We've been caught out here, we added a migration that used PG>=11
syntax, but our docs still state that we support v10, when it reached
EoL Nov 2022. This updates our docs to state v14 and newer, v14 came out
in 2021 and as such won't be EoL until 2026 according to [Postgres 5
year versioning scheme
support](https://www.postgresql.org/support/versioning/)
- Create 2 new events to replace the SCHEDULED_CHANGE_REQUEST_EXECUTED
event
- Handle the 3 events in slack-app and webhook addon definitions
3 events handled:
- CHANGE_REQUEST_SCHEDULED
- CHANGE_REQUEST_SCHEDULED_APPLICATION_SUCCESS
- CHANGE_REQUEST_SCHEDULED_APPLICATION_FAILURE
Closes #
[1-1555](https://linear.app/unleash/issue/1-1555/update-change-request-scheduled-and-scheduled-change-request-executed)
Note: SCHEDULED_CHANGE_REQUEST_EXECUTED will be removed in follow up PR
not to break current enterprise build
---------
Signed-off-by: andreas-unleash <andreas@getunleash.ai>
This PR addresses some cleanup related to removing the
useLastSeenRefactor flag:
* Added fallback last seen to the feature table last_seen_at column
* Remove foreign key on environment since we can not guarantee that we
will get valid data in this field
* Add environments to cleanup function
* Add test for cleanup environments
This PR changes the behavior of the API a little bit. Instead of
removing any strategies from `changeRequestStrategies` that are also
in `strategies`, we keep them in instead.
The reason for this is that the overview of where a segment is used is
incomplete if it shows only strategies but not CRs. Imagine this:
You want to delete a segment, but you're told it's only used in strategy
S.
So you go and remove it from strategy S, but then you're told it's
suddenly used in CRs A, B, and C. This is now a two-step operation
with a bad surprise. Instead, we could show you immediately that this
segment is used in strategy S and CRs A, B, and C.
Otherwise, we might accidentally display CR data to open source users.
But more importantly, it might keep them from being able to delete a
segment that's in use by a CR in their database that they can't touch.
So by checking that they're on an enterprise instance, we avoid this
potential blocker.
I've added the `includeChangeRequestUsageData` parameter as a boolean
now, but I'm open to other suggestions.
This PR handles the case where a single strategy is used in multiple
change requests. Instead of listing the strategy several times in the
output, we consolidate the entries and add a new `changeRequestIds`
property. This is a non-empty list that points to all the change
requests it is used in.
This is required for us to be able to link back to the change requests
from the UI overview.
This change is just a refactor, removing code that's no longer used. Instead of
checking just whether a segment is in use, we now extract the list of
strategies that use this segment. This is slightly more costly,
perhaps, but it will be necessary for the upcoming implementation.
This PR changes the payload of the strategiesBySegment endpoint when the
flag is active. In addition to returning just the strategies, the object
will also contain a new property, called `changeRequestStrategies`
containing the strategies that are used in change requests.
This PR does not update the schema. That can be done later when the
changes go into beta. This also allows us some time to iterate on the
payload without changing the public API.
## Discussion points:
Should `strategies` and `changeRequestStrategies` ever contain
duplicates? Take this scenario:
- Strategy S uses segment T.
- There is an open change request that updates the list of segments for
S to T and a new segment U.
- In this case, strategy S would show up both in `strategies` _and_ in
`changeRequestStrategies`.
We have two options:
1. Filter the list of change request strategies, so that they don't
contain any duplicates (this is currently how it's implemented)
2. Ignore the duplicates and just send both lists as is.
We're doing option 2 for now.
Removing a user from a project was impossible if you only had 1 owner.
It worked fine when having more than an owner. This should fix it and
we'll add tests later
In short the issue is that after our last seen improvements, we did not
update where we are getting last_seen field. It was still using features
table, which is not the source of last seen anymore.
## PR Description
https://linear.app/unleash/issue/2-1645/address-post-mortem-action-point-all-flags-should-be-runtime
Refactor with the goal of ensuring that flags are runtime controllable,
mostly focused on the current scheduler logic.
This includes the following changes:
- Moves scheduler into its own "scheduler" feature folder
- Reverts dependency: SchedulerService takes in the MaintenanceService,
not the other way around
- Scheduler now evaluates maintenance mode at runtime instead of relying
only on its mode state (active / paused)
- Favors flag checks to happen inside the scheduled methods, instead of
controlling whether the method is scheduled at all (favor runtime over
startup)
- Moves "account last seen update" to scheduler
- Updates tests accordingly
- Boyscouting
Here's a manual test showing this behavior, where my local instance was
controlled by a remote instance. Whenever I toggle `maintenanceMode`
through a flag remotely, my scheduled functions stop running:
https://github.com/Unleash/unleash/assets/14320932/ae0a7fa9-5165-4c0b-9b0b-53b9fb20de72
Had a look through all of our current flags and it *seems to me* that
they are all used in a runtime controllable way, but would still feel
more comfortable if this was double checked, since it can be complex to
ensure this.
The only exception to this was `migrationLock`, which I believe is OK,
since the migration only happens at the start anyways.
## Discussion / Questions
~~Scheduler `mode` (active / paused) is currently not *really* being
used, along with its respective methods, except in tests. I think this
could be a potential footgun. Should we remove it in favor of only
controlling the scheduler state through maintenance mode?~~ Addressed in
7c52e3f638
~~The config property `disableScheduler` is still a startup
configuration, but perhaps that makes sense to leave as is?~~
[Answered](https://github.com/Unleash/unleash/pull/5363#issuecomment-1819005445)
by @FredrikOseberg, leaving as is.
Are there any other tests we should add?
Is there anything I missed?
Identified some `setInterval` and `setTimeout` that may make sense to
leave as is instead of moving over to the scheduler service:
- ~~`src/lib/metrics` - This is currently considered a `MetricsMonitor`.
Should this be refactored to a service instead and adapt these
setIntervals to use the scheduler instead? Is there anything special
with this we need to take into account? @chriswk @ivarconr~~
[Answered](https://github.com/Unleash/unleash/pull/5363#issuecomment-1820501511)
by @ivarconr, leaving as is.
- ~~`src/lib/proxy/proxy-repository.ts` - This seems to have a complex
and specific logic currently. Perhaps we should leave it alone for now?
@FredrikOseberg~~
[Answered](https://github.com/Unleash/unleash/pull/5363#issuecomment-1819005445)
by @FredrikOseberg, leaving as is.
- `src/lib/services/user-service.ts` - This one also seems to be a bit
more specific, where we generate new timeouts for each receiver id.
Might not belong in the scheduler service. @Tymek
This PR adds the ability to detect which strategies use a specific
segment in active change requests.
It does not wire this functionality up to anything just yet. Follow-up
PRs will integrate this with the segment service and eventually with the
front end.
The issue was that we all features were created exactly in same time,
and our feature counter waas expecting time to be unique to feature,
which was not the case.
Instead of throwing an error when the project doesn't exist, we say that
the names are valid, because we have nothing to say that they're not.
Presumably there is already something in place to prevent you from
importing into a non-existent project.
## About the changes
This feature allows our Enterprise customers to configure banners to be
displayed on their Unleash instance for all their users to see and
interact with. Previously known as "internal message banners".