Since there was no merge conflict and the changeset worked pre-merge, when jenkins merged the fullscreen changeset, it actually turned out to be incompatible with the new code and spews out a nasty JS error. I think from now on I'll always avoid +2ing a diff that hasn't been rebased to the latest. When looking at the diff not rebased to the latest, you just can't see the issues that might happen with the latest code merged and you certainly won't spot the potential breakage that comes with it.
In fact I think a lot of breakages we've encountered as of late were caused by this very issue.
Change-Id: I46b7dd93c55635f34c01bd8d3eee9785140b5f35
fileUsage tests were applying styles to the fixture element, which
apparently does not get cleaned between tests. This was because
fileUsage.$container had different semantics from element.$container
(widget's own container div vs. parent container div). FileUsage
now inherits from Element to make sure behavior is consistent.
Change-Id: I8fab8bcf084d8b7e480655114506d9848e9d9a49
The first version of the e2e tests just checked the presence
of some DOM sections. This 2d version actually verifies the
values for most of the components in the viewer.
Change-Id: Iabfd544f05182e86a16cf6bda162bb0abc5cf260
We are using data:URIs to measure performace. This
change broke e2e tests that were trying to match plain urls.
Change-Id: I8220801472cde595dd6651ef2796468eba484071
We have had this method in all Repo subclasses for a while, but sadly
it never got used and we've unintentionally crippled foreign DB repos
for some time now.
{{fixed}}
Change-Id: I972eb739cdd56c666981d5fbc371fa53024ff359
Mingle: https://wikimedia.mingle.thoughtworks.com/projects/multimedia/cards/217
* more robust method of obtaining URL
* decouple performance logging from providers (mostly)
* ignore fake XHR object which jQuery returns for JSONP requests
* guard for CORS requests - apparently Chrome refuses to return
certain information even with an Allow-Origin: * response header.
* Resource Timing is limited to 150 results, which causes fake
misses in debug mode. There is an API to increase the limit
but it is not implemented in Chrome. I am calling it nevertheless,
maybe IE understands it (it is present in the MSDN docs at least).
This seems to work for AJAX, CORS, JSONP, image AJAX; CORS requests
return 0 for a lot of values, per spec a Timing-Allow-Origin: *
header might help that.
Change-Id: I8353858022f51a7e70774e65513d0fa2554a5064
Add all authors, and put the extension in the new "Beta features" credit
section in Special:Version.
Change-Id: I22b0ab0ded87191832b469bec21665ef3fd6f2e1
When the lightbox is opened, or prev/next pressed, preloads the
previous/next N images.
Technical debt introduced:
* initialization is a mess, with the viewer and the interface
randomly setting properties on each other in different phases of
execution. That got in the way and I shuffled things around
until they worked, which is obviously not the way to have a
robust system, but hopefully it will get scrapped soon anyway
in favor of a clean top-down dependency injection.
Change-Id: Idcb5c40de1ac0b3e482decd66e56c4de8ec71b6b
Mingle: https://wikimedia.mingle.thoughtworks.com/projects/multimedia/cards/155
A simple task queue which can be processed or cancelled.
Will be used to handle preloading in a more robust way.
Change-Id: Ib33f9b2d814a35538f9d4f3691fce5ba5cdc82c1