Require that two promises are resolved (or one is rejected) before the
FETCH_COMPLETE action is dispatched. The first promise represents the
gateway request and the second represents an arbitrarily long delay. If
the first resolves before the second, then there'll be a delay until the
second resolves; whereas if the first rejects, then there's no delay.
Change-Id: I496fe317337745c593594efff26688c46d661bf3
The delay/timeout logic in actions#fetch will require more than one wait
call, for example.
Changes:
* Update the stub created in setupWait to store all deferred-promise
pairs and update the integration tests so that they don't use the stub
accidentally.
* Remove all references to the waitDeferred/waitPromise properties.
* Fix tests that relied on the waitDeferred/waitPromise properties being
available regardless of whether wait had been called.
* Update outdated or brittle - in the sense that it didn't reference
constants but their values - inline documentation.
Change-Id: I94345cdf4126b6c540d4fb8135a7a7e4d0507bed
Mixing in the delay was introduced in If3f1a06f so that the total RTT
for an API request could be calculated. Now that the FETCH_END action is
dispatched when the gateway request ends and not when the preview model
is resolved, this additional information (state) is redundant.
Change-Id: I7e6ffe0945ffedd9425525fa7da855e729d50b77
Ideally, the preview model is resolved after 500 ms, regardless of
whether the internal gateway takes 100 or 300 ms. Given this, there's an
important distinction to be made between the "fetch" ending and it
completing and their associated actions.
Changes:
* Dispatch the FETCH_COMPLETE action when the preview model is resolved.
* Update the reducers accordingly.
Change-Id: I62c9cb0430284b76338ea80bd170cac5af4be9d0
For logging to work:
1. $wgWMEStatsdBaseUri needs to point to a valid statsv endpoint,
e.g. 'https://en.wikipedia.org/beacon/statsv'.
2. $wgPopupsStatsvSamplingRate needs to be set. Note that the codebase
already contains the EventLogging functionality, which is configured
separately. Separately configuring different logging mechanisms
allows us to avoid sampling mistakes that may arise while choosing
one or the other. For example, let's say we want to use EventLogging for
10% of users and statsv for 5%. We'd sample all users into two
buckets: 50/50. And then we'd have to set the sampling rates as
20% and 10% respectively, only because of the bucketing above. To avoid
this kind of complications, separate sampling rates are used for each
logging mechanism. This, of course, may result in situations where a
session is logged via both EventLogging and statsv.
3. The WikimediaEvents extension needs to be installed. The extension
adds the `ext.wikimediaEvents` module to the output page. The
logging functionality is delegated to this module.
Notable changes:
* The FETCH_START and FETCH_END actions are converted to a timed action.
* The experiments stub used in tests has been extracted to the stubs
file.
Logged data is visualized at
https://grafana.wikimedia.org/dashboard/db/reading-web-page-previews
Bug: T157111
Change-Id: If3f1a06f1f623e8e625b6c30a48b7f5aa9de24db
Because of the globals mw.popups.wait usage and mocking in both actions
and integration, they need to be migrated in a single step, fixing them
both to require wait.js and mock using mock-require instead of the
global variable.
Additional changes:
* Fix FIXMEs about actions.js using the global mw.popups.wait instead of
the require one.
* Fix the unit tests to use require mocking for wait.js instead of
global variable mocking in both integration and actions tests
* Change tests that use deferreds and promises to be async qunit tests
(Deferreds are asynchronous with jQuery in node, apparently they
weren't in the browser)
* Change integration.test.js to use require on Redux and ReduxThunk
Change-Id: I8e3e87b158bd11c9620e77d0a73e611cf9e82183