no issue
- review use of Ember core hooks and add a call to `this._super` if missing
- fix a few occurrences of using the wrong component lifecycle hooks that could result in multiple/duplicate event handlers being attached
`_super` should always be called when overriding Ember's base hooks so that core functionality or app functionality added through extensions, mixins or addons is not lost. This is important as it guards against issues arising from later refactorings or core changes.
As example of lost functionality, there were a number of routes that extended from `AuthenticatedRoute` but then overrode the `beforeModel` hook without calling `_super` which meant that the route was no longer treated as authenticated.
no issue
- add ember-suave dependency
- upgrade grunt-jscs dependency
- add a new .jscsrc for the client's tests directory that extends from client's base .jscsrc
- separate client tests in Gruntfile jscs task so they pick up the test's .jscsrc
- standardize es6 usage across client
closes#5903, refs #5409
- switch alert/notification component tests from unit to integration where appropriate
- rename `notifications.closeAll` to `notifications.clearAll` to better represent it's behaviour
- add concept of a "key" to alerts/notifications and ability to close only specified keys through notifications service
- close duplicate alerts/notifications before showing a new one
- specify a key for all existing alerts
- close failure alerts on successful retries
- clear all currently displayed alerts on successful sign-in
issue #5409
- change persistent/passive notification status to alert/notification
- replace showSuccess/Info/Warn/Error with showNotification/showAlert
- fix and clean up notification/alert components
No Issue
- Switches to the newer style of dependency injection.
- Instead of injection Controllers via "needs," use
Ember.inject.controller().
- Get rid of initializers that were only injecting objects
into various factories. Converts these objects into Ember.Service
objects and declaratively inject them where needed via
Ember.inject.service(). The added benefit to this is that it's no
longer a mystery where these properties/methods come from and it's
straightforward to inject them where needed.