Made a few QoL improvements:
- Don't use default export for class
- Move users store to a feature package (didn't move the interface as it
might be referenced elsewhere)
- Add types for query builders (and ts-expect-error when needed)
Vitest Pros:
* Automated failing test comments on github PRs
* A nice local UI with incremental testing when changing files (`yarn
test:ui`)
* Also nicely supported in all major IDEs, click to run test works (so
we won't miss what we had with jest).
* Works well with ESM
Vitest Cons:
* The ESBuild transformer vitest uses takes a little longer to transform
than our current SWC/jest setup, however, it is possible to setup SWC as
the transformer for vitest as well (though it only does one transform,
so we're paying ~7-10 seconds instead of ~ 2-3 seconds in transform
phase).
* Exposes how slow our tests are (tongue in cheek here)
We're migrating to ESM, which will allow us to import the latest
versions of our dependencies.
Co-Authored-By: Christopher Kolstad <chriswk@getunleash.io>
https://linear.app/unleash/issue/2-3406/hold-unknown-flags-in-memory-and-show-them-in-the-ui-somehow
This PR introduces a suggestion for a “unknown flags” feature.
When clients report metrics for flags that don’t exist in Unleash (e.g.
due to typos), we now track a limited set of these unknown flag names
along with the appnames that reported them. The goal is to help users
identify and clean up incorrect flag usage across their apps.
We store up to 10 unknown flag + appName combinations, keeping only the
most recent reports. Data is collected in-memory and flushed
periodically to the DB, with deduplication and merging to ensure we
don’t exceed the cap even across pods.
We were especially careful to make this implementation defensive, as
unknown flags could be reported in very high volumes. Writes are
batched, deduplicated, and hard-capped to avoid DB pressure.
No UI has been added yet — this is backend-only for now and intended as
a step toward better visibility into client misconfigurations.
I would suggest starting with a simple banner that opens a dialog
showing the list of unknown flags and which apps reported them.
<img width="497" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/b7348e0d-0163-4be4-a7f8-c072e8464331"
/>
As part of preparation for ESM and node/TSC updates, this PR will make
Unleash build with strictNullChecks set to true, since that's what's in
our tsconfig file. Hence, this PR also removes the `--strictNullChecks
false` flag in our compile tasks in package.json.
TL;DR - Clean up your code rather than turning off compiler security
features :)
Currently, in enterprise we're struggling with setting service and
transactionality; all our verfications says that the setting key is not
present, so setting-store happily tries to insert a new row with a new
PK. However, somehow at the same time, the key already exists. This
commit adds conflict handling to the insertNewRow.
Trying again, now with a tested function for resolvingIsOss.
Still want to test this on a pro instance in sandbox before we deploy
this to our customers to avoid what happened Friday.
---------
Co-authored-by: Gastón Fournier <gaston@getunleash.io>
## About the changes
According to some logs, sdks can be undefined:
```
TypeError: Cannot read properties of null (reading 'sort')\n at /unleash/node_modules/unleash-server/dist/lib/db/client-applications-store.js:330:22\n
```
Adding email_hash column to users table.
We will update all existing users to have hashed email.
All new users will also get the hash.
We are fine to use md5, because we just need uniqueness. We have emails
in events table stored anyways, so it is not sensitive.
This change introduces a new method `countProjectTokens` on the
`IApiTokenStore` interface. It also swaps out the manual filtering for
api tokens belonging to a project in the project status service.
The two lints being turned off are new for 1.9.x and caused a massive
diff inside frontend if activated. To reduce impact, these were turned off for
the merge. We might want to look at turning them back on once we're
ready to have a semantic / a11y refactor of our frontend.