Commit Graph

6 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
David Taylor cb932d6ee1
DEV: Apply syntax_tree formatting to `spec/*` 2023-01-09 11:49:28 +00:00
Phil Pirozhkov 493d437e79
Add RSpec 4 compatibility (#17652)
* Remove outdated option

04078317ba

* Use the non-globally exposed RSpec syntax

https://github.com/rspec/rspec-core/pull/2803

* Use the non-globally exposed RSpec syntax, cont

https://github.com/rspec/rspec-core/pull/2803

* Comply to strict predicate matchers

See:
 - https://github.com/rspec/rspec-expectations/pull/1195
 - https://github.com/rspec/rspec-expectations/pull/1196
 - https://github.com/rspec/rspec-expectations/pull/1277
2022-07-28 10:27:38 +08:00
David Taylor c00205730e
FIX: Ensure presence endpoints don't break the session (#17108)
Presence endpoints are often called asynchronously at the same time as other request, and never need to modify the session. Skipping ensures that an unneeded cookie rotation doesn't race against another request and cause issues.

This change brings presence in line with message-bus's behaviour.
2022-06-16 14:38:43 +01:00
David Taylor c9dab6fd08
DEV: Automatically require 'rails_helper' in all specs (#16077)
It's very easy to forget to add `require 'rails_helper'` at the top of every core/plugin spec file, and omissions can cause some very confusing/sporadic errors.

By setting this flag in `.rspec`, we can remove the need for `require 'rails_helper'` entirely.
2022-03-01 17:50:50 +00:00
David Taylor a55642a30a
DEV: Various behind-the-scenes improvements to PresenceChannel (#14518)
- Allow the `/presence/get` endpoint to return multiple channels in a single request (limited to 50)
- When multiple presence channels are initialized in a single Ember runloop, batch them into a single GET request
- Introduce the `presence-pretender` to allow easy testing of PresenceChannel-related features
- Introduce a `use_cache` boolean (default true) on the the server-side PresenceChannel initializer. Useful during testing.
2021-10-07 15:50:14 +01:00
David Taylor 31db83527b DEV: Introduce PresenceChannel API for core and plugin use
PresenceChannel aims to be a generic system for allow the server, and end-users, to track the number and identity of users performing a specific task on the site. For example, it might be used to track who is currently 'replying' to a specific topic, editing a specific wiki post, etc.

A few key pieces of information about the system:
- PresenceChannels are identified by a name of the format `/prefix/blah`, where `prefix` has been configured by some core/plugin implementation, and `blah` can be any string the implementation wants to use.
- Presence is a boolean thing - each user is either present, or not present. If a user has multiple clients 'present' in a channel, they will be deduplicated so that the user is only counted once
- Developers can configure the existence and configuration of channels 'just in time' using a callback. The result of this is cached for 2 minutes.
- Configuration of a channel can specify permissions in a similar way to MessageBus (public boolean, a list of allowed_user_ids, and a list of allowed_group_ids). A channel can also be placed in 'count_only' mode, where the identity of present users is not revealed to end-users.
- The backend implementation uses redis lua scripts, and is designed to scale well. In the future, hard limits may be introduced on the maximum number of users that can be present in a channel.
- Clients can enter/leave at will. If a client has not marked itself 'present' in the last 60 seconds, they will automatically 'leave' the channel. The JS implementation takes care of this regular check-in.
- On the client-side, PresenceChannel instances can be fetched from the `presence` ember service. Each PresenceChannel can be used entered/left/subscribed/unsubscribed, and the service will automatically deduplicate information before interacting with the server.
- When a client joins a PresenceChannel, the JS implementation will automatically make a GET request for the current channel state. To avoid this, the channel state can be serialized into one of your existing endpoints, and then passed to the `subscribe` method on the channel.
- The PresenceChannel JS object is an ember object. The `users` and `count` property can be used directly in ember templates, and in computed properties.
- It is important to make sure that you `unsubscribe()` and `leave()` any PresenceChannel objects after use

An example implementation may look something like this. On the server:

```ruby
register_presence_channel_prefix("site") do |channel|
  next nil unless channel == "/site/online"
  PresenceChannel::Config.new(public: true)
end
```

And on the client, a component could be implemented like this:

```javascript
import Component from "@ember/component";
import { inject as service } from "@ember/service";

export default Component.extend({
  presence: service(),
  init() {
    this._super(...arguments);
    this.set("presenceChannel", this.presence.getChannel("/site/online"));
  },
  didInsertElement() {
    this.presenceChannel.enter();
    this.presenceChannel.subscribe();
  },
  willDestroyElement() {
    this.presenceChannel.leave();
    this.presenceChannel.unsubscribe();
  },
});
```

With this template:

```handlebars
Online: {{presenceChannel.count}}
<ul>
  {{#each presenceChannel.users as |user|}} 
    <li>{{avatar user imageSize="tiny"}} {{user.username}}</li>
  {{/each}}
</ul>
```
2021-08-27 16:26:06 +01:00