it somewhat harder to follow what tools did what.
I'm also pretty sure `tools/build-ui` was totally unused.
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This has a couple of material consequences:
* It will be (much) easier to reorganize the source tree, as the path to the output is no longer relative to where the config files are when building the final binary. If we do decide to move `ui` into its own child crate, we won't have to make a bunch of (very similar) changes to the Svelte build process at that time.
* There is less chance of a stale build contaminating a new one, since changes to the crate change the project hash in `OUT_DIR`. For example, while working on this change, `OUT_DIR` was at various points:
* `target/debug/build/pilcrow-7cfeef3536ddd3e7/out`
* `target/debug/build/pilcrow-09d4ddbc12bef36b/out`
* `target/release/build/pilcrow-070d373bd5f850a1`
This may use more space on disk, but it's all reclaimable with `cargo clean` and Rust is _far_ more profligate with disk space than Svelte will ever be.
* It's more consistent with Cargo's expectations around generated source files, and thus potentially easier to onboard Rust developers into.
Merges prop/ui-build-to-cargo-output into main.
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This has a couple of material consequences:
* It will be (much) easier to reorganize the source tree, as the path to the output is no longer relative to where the config files are when building the final binary. If we do decide to move `ui` into its own child crate, we won't have to make a bunch of (very similar) changes to the Svelte build process at that time.
* There is less chance of a stale build contaminating a new one, since changes to the crate change the project hash in `OUT_DIR`. For example, while working on this change, `OUT_DIR` was at various points:
* `target/debug/build/pilcrow-7cfeef3536ddd3e7/out`
* `target/debug/build/pilcrow-09d4ddbc12bef36b/out`
* `target/release/build/pilcrow-070d373bd5f850a1`
This may use more space on disk, but it's all reclaimable with `cargo clean` and Rust is _far_ more profligate with disk space than Svelte will ever be.
* It's more consistent with Cargo's expectations around generated source files, and thus potentially easier to onboard Rust developers into.
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from prop/merge-template into main
Reviewed-on: https://codeberg.org/ojacobson/pilcrow/pulls/14
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For a merge with a single incoming commit, this will generally be redundant - the default pull request subject and body are drawn from the commit itself, so they'll get repeated in the merge commit. However, for a pull request with multiple commits, the pull request title and body are likely a better merge commit message than the default offered by Codeberg.
I've been doing basically this for manual merges regardless.
Further reading: <https://forgejo.org/docs/latest/user/merge-message-templates/>
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This allows developers (hi) to run tools installed via NPM without having to run `npm exec` or `npx` to do so. It's mostly for ergonomics, but it's nice to be able to run `vite build` and have it "just" work.
The "canonical" invocations, used in tool scripts or when `build.rs` has to run Node, uses `npx`. More generally, we don't assume direnv, even though the source tree provides it.
There is no corresponding `layout rust` in `direnv`, but the same niche is fulfilled by the `PATH_add` targeting Cargo's output directory. I also considered using `PATH_add` instead of `layout` for this, as they do the same thing (at least as of this version of `direnv`), but I think it's probably more appropriate to use the parts of direnv that express the broader intention to use Node's tools than to manually implement them myself.
If you're using `direnv` across this change, you'll need to re-run `direnv allow`.
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This was a simple omission on my part. In f26dd0d662d8fc33108d072031329e707f54300b, I added a `.envrc` file that was intended to be tracked, and had it reference `.envrc.local` so that others could customize the environment, through direnv, without requiring that those changes be submitted upstream.
I forgor to mark that file as ignored. It never bit us, but I tried to use a .envrc.local file today to experiment on some Node-specific PATH ideas (I want to be able to run `vite` without `npx`!) and noticed that Git wanted to track my config.
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Notably, one of them was hiding a real (if unreachable) bug, by converting a "the token you have presented is not valid because the user was deleted" scenario into an internal server error, when it should have been an authorization error.
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Notably, one of them was hiding a real (if unreachable) bug, by converting a "the token you have presented is not valid" scenario into an internal server error.
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Tests were inadvertently broken in 96d363fd9290d43d2e6a11e2e5269fb8ccf6d65d (probably in 9f0b5b00f7ada4c5735230d0f93e04a3c58d4d7a).
The tests found a potentially-real accessibility problem! Great success.
Unfortunately, the switch to an editable div also broke the tests completely. I've marked them as skipped rather than removing them, out of optimism at the underlying bug being fixed one day.
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We … can't test this, I think, because of a bug in `user-event`. Maybe there's an alternative that directly manipulates the DOM, but I'd prefer not to do that.
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The hidden `textarea` used to attach the form value to the DOM was being included in the ARIA accessibility tree, at least in testing (I didn't check in a browser). While we could suppress this iwth `aria-role="hidden"`, the WHATWG recommendation is to Not Do That, and to find another way to hide the element, instead. Marking the element as hidden accomplishes that goal, _and_ gets rid of a style rule.
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In ae93188f0f4f36086622636ba9ae4810cbd1f8c9, `remote.channels.all` became a flat array of channels, instead of a map, in order to simplify some of the reasoning around how state changes propagate. However, I neglected to remove all Map-shaped calls referring to it.
This lead to some pretty interesting behaviour:
* The client could not track unread state, because reconciling local state against the remote state would find no remote state, then throw away local state entirely as a result.
* The client would not actually update when a new channel appeared.
* The client would not actually update when a channel disappeared.
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vanished.
This may happen if the user has a link to a channel open when the channel is deleted/expires, or if they return to the app after the last channel they looked at has expired.
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`session`.
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channel's creation time.
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been read.
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To make unread handling of empty channels coherent (and to make it possible to mark an empty channel as having been read), they need to be associated with a specific point in time. This change exposes their creation time in the snapshot - it was already part of the event view, though the client doesn't know that yet.
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> We can hand-write markdown for now, as per discussions.
>
> If we have buttons and shortcuts, we'd like them to insert actual markdown into the text stream, and then, as a separate concern, we'd like to render the markdown without changing the text stream (à la Discord). But we're doing none of that now, and it's too high a piece of fruit to pluck today.
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prop/text-input-no-quill-plus into prop/text-input-no-quill
Reviewed-on: https://codeberg.org/ojacobson/pilcrow/pulls/2
Reviewed-by: Kit <wlonk@noreply.codeberg.org>
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modification.
This also avoids using `placeholder` on elements where it's nonstandard, like `<div>`s.
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* Give the input `div` a marker to tell screen readers &c that it is a textbox.
* Ensure that it participates in tab order. (Zero is a sentinel value, see <https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTML/Reference/Global_attributes/tabindex>.)
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This is purely an aesthetic choice:
* The DOM `reset()` function can be used to clear the form, but can't be used to clear editable DIVs. Binding the editable div to a (hidden) form field allows `reset()` to clear both.
* We can find the target `form` element out of the event, but the API needed to do so differs between events dispatched to form controls and events dispatched to random DOM nodes. Using `closest('form')` works for both kinds of event target.
In practice, there is little need to make sure the message input form uses "normal" DOM APIs for functional reasons. Everything inside `MessageInput` is controllable through the component's script. This change isn't based on a functional need, but rather in the hopes that integrating with the DOM APIs makes it easier for _code we don't control_ - screen readers, password managers, saved-form support in browsers, &c - to integrate with Pilcrow. It is purely speculative.
(This also used to be necessary because Firefox didn't support `contenteditable="plaintext-only"`, but [support was added in March][ff-pto]
[ff-pto]: https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/136.0/releasenotes/#:~:text=The%20value%20plaintext%2Donly%20can%20now%20be%20specified%20for%20the%20contenteditable%20attribute%2C%20making%20the%20raw%20text%20of%20an%20element%20editable%20but%20without%20supporting%20rich%20text%20formatting.
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* Suppress input (including paste) while the input is disabled.
* Style the input to make it visible that it's not accepting input.
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It's not much, but it makes it a bit easier to see that the placeholder text _is_ a placeholder.
Not sure what to do about it vanishing permanently once the element is edited, until the element is formally `reset()`, though.
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