This PR adds tests for the new admins property of the personal dashboard
API payload.
It checks that only user admins are added and that their image URL is
not an empty string. In doing this, also fixes an issue where the image
URL wouldn't be generated correctly.
## Discussion points
Some of the test feels like it might be better testing on a deeper level
(i.e. the account store). However, from an initial glance, I think that
would require more setup and work, so I'm leaving it in the dashboard
test for now as that's where it's ultimately useful. But we can discuss
if we should move it.
Adds Unleash admins to the personal dashboard payload.
Uses the access store (and a new method) to fetch admins and maps it to
a new `MinimalUser` type. We already have a `User` class, but it
contains a lot of information we don't care about here, such as `isAPI`,
SCIM data etc.
In the UI, admins will be shown to users who are not part of any
projects. This is the default state for new viewer users, and can also
happen for editors if you archive the default project, for instance.
Tests in a follow-up PR
Hooks up the new project read model and updates the existing project
service to use it instead when the flag is on.
In doing:
- creates a composition root for the read model
- includes it in IUnleashStores
- updates some existing methods to accept either the old or the new
model
- updates the OpenAPI schema to deprecate the old properties
We'll store hashes for the last 5 passwords, fetch them all for the user
wanting to change their password, and make sure the password does not
verify against any of the 5 stored hashes.
Includes some password-related UI/UX improvements and refactors. Also
some fixes related to reset password rate limiting (instead of an
unhandled exception), and token expiration on error.
---------
Co-authored-by: Nuno Góis <github@nunogois.com>
If you have SDK tokens scoped to projects that are deleted, you should
not get access to any flags with those.
---------
Co-authored-by: David Leek <david@getunleash.io>
Joining might not always be the best solution. If a table contains too
much data, and you later run sorting on top of it, it will be slow.
In this case, we will first reduce the instances table to a minimal
version because instances usually share the same SDK versions. Only
after that, we join.
Based on some customer data, we reduced query time from 3000ms to 60ms.
However, this will vary based on the number of instances the customer
has.
## About the changes
This aligns us with the requirement of having ip in all events. After
tackling the enterprise part we will be able to make the ip field
mandatory here:
2c66a4ace4/src/lib/types/events.ts (L362)
## About the changes
EdgeService is the only place where we use active tokens validation in
bulk. By switching to validating from the cache, we no longer need a
method to return all active tokens from the DB.
Adds a postgres_version gauge to allow us to see postgres_version in
prometheus and to post it upstream when version checking. Depends on
https://github.com/bricks-software/version-function/pull/20 to be merged
first to ensure our version-function doesn't crash when given the
postgres-version data.
## About the changes
Add time metrics to relevant queries:
- get
- getAll
- bulkInsert
- count
- exists
- get
Ignored because might not be that relevant:
- insert
- delete
- deleteAll
- update
## About the changes
This PR removes the feature flag `queryMissingTokens` that was fully
rolled out.
It introduces a new way of checking edgeValidTokens controlled by the
flag `checkEdgeValidTokensFromCache` that relies in the cached data but
hits the DB if needed.
The assumption is that most of the times edge will find tokens in the
cache, except for a few cases in which a new token is queried. From all
tokens we expect at most one to hit the DB and in this case querying a
single token should be better than querying all the tokens.
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.
## About the changes
- Removes the feature flag for the created_by migrations.
- Adds a configuration option in IServerOption for
`ENABLE_SCHEDULED_CREATED_BY_MIGRATION` that defaults to `false`
- the new configuration option when set on startup enables scheduling of
the two created_by migration services (features+events)
- Removes the dependency on flag provider in EventStore as it's no
longer needed
- Adds a brief description of the new configuration option in
`configuring-unleash.md`
- Sets the events created_by migration interval to 15 minutes, up from
2.
---------
Co-authored-by: Gastón Fournier <gaston@getunleash.io>
There was no need to join the entire metrics table, as it is a huge
table. We only needed all combinations of app_name, environment, and
feature_name. The new query retrieves all this data, which will then be
joined into the main query.
## About the changes
This ports the CRUD store into OSS which is an abstraction to reduce the
amount of boilerplate code we have to write in stores.
By extending CRUDStore, the store becomes simply the type definition:
```typescript
type ActionModel = {
actionSetId: number;
action: string;
executionParams: Record<string, unknown>;
createdByUserId: number;
sortOrder: number;
};
export class ActionStore extends CRUDStore<
ActionModel & { id: number; createdAt: Date },
ActionModel
> {
}
```
And eventually specific mappings between those types can be provided (if
the mapping is more complex than camelCase -> snake_case):
```typescript
toRow: ({ project, name, actor, match, createdByUserId }) => ({
created_by_user_id: createdByUserId,
project,
name,
actor_id: actor,
source: match.source,
source_id: match.sourceId,
payload: match.payload,
}),
fromRow: ({
id,
created_at,
created_by_user_id,
project,
name,
actor_id,
source,
source_id,
payload,
}) => ({
id,
createdAt: created_at,
createdByUserId: created_by_user_id,
project,
name,
actor: actor_id,
match: {
source,
sourceId: source_id,
payload,
},
}),
```
Stores can also be extended to include additional functionality in case
you need to join with another table or do an aggregation, but it
significantly reduces the amount of boilerplate code needed to create a
basic store