Refs TryGhost/Team#2459
-upgraded got from v9.6.0 to v11.8.6 to support following redirects (and
other fixes)
-got v12+ requires ESM, so we do not want to upgrade further at this
time
-required changes to a few libraries that use externalRequests
-mention discovery service tests updated to test for follow redirects
closes https://github.com/TryGhost/Team/issues/2558
- bumped `kg-lexical` packages so we're working with latest suite of default nodes and renderer
- added a `render()` method directly to our `lexicalLib` object
- allows us to pass through all of Ghost's config for image transforms etc in one place rather than every time we want to render something
no issue
There are a couple of issues with resetting the Ghost instance between
E2E test files:
These issues came to the surface because of new tests written in
https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/pull/16117
**1. configUtils.restore does not work correctly**
`config.reset()` is a callback based method. On top of that, it doesn't
really work reliably (https://github.com/indexzero/nconf/issues/93)
What kinda happens, is that you first call `config.reset` but
immediately after you correcty reset the config using the `config.set`
calls afterwards. But since `config.reset` is async, that reset will
happen after all those sets, and the end result is that it isn't reset
correctly.
This mainly caused issues in the new updated images tests, which were
updating the config `imageOptimization.contentImageSizes`, which is a
deeply nested config value. Maybe some references to objects are reused
in nconf that cause this issue?
Wrapping `config.reset()` in a promise does fix the issue.
**2. Adapters cache not reset between tests**
At the start of each test, we set `paths:contentPath` to a nice new
temporary directory. But if a previous test already requests a
localStorage adapter, that adapter would have been created and in the
constructor `paths:contentPath` would have been passed. That same
instance will be reused in the next test run. So it won't read the new
config again. To fix this, we need to reset the adapter instances
between E2E tests.
How was this visible? Test uploads were stored in the actual git
repository, and not in a temporary directory. When writing the new image
upload tests, this also resulted in unreliable test runs because some
image names were already taken (from previous test runs).
**3. Old 2E2 test Ghost server not stopped**
Sometimes we still need access to the frontend test server using
`getAgentsWithFrontend`. But that does start a new Ghost server which is
actually listening for HTTP traffic. This could result in a fatal error
in tests because the port is already in use. The issue is that old E2E
tests also start a HTTP server, but they don't stop the server. When you
used the old `startGhost` util, it would check if a server was already
running and stop it first. The new `getAgentsWithFrontend` now also has
the same functionality to fix that issue.
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Team/issues/2225
- updated the `formatOnWrite` transform map for posts to include the new `nodes` and `transformMap` options used by `urlUtils` for transforming node payload data
- added `nodes` to the `lexicalLib` module that pulls in our default nodes to be passed in to the URL transform utilities
- added `urlTransformMap` to the `lexicalLib` module that maps transform type and data type to URL transform utility functions that accept a single URL argument
no issue
- added `@tryghost/kg-lexical-html-renderer` dependency
- added `lexical` lib following the same pattern as our `mobiledoc` lib
- updated the Post model's `onSaving` hook to generate the `html` value from `lexical` when present
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Toolbox/issues/389
- The e2e test suite log was full of ERR_NOCK_NO_MATCH warnings when the logging level was set to "warn". The cause of this warning was legit duplicated webhook trigger processing on test environment. Gah!
- The source of duplicate webhook processing was duplication of event handlers. Event handlers were registered multiple times for same event because of the singleton nature of the "common/events" module - it remains the same instance and is not cleaned up between reboots. The deeper issue of events module initialization should be solved separately, this slightly hacky approach fixes the problem now and highlights it to be tackled in the future.
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Toolbox/issues/364
refs 147ec91162
- This looks like a subtle bug that has gone unnoticed for years. Have checked if we rely on the logic anywhere (mostly used in image-dimensions frontend helper) - we don't access the "url" directly.
- There is no reasoning attached behind why the cached size was stored as a url (see refed commit)
- WHY is this even being fixed? Caches can store anything... does not mean we should! Inconsistent data becomes a real PITA if the cache is persisted and is hard to repopulate (e.g. to migrate the cached data format).
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Toolbox/issues/364
- The "new Map()" cache was a "hidden cache" that did not follow any specific pattern. Following the cache adapter pattern here makes it possible swapping out the cache for alternative implementations - e.g. Redis storage
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Toolbox/issues/364
- The InMemoryCache is an implementation of the cache adapter interface and allows to test cache in the works which is "close to the real world". Being able to do so in tests for image sizes cache manager proves we can use other cache adapters such as Redis based ones.
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Toolbox/issues/364
- Doing the `.catch(errors.NotFoundError...` was throwing another error as this syntax did not work with native promises. Checking `instanceof` works 100% and is way more explicit/readable way to handle this type of error differently
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Toolbox/issues/364
- It was using an outdated syntax and relied on Bluebird depencency. Updated the syntax to async/await and dropped the Bluebird dependency.
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Toolbox/issues/354
- this commit turns the Ghost repo into a monorepo so we can bring our
internal packages back in, which makes life easier when working on
Ghost