This PR removes the flag for the new project card design, making it GA.
It also removes deprecated components and updates one reference (in the
groups card) to the new components instead.
This PR removes all the feature flags related to the project list split
and updates the snapshot.
Now the project list will always contain "my projects" and "other
projects"
We are keeping the UI hidden for mdsol behind kill switch, but I feel
like we can remove the flag completely for backend, so everyone will
keep collecting data.
Co-authored-by: Gitar Bot <noreply@gitar.co>
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.
We encountered an issue with a customer because this query was returning
3 million rows. The problem arose from each instance reporting
approximately 100 features, with a total of 30,000 instances. The query
was joining these, thus multiplying the data. This approach was fine for
a reasonable number of instances, but in this extreme case, it did not
perform well.
This PR modifies the logic; instead of performing outright joins, we are
now grouping features by environment into an array, resulting in just
one row returned per instance.
I tested locally with the same dataset. Previously, loading this large
instance took about 21 seconds; now it has reduced to 2 seconds.
Although this is still significant, the dataset is extensive.
Previously, we were extracting the project from the token, but now we
will retrieve it from the session, which contains the full list of
projects.
This change also resolves an issue we encountered when the token was a
multi-project token, formatted as []:dev:token. Previously, it was
unable to display the exact list of projects. Now, it will show the
exact project names.
<details>
<summary>Feature Flag Cleanup</summary>
| Stale Flag | Value |
| ---------- | ------- |
| stripClientHeadersOn304 | true |
</details>
<details>
<summary>Trigger</summary>
https://github.com/Unleash/unleash/issues/6559#issuecomment-2058848984
</details>
<details>
<summary>Bot Commands</summary>
`@gitar-bot cleanup stale_flag=value` will cleanup a stale feature flag.
Replace `stale_flag` with the name of the stale feature flag and `value`
with either `true` or `false`.
</details>
---------
Co-authored-by: Gitar Bot <noreply@gitar.co>
Converts `newContextFieldUI` release flag to
`disableShowContextFieldSelectionValues` kill switch.
The kill switch controls whether we show the value selection above the
search filed when > 100 values
---------
Signed-off-by: andreas-unleash <andreas@getunleash.ai>
## About the changes
This is a rough initial version as a PoC for a permission matrix.
This is only available after enabling the flag `userAccessUIEnabled`
that is set to true by default in local development.
The access was added to the users' admin page but could be embedded in
different contexts (e.g. when assigning a role to a user):
![image](https://github.com/Unleash/unleash/assets/455064/3f541f46-99bb-409b-a0fe-13f5d3f9572a)
This is how the matrix looks like
![screencapture-localhost-3000-admin-users-3-access-2024-02-13-12_15_44](https://github.com/Unleash/unleash/assets/455064/183deeb6-a0dc-470f-924c-f435c6196407)
---------
Co-authored-by: Nuno Góis <github@nunogois.com>
## About the changes
This adds a Makefile to make it easy to test migrations from one version
of Unleash to another.
The script depends on [docker compose
V2](https://docs.docker.com/compose/migrate/)
**Before starting**: make sure you're inside test-migrations folder and
run `make clean` to be in a clean state.
We can run 2 versions of Unleash side by side with a shared database
(the second version will apply migrations to the DB):
```shell
UNLEASH_DOCKER_IMAGE=unleashorg/unleash-server:5.6.10 make start-unleash # defaults to port 4242
UNLEASH_DOCKER_IMAGE=unleashorg/unleash-server:latest make start-another-unleash # defaults to port 4243
make test # run basic UI tests against port 4242 (first image)
EXPOSED_PORT=4243 make test # run basic UI tests against port 4243
```
This also enables us to test our local repository with our code of
Unleash server running at port 4244 (`EXPOSE_PORT=4444 make run-current`
if you want to change it):
```shell
UNLEASH_DOCKER_IMAGE=unleashorg/unleash-server:5.6.10 make start-unleash # defaults to port 4242
make run-current # exposes the current backend at 4244
```
You can also connect the latest UI to any of the ports specified above,
starting the UI at port 3000:
```shell
EXPOSED_PORT=4242 make run-current-ui # exposed port defaults to 4244 which is the port of the current backend
```
Today we include a lot of "secutiry headers" for all API calls. Quite a
lot of them are only relevent when we return a HTML document for the
browser.
This PR removes and simplify these headers for API calls, so that we do
not include unecessary data in the HTTP headers.
Each header have been carfully examied by following best practices from
these source:
-
https://cheatsheetseries.owasp.org/cheatsheets/REST_Security_Cheat_Sheet.html
- https://owasp.org/www-project-secure-headers/
This feature is protected with feature flag named 'stripHeadersOnAPI'.