NEXT_PUBLIC environnement variable values are set at build time and not
run time.
Build is currently performed in Github actions so setting those vars at
runtime has no effect.
We can use a package to automatically pass those variables at runtime
Added:
- An "Ask AI" command to the command menu.
- A simple GraphQL resolver that converts the user's question into a
relevant SQL query using an LLM, runs the query, and returns the result.
<img width="428" alt="Screenshot 2024-06-09 at 20 53 09"
src="https://github.com/twentyhq/twenty/assets/171685816/57127f37-d4a6-498d-b253-733ffa0d209f">
No security concerns have been addressed, this is only a
proof-of-concept and not intended to be enabled in production.
All changes are behind a feature flag called `IS_ASK_AI_ENABLED`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Félix Malfait <felix.malfait@gmail.com>
### Overview
This PR introduces significant enhancements to the MessageQueue module
by integrating `@Processor`, `@Process`, and `@InjectMessageQueue`
decorators. These changes streamline the process of defining and
managing queue processors and job handlers, and also allow for
request-scoped handlers, improving compatibility with services that rely
on scoped providers like TwentyORM repositories.
### Key Features
1. **Decorator-based Job Handling**: Use `@Processor` and `@Process`
decorators to define job handlers declaratively.
2. **Request Scope Support**: Job handlers can be scoped per request,
enhancing integration with request-scoped services.
### Usage
#### Defining Processors and Job Handlers
The `@Processor` decorator is used to define a class that processes jobs
for a specific queue. The `@Process` decorator is applied to methods
within this class to define specific job handlers.
##### Example 1: Specific Job Handlers
```typescript
import { Processor, Process, InjectMessageQueue } from 'src/engine/integrations/message-queue';
@Processor('taskQueue')
export class TaskProcessor {
@Process('taskA')
async handleTaskA(job: { id: string, data: any }) {
console.log(`Handling task A with data:`, job.data);
// Logic for task A
}
@Process('taskB')
async handleTaskB(job: { id: string, data: any }) {
console.log(`Handling task B with data:`, job.data);
// Logic for task B
}
}
```
In the example above, `TaskProcessor` is responsible for processing jobs
in the `taskQueue`. The `handleTaskA` method will only be called for
jobs with the name `taskA`, while `handleTaskB` will be called for
`taskB` jobs.
##### Example 2: General Job Handler
```typescript
import { Processor, Process, InjectMessageQueue } from 'src/engine/integrations/message-queue';
@Processor('generalQueue')
export class GeneralProcessor {
@Process()
async handleAnyJob(job: { id: string, name: string, data: any }) {
console.log(`Handling job ${job.name} with data:`, job.data);
// Logic for any job
}
}
```
In this example, `GeneralProcessor` handles all jobs in the
`generalQueue`, regardless of the job name. The `handleAnyJob` method
will be invoked for every job added to the `generalQueue`.
#### Adding Jobs to a Queue
You can use the `@InjectMessageQueue` decorator to inject a queue into a
service and add jobs to it.
##### Example:
```typescript
import { Injectable } from '@nestjs/common';
import { InjectMessageQueue, MessageQueue } from 'src/engine/integrations/message-queue';
@Injectable()
export class TaskService {
constructor(
@InjectMessageQueue('taskQueue') private readonly taskQueue: MessageQueue,
) {}
async addTaskA(data: any) {
await this.taskQueue.add('taskA', data);
}
async addTaskB(data: any) {
await this.taskQueue.add('taskB', data);
}
}
```
In this example, `TaskService` adds jobs to the `taskQueue`. The
`addTaskA` and `addTaskB` methods add jobs named `taskA` and `taskB`,
respectively, to the queue.
#### Using Scoped Job Handlers
To utilize request-scoped job handlers, specify the scope in the
`@Processor` decorator. This is particularly useful for services that
use scoped repositories like those in TwentyORM.
##### Example:
```typescript
import { Processor, Process, InjectMessageQueue, Scope } from 'src/engine/integrations/message-queue';
@Processor({ name: 'scopedQueue', scope: Scope.REQUEST })
export class ScopedTaskProcessor {
@Process('scopedTask')
async handleScopedTask(job: { id: string, data: any }) {
console.log(`Handling scoped task with data:`, job.data);
// Logic for scoped task, which might use request-scoped services
}
}
```
Here, the `ScopedTaskProcessor` is associated with `scopedQueue` and
operates with request scope. This setup is essential when the job
handler relies on services that need to be instantiated per request,
such as scoped repositories.
### Migration Notes
- **Decorators**: Refactor job handlers to use `@Processor` and
`@Process` decorators.
- **Request Scope**: Utilize the scope option in `@Processor` if your
job handlers depend on request-scoped services.
Fix#5628
---------
Co-authored-by: Weiko <corentin@twenty.com>
- Added Linaria to have compiled CSS on our optimized field displays
- Refactored mocks for performance stories on fields
- Refactored generateRecordChipData into a global context, computed only
when we fetch object metadata items.
- Refactored ChipFieldDisplay
- Refactored PhoneFieldDisplay
Current state:
<img width="704" alt="Bildschirmfoto 2024-05-11 um 17 57 33"
src="https://github.com/twentyhq/twenty/assets/48770548/c979f6fd-083e-40d3-8dbb-c572229e0da3">
I have some things im not really happy with right now:
* If I have different connections it would be weird to display a one_one
or many_one connection differently
* The edges overlay always at one hand at the source/target (also being
a problem with the 3 dots vs 1 dot)
* I would have to do 4 versions of the 3 dot marker variant as an svg
with exactly the same width as the edges wich is not as easy as it seems
:)
* The initial layout is not really great - I know dagre or elkjs could
solve this but maybe there is a better solution ...
If someone has a good idea for one or more of the problems im happy to
integrate them ;)
---------
Co-authored-by: Félix Malfait <felix.malfait@gmail.com>
In this PR I'm optimizing a whole RecordTableCell in real conditions
with a complex RelationFieldDisplay component :
- Broke down getObjectRecordIdentifier into multiple utils
- Precompute memoized function for getting chip data per field with
useRecordChipDataGenerator()
- Refactored RelationFieldDisplay
- Use CSS modules where performance is needed instead of styled
components
- Create a CSS theme with global CSS variables to be used by CSS modules
This PR introduces many improvements over the new profiling story
feature, with new tests and some refactor with main :
- Added use-context-selector for getting value faster in display fields
and created useRecordFieldValue() hook and RecordValueSetterEffect to
synchronize states
- Added performance test command in CI
- Refactored ExpandableList drill-downs with FieldFocusContext
- Refactored field button icon logic into getFieldButtonIcon util
- Added RelationFieldDisplay perf story
- Added RecordTableCell perf story
- First split test of useField.. hook with useRelationFieldDisplay()
- Fixed problem with set cell soft focus
- Isolated logic between display / soft focus and edit mode in the
related components to optimize performances for display mode.
- Added warmupRound config for performance story decorator
- Added variance in test reporting
For remotes, we will only create the foreign key, without the relation
metadata. Expected behavior will be:
- possible to create an activity. But the remote object will not be
displayed in the relations of the activity
- the remote objects should not be available in the search for relations
Also switched the number settings to an enum, since we now have to
handle `BigInt` case.
---------
Co-authored-by: Thomas Trompette <thomast@twenty.com>
In this PR:
- Follow up on #5170 as we did not take into account not logged in users
- only apply throttler on root fields to avoid performance overhead
In this PR I'm introducing a new patch on @graphql-yoga/nestjs package.
This patch overrides a previous patch that was made to compute the
conditionnal schema on each request,
Here we use a cache map to compute only once per schema workspace cache
version.
This allows us to have sub 100ms query time.
Previously we had to create a separate API key to give access to chrome
extension so we can make calls to the DB. This PR includes logic to
initiate a oauth flow with PKCE method which redirects to the
`Authorise` screen to give access to server tokens.
Implemented in this PR-
1. make `redirectUrl` a non-nullable parameter
2. Add `NODE_ENV` to environment variable service
3. new env variable `CHROME_EXTENSION_REDIRECT_URL` on server side
4. strict checks for redirectUrl
5. try catch blocks on utils db query methods
6. refactor Apollo Client to handle `unauthorized` condition
7. input field to enter server url (for self-hosting)
8. state to show user if its already connected
9. show error if oauth flow is cancelled by user
Follow up PR -
Renew token logic
---------
Co-authored-by: Félix Malfait <felix@twenty.com>
I extracted the init database logic into its own file.
You can now run it with yarn database:init.
Added database entry for GitHub stars.
Do you want me to remove the init route or is it used for something else
?
---------
Co-authored-by: Ady Beraud <a.beraud96@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Félix Malfait <felix.malfait@gmail.com>
# This PR
- Moves dev and ci scripts to the `project.json` file in the
twenty-front package
- Adds a project.json file in the root of the project with the main
start command that start both twenty-server and twenty-front
applications concurrently
- Updates the script command of the root project with the start:prod
command (replacing the start command which will be used in dev with the
help of nx)
- Add a start:prod command in the twenty-front app, replacing the start
command (now used for dev purpose)
Issue ref #4645
@charlesBochet @FelixMalfait please let me know how can I improve it
---------
Co-authored-by: Thaïs Guigon <guigon.thais@gmail.com>
We will require remote table entity to map distant table name and local
foreign table name.
Introducing the entity:
- new source of truth to know if a table is sync or not
- created synchronously at the same time as metadata and foreign table
Adding a few more changes:
- exception rather than errors so the user can see these
- `pluralize` library that will allow to stop adding `Remote` suffix on
names
---------
Co-authored-by: Thomas Trompette <thomast@twenty.com>
- Implemented correct mask for Date and DateTime field in
InternalDatePicker
- Use only keyDown event and click outside in InternalDatePicker and
DateInput
- Refactored InternalDatePicker UI to have month and year displayed
- Fixed bug and synchronized date value between the different inputs
that can change it
---------
Co-authored-by: gitstart-twenty <gitstart-twenty@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: v1b3m <vibenjamin6@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Matheus <matheus_benini@hotmail.com>
Experiment using swc instead of tsc (as we did the switch on
twenty-front)
It's **much** faster (at least 5x) but has stricter requirements.
I fixed the build but there's still an error while starting the server,
opening this PR for discussion.
Checkout the branch and try `nx build:swc twenty-server`
Read: https://docs.nestjs.com/recipes/swc#common-pitfalls
Split from https://github.com/twentyhq/twenty/pull/4518
- Setup `@ui/*` as an internal alias to reference `twenty-ui/src`.
- Configures twenty-front to understand the `@ui/*` alias on development
mode, so twenty-ui can be hot reloaded.
- When building on production mode, twenty-front needs twenty-ui to be
built beforehand (which is automatic with the `dependsOn` option).
- Configures twenty-front to understand the `@ui/*` alias when launching
tests, so there is no need to re-build twenty-ui for tests.
---------
Co-authored-by: Lucas Bordeau <bordeau.lucas@gmail.com>
Split from https://github.com/twentyhq/twenty/pull/4518
Related to #4766
Mutualizes eslint config between projects.
I didn't include `twenty-server` in this PR as this was causing too many
lint errors.
We were missing `JsDom` dependencies in the package.json generated by nx
while running `twenty-server`: `yarn nx build:packageJson`
Detailed explanation:
- we are currently using nx paradigm which is to put dependencies of all
projets at root, which enables global package migrations for the whole
monorepo
- for production containers, we only want specific project dependency to
be added. This is done by running `yarn nx build:packageJson` on
`twenty-server`. Nx is statically analyzing twenty-server dependencies
and generating a tailored package.json that production containers can
later use.
- However, `nx` static analysis is not flawless and is missing some
packages. We are going to stop using it as the value is not there yet
but the burden for developers is high. The guideline is to put back
project dependencies into specific package `package.json`
- Therefore, I'm adding `jsdom` to twenty-server `package.json`
Split from https://github.com/twentyhq/twenty/pull/4518
- Upgrades dependencies and applies automatic config migrations with the
command: `npx nx migrate nx` (see
https://nx.dev/nx-api/nx/documents/migrate)
- Fixes lint errors after upgrading `@typescript-eslint`
Note: it was not possible (for now) to migrate Nx to the latest stable
version (v18.2.1) because it upgrades Typescript to v5.4.3, which seems
to cause a bug on install when Yarn tries to apply its native patches.
Might be a bug on the Yarn side.
* add lodash differenceWith
* add awaits
* update sync cursor is working
* add logs
* use isSyncEnabled information to enqueue jobs
* add decorator InjectObjectMetadataRepository
* fix gmail-full-sync