In addition to this computation being wasteful, it introduces a bug
where the allocation on a stats tracker can update twice in one render,
which isn't allowed in Glimmer (ironically, Glimmmer's lack of
auto-memoization introduced the issue).
- Sorting must be done on copies to preserve orders.
- Indices should be reversed since rendering is also reversed (the back
layer (the tallest) is rendered first to create the stacking effect).
This leverages the existing pre-processing being done in the
allocation-stats-tracker to also create additive percentages relative to
the allocation resources vs. the task resources.
This can then be used in a chart to create a stacked area representation
of consumption.
This binds a function to a target before passing it along to another
component. It's normal to expect to get to use `this` within functions
on components and controllers, but (sans actions) that doesn't happen
automatically.
Currently, PrimaryMetric is already overloaded on multiple dimensions:
metric and resource type.
This refactor will use multiple components as a form of control flow
instead spidering conditionals, which are only getting worse as the
charts for each resource type diverge.
As @backspace pointed out, we're processing a bunch of other stuff
anyway, so might as well process the active state there too where it's
more likely to be expected.
When a @dataProp is provided, the LineChart component assumes data is an
array of data series. It will map by the data prop and flatten to
compute the domains of the data.
With the Ember update, when the will-destroy action is called
to check the element height, its height is already zero. That
seems strange but I didn’t look into it any further, as
using did-insert to store the element lets us check its height
before any other actions when a processing button is pressed.
This doesn’t include Ember Data, as we are still back on 3.12.
Most changes are deprecation updates, linting fixes, and dependencies. It can
be read commit-by-commit, though many of them are mechanical and skimmable.
For the new linting exclusions, I’ve added them to the Tech Debt list.
The decrease in test count is because linting is no longer included in ember test.
There’s a new deprecation warning in the logs that can be fixed by updating Ember
Power Select but when I tried that it caused it to render incorrectly, so I decided to
ignore it for now and address it separately.
This closes#8744 and #9826.
It necessitated some customisation options for TwoStepButton. One is inlineText, which puts the confirmation text in the same line as the buttons. Also, there was a single-use configuration option named isInfoAction that I removed in favour of passing a set of class configuration options like this:
@classes={{hash
idleButton="is-warning"
confirmationMessage="inherit-color"
cancelButton="is-danger is-important"
confirmButton="is-warning"}}
This closes#7459.
While emoji don’t actually need escaping, expanding the
expression that enumerates all task name characters that
don’t need escaping to include emoji is prohibitive, since
it’s a discontinuous range. The emoji-regex project has
such an expression and it’s 12kB.
This fixes the regular expression to property escape emoji
as a single character instead of as its component bytes.
Thanks to @DingoEatingFuzz for the suggestion.
This closes#9966. It was looking at the query parameters
for the namespace and region, but allocation (and task!)
routes don’t have a namespace query parameter. Since the URL
generator requires the job for all calls, it makes sense to
extract the namespace and region from the job instead.