This PR adds stale flag count to the project status payload. This is
useful for the project status page to show the number of stale flags in
the project.
Hooks up the project status lifecycle data to the UI. Adds some minor
refactoring as part of that effort.
## Other files
There's been some small changes to
`frontend/src/component/feature/FeatureView/FeatureOverview/FeatureLifecycle/FeatureLifecycleStageIcon.tsx`
and `frontend/src/hooks/useLoading.ts` as well to accommodate their
usage here and to remove unused stuff. The inline comments mention the
same thing but for posterity (especially after this is merged), the
comments are:
For
`frontend/src/component/feature/FeatureView/FeatureOverview/FeatureLifecycle/FeatureLifecycleStageIcon.tsx`:
> The icon only needs the name to pick.
https://github.com/Unleash/unleash/pull/7049 deliberately changed the
logic so that the completed stage gets the same icon regardless of its
status. As such, to make the icon easier to use other places (such as in
the lifecycle widget), we'll only require the name.
For `frontend/src/hooks/useLoading.ts`:
> There's no reason we should only be able to put refs on divs, as far
as I'm aware. TS was complaining that that a `ul` couldn't hold a div
reference, so I gave it a type parameter that defaults to the old
version.
This PR adds member, api token, and segment counts to the project status
payload. It updates the schemas and adds the necessary stores to get
this information. It also adds a new query to the segments store for
getting project segments.
I'll add tests in a follow-up.
This PR wires up the connectedenvironments data from the API to the
resources widget.
Additionally, it adjusts the orval schema to add the new
connectedEnvironments property, and adds a loading state indicator for
the resource values based on the project status endpoint response.
As was discussed in a previous PR, I think this is a good time to update
the API to include all the information required for this view. This
would get rid of three hooks, lots of loading state indicators (because
we **can** do them individually; check out
0a334f9892)
and generally simplify this component a bit.
Here's the loading state:

This PR hooks up the actionable change request data to the counter in
the UI. It:
- creates a getter for the data. It only exposes data. We don't really
care about error or loading for this (it's not an important piece of
data), so we don't expose that just yet.
- Adds orval-generated schema
- Uses the hook in the UI.
It also stwitches the previous "notification badge" for MUI's built-in
badge. We already use that badge component for the event timeline, so I
thought it would make sense to do it here too. Overall, the effect is
pretty good, but there's a few kinks we might wanna work out. I'll make
a follow-up for that (worked out in this PR after all)
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Fixes all warnings about the "key" prop. The majority of the fixes fall
into one of the following categories:
- Extracting "key" props in tables (you're not allowed to just spread
them in)
- Adding "key" props to autocomplete options and chips
- fixing test data that didn't contain ids
https://linear.app/unleash/issue/2-2791/create-a-useaiapi-react-hook
Implements a basic Unleash AI API React hook that fits our initial needs
for interacting with this API through our frontend.
Also adds a new nice-to-have script to run the frontend set to the
`demo` base path, which matches our Cloud defaults. This way you can run
the latest local cloud with the latest local frontend in an easy way.
This PR adds plausible tracking for navigating to items from the
personal dashboard.
It tracks:
- Navigating to projects from the list
- Navigating to projects from the onboarding screen
- Navigating to flags from the list
- Opening the key concepts dialog
This PR stores the dashboard state (selected project and flag) in
localstorage so that you get taken back to the same project and flag
when you refresh the page or navigate away and back.
It also handles scrolling the selected items into view in case they're
below the fold.
https://linear.app/unleash/issue/2-2743/open-the-signal-query-endpoint-to-everyone-not-only-admins
The new signal query endpoint is now open for every Unleash user, not
only admins.
This PR allows non-admins to view signals in the event timeline. It also
updates the signals tooltip to be shown to all users, not just admins,
under the following assumptions:
- `!signalsSuggestionSeen` - Current user has not dismissed the signals
tip
- `isEnterprise()` - Enterprise instance
- `signalsEnabled` - The signals feature flag is enabled
- `!signalsLoading` - Signals have finished loading (avoids flickering)
- `signals.length === 0` - We can't find any signals in the selected
timespan
Tracking events for
1. Onboarding started/project created
2. Onboarding finishes
3. API token generated
4. Sdk example clicked
Not tracking events that can happen multiple times and results are
skewed
1. Moving between onboarding steps
This switches to using conditional SWR to fetch project details only
when you provide a project. This fixes an issue where we'd make
requests for `api/admin/personal-dashboard/undefined` (which will be a
404 in the future).
https://linear.app/unleash/issue/2-2665/show-signals-in-the-event-timeline
Implements signals in the event timeline.
This merges events and signals into a unified `TimelineEvent`
abstraction, streamlining the data structure to only include properties
relevant to the timeline.
Key changes:
- Refactors the timeline logic to handle both events and signals through
the new abstraction.
- Introduces the `useSignalQuery` hook, modeled after `useEventSearch`,
as both serve similar purposes, albeit for different resource types.
Note: The signals suggestion alert is not included and will be addressed
in a future task.

Begins cleaning up the front end.
Removes the "legacy" event log component in favor of only using the new
one. What we do is simply not to show the filters if you're not on
enterprise.
This means that we'll get pagination (and maybe exports?) for everyone.
It also means that you can reverse-engineer the filters and use them
even on non-enterprise, as long as you're happy editing URLs manually.
However, putting it behind a flag on the front end always exposed that
kind of risk, so I don't think this is a bad move.
Adds event creator data to the event creator filter.
It uses a new useEventCreators hook to fetch event creators from the new
API, and uses that to populate the event creators filter.
Creates a new useEventSearch hook based on the useFeatureSearch hook.
Moves the old useEventSearch hook into useLegacyEventSearch and updates
references to it.
I don't know yet whether this'll work entirely as expected, but I plan
on making any necessary configurations when I implement the state
management in a follow-up PR.
But because this is pretty much a straight copy-paste from
useFeatureSearch (only adjusting types, I think), I also think it might
be possible to turn this into a generic search template. Not sure if now
is the time, but worth thinking about, I think.
Changes the type used by the useEventSearch hook to be `EventSchema`
from OpenAPI instead. This is more accurate with what we're actually
getting. And crucially for the event log search, it contains the
`createdByUserId` property that we need to filter out events.
It's mostly a straightforward find and replace except for one instance
where we need to do some extra fiddling. There's an inline comment
explaining that.
This PR fixes a bug where we wouldn't update the `useFeatureSearch`
hook's cached `total` value if the new total was `0`. The reason this
failed is that we would only update it if `data?.total`. Because `0` is
a falsy value, the check would fail.
This PR disables the "create feature flag" button when you've reached
the limits.
This one is a little more complex than the other UI limits, because we
also have to take into account the project feature limit. I've tried to
touch as little as possible, but I _have_ extracted the calculation of
both limits into a single hook.
This PR activates the limit for API token creation in both the global
API token window and in the project-level API token tab.
Because the same button is used in two places, I encapsulated the
fetching of flags and resource limits within the button. I can be
convinced to pass the current API token count and the limit as
arguments, but I think this is the right solution for this case.
This PR updates the Unleash UI to use the new environment limit.
As it turns out, we already had an environment limit in the UI, but it
was hardcoded (luckily, its value is the same as the new default value
🥳).
In addition to the existing places this limit was used, it also disables
the "new environment" button if you've reached the limit. Because this
limit already exists, I don't think we need a flag for it. The only
change is that you can't click a button (that should be a link!) that
takes you to a page you can't do anything on.
Previously, clearing the SWR cache cleared all entries. Now you can
configure the cache size.
1. This makes the search more fluid. Previously, if you went back and
forth on pages, you were always sent to the loading state.
2. This also solves the issue where the command bar search cleared the
cache for all other searches.
3. Additionally, it addresses the problem where the global search
cleared the cache for project search.
Start tracking plausible events
1. Log the search keywords that returned 0 results
2. Track all clicks, based on source(search/recents/pages), type etc.
**Upgrade to React v18 for Unleash v6. Here's why I think it's a good
time to do it:**
- Command Bar project: We've begun work on the command bar project, and
there's a fantastic library we want to use. However, it requires React
v18 support.
- Straightforward Upgrade: I took a look at the upgrade guide
https://react.dev/blog/2022/03/08/react-18-upgrade-guide and it seems
fairly straightforward. In fact, I was able to get React v18 running
with minimal changes in just 10 minutes!
- Dropping IE Support: React v18 no longer supports Internet Explorer
(IE), which is no longer supported by Microsoft as of June 15, 2022.
Upgrading to v18 in v6 would be a good way to align with this change.
TS updates:
* FC children has to be explicit:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/71788254/react-18-typescript-children-fc
* forcing version 18 types in resolutions:
https://sentry.io/answers/type-is-not-assignable-to-type-reactnode/
Test updates:
* fixing SWR issue that we have always had but it manifests more in new
React (https://github.com/vercel/swr/issues/2373)
---------
Co-authored-by: kwasniew <kwasniewski.mateusz@gmail.com>
This PR is part of #4380 - Remove legacy `/api/feature` endpoint.
## About the changes
### Frontend
- Removes the useFeatures hook
- Removes the part of StrategyView that displays features using this
strategy (not been working since v4.4)
- Removes 2 unused features entries from routes
### Backend
- Removes the /api/admin/features endpoint
- Moves a couple of non-feature related tests (auth etc) to use
/admin/projects endpoint instead
- Removes a test that was directly related to the removed endpoint
- Moves a couple of tests to the projects/features endpoint
- Reworks some tests to fetch features from projects features endpoint
and strategies from project strategies
At first, I was creating a new component, Project Banner, which was 90%
of the old banner and 10% new code, but it did not feel right. The
current banner is actually smart enough to be used in any container. So
now, I have moved the outdated SDK banner to the project level.
I like the simplicity of the change.

1. Added new schema and tests
2. Controller also accepts the data
3. Also sending fake data from frontend currently
Next steps, implement service/store layer and frontend
This fixes the case when a customer have thousands of strategies causing
the react UI to crash. We still consider it incorrect to use that amount
of strategies and this is more a workaround to help the customer out of
a crashing state.
We put it behind a flag called `manyStrategiesPagination` and plan to
only enable it for the customer in trouble.
This PR is a combination of two PRs:
This PR adds a functioning environment selection button to the new project creation form. Selected environments are added to the payload and to the API preview.
The implementation is mostly lifted from the existing FilterItem component we have for search filters. However, our need here is less complex, so I've removed some of the things we don't need. There is still more cleanup to be done, however, but I'd like to implement the rest of the submenus first, to see what we really do need in the end.
---
This PR adds support for stickiness and project mode in the new project
creation form.
Achieve this, it does a few things:
1. Moves `resolveStickinessOptions` from
`frontend/src/component/feature/StrategyTypes/FlexibleStrategy/StickinessSelect/StickinessSelect.tsx`
and into a separate hook. This component was used by the old project
creation form. Because the new form has a different input, but needs the
same option, moved that code into a reusable hook.
2. It adds functioning buttons for project stickiness and mode.
3. It adds labels to the search inputs for the dropdowns. Inputs *must*
have labels to meet a11y requirements. However, the designs don't have
labels, so we can hide them visually. Though that leads to another issue
(refer to the screen shot below).
4. It updates the `SelectionButton` component to handle both single- and
multiselect cases. It instead exports these two subcomponents. These are
currently in one file, but I'll split them out into their separate files
in a later PR.
As a side effect of working with the selection buttons, it also improves
how we handle keyboard interaction for these buttons.
Here's what it looks like for single-select lists. Notice the missing
part of the input's border around the top (where the label *would* be if
we showed it). We should figure out how best to handle it. I've done
like this for now, but we can sort it out later.
