refs: https://github.com/TryGhost/Toolbox/issues/595
We're rolling out new rules around the node assert library, the first of which is enforcing the use of assert/strict. This means we don't need to use the strict version of methods, as the standard version will work that way by default.
This caught some gotchas in our existing usage of assert where the lack of strict mode had unexpected results:
- Url matching needs to be done on `url.href` see aa58b354a4
- Null and undefined are not the same thing, there were a few cases of this being confused
- Particularly questionable changes in [PostExporter tests](c1a468744b) tracked [here](https://github.com/TryGhost/Team/issues/3505).
- A typo see eaac9c293a
Moving forward, using assert strict should help us to catch unexpected behaviour, particularly around nulls and undefineds during implementation.
fixes https://github.com/TryGhost/Team/issues/2562
New event fetching loops:
- Reworked the analytics fetching algorithm. Instead of starting again
where we stopped during the last fetching minus 30 minutes, we now just
continue where we stopped. But with ms precision (because no longer
database dependent after first fetch), and we stop at NOW - 1 minute to
reduce chance of missing events.
- Apart from that, a missing fetching loop is introduced. This fetches
events that are older than 30 minutes, and just processes all events a
second time to make sure we didn't skip any because of storage delays in
the Mailgun API.
- A new scheduled fetching loop, that allows us to schedule between a
given start/end date (currently only persisted in memory, so stops after
a reboot)
UI and endpoint changes:
- New UI to show the state of the analytics 'loops'
- New endpoint to request the analytics loop status
- New endpoint to schedule analytics
- New endpoint to cancel scheduled analytics
- Some number formatting improvements, and introduction of 'opened'
count in debug screen
- Live reload of data in the debug screen
Other changes:
- This also improves the support for maxEvents. We can now stop a
fetching loop after x events without worrying about lost events. This is
used to reduce the fetched events in the missing and scheduled event
loop (e.g. when the main one is fetching lots of events, we skip the
other loops).
- Prevents fetching the same events over and over again if no new events
come in (because we always started at the same begin timestamp). The
code increases the begin timestamp with 1 second if it is safe to do so,
to prevent the API from returning the same events over and over again.
- Some optimisations in handing the processing results (less merges to
reduce CPU usage in cases we have lots of events).
Testing:
- You can test with lots of events using the new mailgun mocking server
(Toolbox repo `scripts/mailgun-mock-server`). This can also simulate
events that are only returned after x minutes because of storage delays.
fixes https://github.com/TryGhost/Team/issues/2332
Saves events in the database and collects error information.
Do note that we can emit the same events multiple times, and as a result
out of order. That means we should correctly handle that a delivered
event might be fired after a permanent failure. So a delivered event is
ignored if the email is already marked as failed. Also delivered_at is
reset to null when we receive a permanent failure.
- during a refactor, I moved the `BATCH_SIZE` variable around
- putting the variable export above a more general export means it get
overwritten and the value is `undefined` outside of the module
- when we chunk the emails, we were chunking in sized of `undefined`,
so I'm guessing it just defaulted to 1
- this means the email batches were of size 1 instead of 1000 - oops
- some of the existing tests return `items` as an empty array
- the upcoming change to switch `mailgun-js` to `mailgun.js` means it's
more strict about requiring `paging` too
- this commit adds a new empty-response fixture so we can standardize
using that across tests
- this is the current functionality of the code, as it has always been,
but this test ensures we prioritise the values in the config over
those in settings
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Toolbox/issues/363
- this copies over tests from `email-analytics-provider-mailgun` that
are more relevant here
- there is now duplication in tests across the two packages but this
will be resolved soon
- this test checks that the mailgun client respects the changes in
settings, which is something that we used to ask
`email-analytics-provider-mailgun` to do when the mailgun client was
made in that package
- since then, we've pulled it out, so we should move the test to the
`mailgun-client` library
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Toolbox/issues/363
- this commit pulls all code involving the Mailgun client SDK into one
new package called `mailgun-client`
- this means we should be able to replace `mailgun-js` (deprecated) with
`mailgun.js` (the new, official one) without editing code all over the
place
- this also lays some groundwork for better testing of smaller
components