- this version is written in TS, but was published a few months ago and
needs to be bumped here
- also updates a previous deep include into the library, which was
unnecessary anyway
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.
- we previously used `@stdlib/utils` instead of the child package
`@stdlib/copy`, which is a lot smaller and contains our only use of
the parent
- this saves 140+MB of dependencies
- we keep ending up with multiple versions of the depedency in our tree,
and it's causing problems when comparing instances
- the workaround I'm implementing for now is to bump the package
everywhere and set a resolution so we only have 1 shared instance
- hopefully we can come up with a better method down the line
- there's a weird situation when we have mixed versions of the
dependency because different libraries try to compare instances
- this brings the usage up to 1.2.21 so we can fix the build for now
- this was all getting terribly behind so I've done several things:
- majority of `@tryghost/*` except Lexical packages
- gscan + knex-migrator to remove old `@tryghost/errors` usage
- bumped lockfile
closes https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/issues/15424
refs b9ab1002b3
refs 9210ac7dc7
- When errors were throw from the model layer the HTTP API responses contained misleading information about the error - e.g.:
"message": "Unknown error - TypeError, cannot save post."
- This was due to the error handling code throwing it's own internal error resulting in compete loss of the original Ghost's error context.
- cleaned up unused dependencies
- adds missing dependencies that are used in the code
- this should help us be more explicit about the dependencies a package
uses
- because of how the npm scripts were set up, we were running the full
Admin integration tests during the unit tests phase of CI
- this commit renames the majority of `test` to `test:unit` in the
package.json files, and aliases `test` to `test:unit`
- special packages like Admin have no-op'd `test:unit` scripts so we
don't end up running its tests
- we shouldn't need individual LICENSE files because these packages
won't be published, so the top-level one applies
- also cleaned up README files to remove mentions of Lerna monorepos and
install instructions
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Toolbox/issues/354
- set packages to `private: true`
- removed repository link - these packages won't be published so this
link won't be seen anywhere
- removed `publishConfig`
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Toolbox/issues/292
- There are couple of reasons why we don't want to include the query string information in the outgoing notification emails:
- 1. Security - we can expose the Content API key to an unauthorized person. The emails go out to administrators, so they have access to this data anyway. But for example they might forward full email content to someone from “tech team” or whoever is not really authorized to see it.
2. It looks a bit ugly and could be waaay to long breaking the email layou
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Toolbox/issues/292
- The version mismatch middleware middleware is the best place where the information can be assembled for the APIVersionCompatibilityService to handle. We need API key identification information to be able to pick up the integration name when sending a notification email to the administrators
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Toolbox/issues/292
- There was a typo in the variable name - req.originalURL is NOT does not exist on express' reqest object
- Added tests to avoid similar mistake again
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Toolbox/issues/292
- This middleware is meant to deal with version missmatch erros and call a service that does all the business logic. Having this handling in a separate module allows for thisngs to be loosely coupled