We originally used 'templates' because it seemed like an obvious
choice for HTML files, and because 'packageFiles' requires extra code
to include anything that isn't a .js or .json file.
However, the templates are expected to be HTML fragments rather than
whole documents, and they are parsed in a particular way that takes a
lot of code to clean up (which we needed to do, because we use the
same test files for testing PHP code).
I tried doing it in the 'packageFiles' way, and the extra code doesn't
seem that bad in comparison after all. Moreover, the 'templates'
mechanism (when used the intended way) feels vaguely deprecated in
favor of Vue.js, and I'd rather move away from it.
This makes the tests faster too (probably mostly thanks to the removal
of the clean up code) – on my machine they go from 1800ms to 1500ms.
(Simplify linearWalk tests, as we no longer need to do weird things
with document fragments to get consistent outputs in PHP and JS.)
Change-Id: I39f9b994ce5636d70fea2e935a7c87c7d56dcb26
This fixes tests in modifier.test.js. The old parser tests
in parser.test.js are currently skipped.
Change-Id: If1fa8055b3cb6c6b43420ab40dd51af79fa083d9
We can no longer change IDs so easily, because they're stored in the
permalink database, so remove this mechanism to make sure it's not
accidentally used in the future.
Change-Id: I392ee1f49c48fc2f23d05e9a37c643438b4f2b9a
Since times immemorial, and for reasons lost to history, our test code
was adding an extra <div> wrapper before parsing the HTML used for
tests. This wasn't a problem, until now, because I want to add some
tests for T303396 that need to check that the *real* wrappers present
in some test cases are handled correctly.
Changes to test cases mostly remove a leading "0/" from serialized
ranges, corresponding to removing the extra wrapper.
Change-Id: Ia50e3590538c8cd274b02d2a937ba1a3fbb4ac89
Goal:
-----
Finishing the work from Iadb7757debe000025e52770ca51ebcf24ca8ee66
by changing CommentParser::parse() to return a data object, instead of
the whole parser.
Changes:
--------
ThreadItemSet.php:
ThreadItemSet.js:
* New data class to access the results of parsing a discussion. Most
methods and properties are moved from CommentParser with no changes.
CommentParser.php:
Parser.js:
* parse() returns a new ThreadItemSet.
* Remove methods moved to ThreadItemSet.
* Placeholder headings are generated slightly differently, as we process
things in a different order.
* Grouping threads and computing IDs/names is no longer lazy. We always
needed IDs/names anyway.
* computeId() explicitly uses a ThreadItemSet to check the existing IDs
when de-duplicating.
controller.js:
* Move the code for turning some nodes annotated by CommentFormatter
into a ThreadItemSet (previously a Parser) from controller#init to
ThreadItemSet.static.newFromAnnotatedNodes, and rewrite it to handle
assigning parents/replies and recalculating legacy IDs more nicely.
* mw.dt.pageThreads is now a ThreadItemSet.
Change-Id: I49bfe019aa460651447fd383f73eafa9d7180a92
Goal:
-----
To have a method like CommentParser::parse(), which just takes a node
to parse and a title and returns plain data, so that we don't need to
keep track of the config to construct a CommentParser object (the
required config like content language is provided by services) and
we don't need to keep that object around after parsing.
Changes:
--------
CommentParser.php:
* …is now a service. Constructor only takes services as arguments.
The node and title are passed to a new parse() method.
* parse() should return plain data, but I split this part to a separate
patch for ease of review: I49bfe019aa460651447fd383f73eafa9d7180a92.
* CommentParser still cheats and accesses global state in a few places,
e.g. calling Title::makeTitleSafe or CommentUtils::getTitleFromUrl,
so we can't turn its tests into true unit tests. This work is left
for future commits.
LanguageData.php:
* …is now a service, instead of a static class.
Parser.js:
* …is not a real service, but it's changed to behave in a similar way.
Constructor takes only the required config as argument,
and node and title are instead passed to a new parse() method.
CommentParserTest.php:
parser.test.js:
* Can be simplified, now that we don't need a useless node and title
to test internal methods that don't use them.
testUtils.js:
* Can be simplified, now that we don't need to override internal
ResourceLoader stuff just to change the parser config.
Change-Id: Iadb7757debe000025e52770ca51ebcf24ca8ee66
These types can be passed a parameters to any file without
creating a dependency, so it makes more sense to allow
the globally.
Change-Id: I5504465fd997b46547642e7046993b370b85586e
This reverts commit f075e37303.
No longer needed after Iaf786cd0f1d870cbcf0b968b7adce616c82df3d8
in MediaWiki core, and now causes exceptions because
UNSAFE_restoreLegacyHtmlPrefilter is undefined.
Bug: T280944
Change-Id: I0dbd6fcb5dce939de334815e9fe371425cf5641f
Disable the legacy htmlPrefilter from jquery.migrate.js, which is
causing noisy warnings when running tests because we use HTML
templates with wacky content in the test module. They look like this:
"JQMIGRATE: HTML tags must be properly nested and closed: <200 KB of HTML>"
Change-Id: Ic9bbd56e24b5769988a52f28d26d8b6d5922b1b4
Our threads now also contain all replies to their sub-threads.
This is similar to how sections work in MediaWiki, where the parent
section also contains the content of all the lower-level sections.
We're going to need this for notifications about replies in a thread.
Bug: T264478
Change-Id: I241fc58e2088a7555942824b0f184ed21e3a8b6f
When adding a reply, we take a node at the end of the previous comment,
compare that comment's indentation level to the expected indentation level
of the reply, and add (or remove) that number of wrapper lists.
The existing code did not consider that comments may have lists within
them, and so the indentation of that node may not match the indentation
of the comment.
Bug: T252702
Change-Id: Icc5ff19783d2b213bff99f283cb0599a8b5c1ab4
I was wondering if the different approach to childIndexOf()
implemented in PHP in b8d7a75c34 would
be faster in JS as well, and yes, it is.
Our test suite now takes (on my machine):
* Chrome: 8337 ms → 7355 ms (average over 5 tries)
* Firefox: 5321 ms → 5044 ms (average over 5 tries)
Change-Id: I71963eeb92dcea9bfd59cbf01a7aa0b7de5d9cf1