- Fixes#6168
- Removes `enso-copy-plugin` in favor of an inline plugin
- It was only used in one place anyway
- It is probably necessary since I've "fixed" it by adding all files as entrypoints (I'm not quite sure why it wasn't working with the fix with `enso-copy-plugin`...)
- Adds live reload (back) to `content/`
# Important Notes
To QA:
Mandatory:
- `./run gui watch --skip-version-check --skip-wasm-opt`
Recommended:
- `npm run watch-dashboard`
- `./run ide watch --skip-version-check --skip-wasm-opt --backend-source release --backend-release latest`
- and with `--ide-option -authentication`
- `./run ide build --skip-version-check --skip-wasm-opt --backend-source release --backend-release latest`
- `Enso` and `Enso -authentication`
Enso will now associate with two file extensions:
* `.enso` — Enso source file.
* If the source file belongs to a project under the Project Manager-managed directory, it will be opened.
* If the source file belongs to a project located elsewhere, it will be imported into the PM-managed directory and opened;
* Otherwise, opening the `.enseo` file will fail. (e.g., loose source file without any project)
* `.enso-project` — Enso project bundle, i.e., `tar.gz` archive containing a compressed Enso project directory.
* it will be imported under the PM-managed directory; a unique directory name shall be generated if needed.
### Important Notes
On Windows, the NSIS installer is expected to handle the file associations.
On macOS, the file associations are expected to be set up after the first time Enso is started,
On Linux, the file associations are not supported yet.
- Fixes prettier config to include `.tsx`
- `prettier -w .` has been run in `app/ide-desktop`
- `prettier -w .` has also been run in `pack/js`, however there were no changes.
# Important Notes
After this is merged, a PR SHOULD be created to add the following file to the root directory:
`.git-blame-ignore-revs`
```
# <name of the commit for this PR>
<hash of the commit for this PR>
```
This makes `git blame` ignore the commit, which is a good idea since this PR only does formatting changes.
Some small improvements relating to rendering:
- Add a debug option: `-debug.pixel-read-period`. This can be used to measure the performance impact of checking the pointer location on different hardware. [On my development box, it makes no difference to performance.] (Closes#5490).
- Unbind pixel pack buffers after each use. This is recommended practice. It has no performance impact on my machine, and allows SpectorJS to run (`-debug.enable-spector`). (Closes#5941).
Also, simplify the profiling CLI: the `profile.load-profile` and `profile.save-profile` options have been renamed to `profile.load`/`profile.save`; `profile.save` now has a default filename, so you can capture a profile at any time in Electron with Ctrl+Alt+P and it will be written to `profile.json`.
- prefer `null`, `!= null` and `== null` instead of `undefined`
- disallow `as`, add comments for the existing usages of `as`
- make `tsconfig.json` a bit stricter
- minor fixes to other files that were missed
# Important Notes
N/A
4th PR for IDE/Cloud authorization with cognito. This PR introduces login templates + flows + amplify wrappers for logging in users w/ federated providers or with username/email.
Set Username + Forgot Password flows are to be added in next PRs to keep the changes reviewable.
3rd PR for IDE/Cloud authorization with cognito. This PR introduces registration templates + flows + amplify wrappers for registering & confirming user registration.
Login + Set Username + Forgot Password flows are to be added in next PRs to keep the changes reviewable.
2nd PR for IDE/Cloud authorization with cognito. This PR introduces boilerplate react app + some amplify code to fetch the access token + username of the currently logged in user, if they are already authenticated.
Registration + Login + Set Username + Forgot Password flows are to be added in next PRs to keep the changes reviewable.
Provides functionality necessary for:
- opening URLs in the system browser (so that we can handle OAuth flows outside of the app)
- handling deep links to the application (so that the OAuth flows can return the user to the app)
### Important Notes
- Modifies `preload.ts` to expose the ability to open the system browser to the sandboxed parts of the app.
- Modifies `election-builder-config.ts` to register a deep link URL protocol scheme with the OS.
- Modifies the client's `index.ts` to register a handler for Electron `open-url` events
This PR changes build script's `ide watch` and `ide start` commands, so they don't use `electron-builder` to package. Instead, they invoke `electron` directly, significantly reducing time overhead.
`ide watch` will now start Electron process, while continuously rebuilding gui and the client in the background. Changes can be puilled by reloading within the electron, or closing the electron and letting it start once again. To stop, the script should be interrupted with `Ctrl+C`.
Logging: Replace tracing with an efficient logging implementation, with 0-runtime cost for disabled log levels. (https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/183755412)
Profiling: Support submitting `profiler` events to the User Timing Web API, so that measurements can be viewed directly in the browser. (https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/184003550)
# Important Notes
Logging interface:
- The macros (`warn!`, etc.) now take standard `format_args!` arguments (the tracing implementations accepted a broader syntax).
- Compile-time log levels can now be set through the CLI, like so:
`./run ide start --log-level=trace --uncollapsed-log-level=info`
Profiling:
- The hotkey Ctrl+Alt+Shift+P submits all `profiler` events logged since the application was loaded to the Web API, so that they can then be viewed with the browser's developer tools. Note that standard tools are not able to represent async task lifetimes or metadata; this is a convenient interface to a subset of `profiler` data.
- As an alternative interface, a runtime flag enables continuous measurement submission. In the browser it can be set through a URL parameter, like http://localhost:8080/?emit_user_timing_measurements=true. Note that this mode significantly impacts performance.
This PR introduced an overhauled Component List Panel implementation, making use of the efficient EnsoGL grid view component. Also, it delivers a couple of new features:
* A part of the new design: there are no more section headers in grid, instead groups are "glued" together. The local scope section is under "popular" (old "favorites").
* The keyboard management inside grid works.
* there is a mouse hover highlight
* selecting the lowest entry in section when jumping with navigation bar.
* accepting input as-is with cmd/ctrl + Enter.
https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/3919101/194561890-fffb9b41-2f0d-4357-8d9a-5038a6bcb023.mp4
### Important Notes
**What is not implemented:**
* [Focus management between panels.](https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/180872763) The grid is always focused. To accept the current input, use ctrl+Enter shortcut.
* [Proper handling of selection when having empty space on the right and pressing right arrow.](https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/183487880)
* When entering a module, its name is not added to the input as described in the design doc. Will be a part of [this User Story](https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/181058321).
**Known issues**
* [the selection, especially in the local scope section, has sometimes an undesirable offset](https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/183487730). The cause is known, but not so easy to fix.
* The inserted nodes are often producing errors. The Browser's inherits the outdated understanding of the language from old Node Searcher, and it does not include new form of imports, static methods etc. Those all will be fixed as a part of [this User Story](https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/181058321).
* The performance is improved, but still not ideal, due to problems in [text areas](https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/183406745).
* To scroll the documentation panel, you must first click on it.
This PR reenables code signing and notarization on macOS.
[ci no changelog needed]
# Important Notes
* electron-builder has been bumped, mostly to avoid missing Python issue. A workaround for a regression with Windows installer is provided as a patch.
This PR reenables code signing on Windows.
Each Windows package built on CI should be now signed.
Additionally, some refactorings were done around electron-builder config, so it is easier to use outside the build script and offers more configuration options.
This PR replaces webpack with esbuild, as our bundler.
The change leads to out-of-the-box ~5x improvement in bundling times, reducing the latency in watch-based workflows.
Along with this a new development server (with live reload capacity) has been introduced to support watch command.
[ci no changelog needed]
### Important Notes
* workflow for checking docs has been removed because it was using outdated prettier version and caused troubles; while the same check is performed in a better way by the GUI/Lint job.
* introduced little more typescript in the scripts in place of js, usually with minimal changes.
This PR contains all work for finishing integration of first Component List Panel in the IDE:
* It adds a stub for the whole Component Browser View. The documentation panel is re-used from the old searcher.
* It has the presenter implementation, integrating the view with Hierarchical Component List from the controller.
* It extends the View API, so the integration is possible, making use of Component Group Set wrapper.
* The selection integration was also merged into this PR, because it depended on the API extension mentioned above. However, we should avoid such practice in the future.
https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/3919101/177816427-8c4285b4-8941-4048-a400-52f4acf77a9f.mp4
# Important Notes
There are some known issues, to-be-fixed in the future.
* The performance is bad. It should be improved with new text::Area, and the decent one shall come with [GridView inside component browser](https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/182561072)
* There is no keyboard navigation. It should also be delivered with [GridView](https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/182561072).
* The Favorites section is not [filtered out by node source type](https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/182661634).
Define some workflows for batch-mode profiling.
Implemented:
- collapse nodes
- create node
- enter collapsed node
- new project
- open visualization
They can currently be built and run with a command like:
`./run.sh ide build --profiling-level=debug && dist/ide/linux-unpacked/enso --entry-point profile --workflow create_node --save-profile out.json`
And the data can be displayed with:
`dist/ide/linux-unpacked/enso --entry-point profiling_run_graph --load-profile out.json`
Demo of recording and viewing a profile with a command-line one-liner:
https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/1047859/169954795-2d9520ca-84f9-45d2-b83a-5063ebe6f718.mp4
See: https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/182195399.
# Important Notes
- When defining workflows, two helpers are enough to allow us to tell when the action is really done: `Fixture::compile_new_shaders`, and `Fixture::backend_execution`. Often, it is appropriate to await both, but it depends on the task.
- The shader compiler is now driven by a `Controller`; while the `Compiler` is reset if context is lost, the `Controller`'s state survives context loss.
- A new `--load-profile` option supports specifying a profile by path when running `profiling_run_graph`.
- Drop the `with_same_start` profiler interface; we ended up preferring a child profiler convention, and this interface was not implemented compatibly with the stricter data model we've had since the introduction of `profiler::data`.
- Fix the noisy `rustfmt` output.
* The bash entry point was renamed `run.sh` -> `run`. Thanks to that `./run` works both on Linux and Windows with PowerShell (sadly not on CMD).
* Everyone's favorite checks for WASM size and program versions are back. These can be disabled through `--wasm-size-limit=0` and `--skip-version-check` respectively. WASM size limit is stored in `build-config.yaml`.
* Improved diagnostics for case when downloaded CI run artifact archive cannot be extracted.
* Added GH API authentication to the build script calls on CI. This should fix the macOS build failures that were occurring from time to time. (Actually they were due to runner being GitHub-hosted, not really an OS-specific issue by itself.)
* If the GH API Personal Access Token is provided, it will be validated. Later on it is difficult to say, whether fail was caused by wrong PAT or other issue.
* Renamed `clean` to `git-clean` as per suggestion to reduce risk of user accidently deleting unstaged work.
* Whitelisting dependabot from changelog checks, so PRs created by it are mergeable.
* Fixing issue where wasm-pack-action (third party) randomly failed to recognize the latest version of wasm-pack (macOS runners), leading to failed builds.
* Build logs can be filtered using `ENSO_BUILD_LOG` environment variable. See https://docs.rs/tracing-subscriber/0.3.11/tracing_subscriber/struct.EnvFilter.html#directives for the supported syntax.
* Improve help for ci-run source, to make clear that PAT token is required and what scope is expected there.
Also, JS parts were updated with some cleanups and fixes following the changes made when introducing the build script.
Implement a command that launches the application, runs a series of steps (a "workflow"), writes a profile to a file, and exits.
See: [#181775808](https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/181775808)
# Important Notes
- The command to capture run and profile is used like: `./run profile --workflow=new_project --save-profile=out.json`. Defining some more workflows (collapse nodes, create node and edit value) comes next; they are implemented with the same infrastructure as the integration-tests.
- The `--save-profile` option can also be used when profiling interactively; when the option is provided, capturing a profile with the hotkey will write a file instead of dumping the data to the devtools console.
- If the IDE panics, the error message is now printed to the console that invoked the process, as well as the devtools console. (If a batch workflow fails, this allows us to see why.)
- New functionality (writing profile files, quitting on command, logging to console) relies on Electron APIs. These APIs are implemented in `index.js`, bridged to the render process in `preload.js`, and wrapped for use in Rust in a `debug_api` crate.
PR fixes the issue when the user is unable to sign in with Google.
In the end, my assumption about the `User-Agent` header was correct and Google sign-in works with the recent Electron out of the box.
The old JS-based Welcome Screen was removed and replaced with the Rusty one.
Co-authored-by: Adam Obuchowicz <adam.obuchowicz@enso.org>
Co-authored-by: Adam Obuchowicz <adam.obuchowicz@luna-lang.org>