While Next.js can handle static sites, we've had a few issues with it, notably a performance hit at runtime and some bugginess around routing and SSR. Gatsby being fully intended for high-performance static sites makes it a great technical fit for the Shields frontend. The `createPages()` API should be a really nice way to add a page for each service family, for example.
This migrates the frontend from Next.js to Gatsby. Gatsby is a powerful tool, which has a bit of downside as there's a lot to dig through. Overall I found configuration easier than Next.js. There are a lot of plugins and for the most part they worked out of the box. The documentation is good.
Links are cleaner now: there is no #. This will break old links though perhaps we could add some redirection to help with that. The only one I’m really concerned about `/#/endpoint`. I’m not sure if folks are deep-linking to the category pages.
There are a lot of enhancements we could add, in order to speed up the site even more. In particular we could think about inlining the SVGs rather than making separate requests for each one.
While Gatsby recommends GraphQL, it's not required. To keep things simple and reduce the learning curve, I did not use it here.
Close#1943Fix#2837Fix#2616
This removes `LONG_CACHE` and its descendants, which was a feature that added `?maxAge` to the live preview badges in the frontend. Since they are all static that is no longer needed, as the static badges all have longer cache timeouts regardless.
This implements the configuration mechanism I described in #2621. The heavy lifting is delegated to [node-config](https://github.com/lorenwest/node-config) with a minor assist from [dotenv](https://github.com/motdotla/dotenv).
`private/secret.json` has been replaced with environment variables and/or `config/local.yml`. See `doc/server-secrets.md`.
* don't use a libraries.io token for bower integration
The libraries.io docs claim you need to be authenticated
to make any API request: https://libraries.io/api#authentication
In practice we can call https://libraries.io/api/bower/jquery
just fine with no token and based on chucking a load of
requests at it and examining the `x-ratelimit-remaining`
headers you actually seem to get a better limit with no
authentication.
All of our libraries.io badges in `services/librariesio`
seem to have been running fine with no token for some time.
* change jira auth settings to jira_user, jira_pass
All the other services use servicename_user, servicename_pass
This switches JIRA to use that convention by preference
but supports _username and _password for legacy users.
* add docs for server secrets
* add danger rule for server-secrets.md
this rule prompts users to update server-secrets.md
if 'serverSecrets' is in the diff
* Basic process metrics
* Enable Prometheus by an environment variable
* Code formatting
* Documentation for Prometheus metrics
* Link from README to documentation of Prometheus
* Link from README to documentation of Prometheus
* Link from README to documentation of Prometheus
* Separate module for metrics + tests
* Metrics limited by IP
* Metrics are forbidded for all requets by default
* Code refactoring
* allowedIps passed as a string to PrometheusMetrics
* Handle missing config
* METRICS_PROMETHEUS_ALLOWED_IPS added to documentation
* Log info about enabled metrics
* Unused code removed
* package-lock.json updated
* prom-client updated to 11.1.2
* Code refactoring
* Do not read IP address from X-Forwarder-For header
This is a fairly simple addition of a Redis-backed TokenPersistence. When GithubConstellation is initialized, it will create a FsTokenPersistence or a RedisTokenPersistence based on configuration. Have added tests of the Redis backend as an integration test, and ensured the server starts up correctly when a `REDIS_URL` is configured.
Ref: #1848
* fix: update nodejs version to latest LTS, to fullfill check-node-version. close#1437
* docs: add docker run example without shields.env file, because there is no such file in a repo and container wont start
* fix: docker build project, clean npm and run production mode. close#1373
- Support single-server testing and a local dev server (like Next) that is on a different port from the shields server
- Refactor config schema
With this change, the suggestions work locally in #1273.
- Followup from #1163
- Retire try.html
- Separate build config for dev and production
- Move config for badge examples into the JS build
- Move the prod transform into npm scripts
- In the future this could be handled using a bundler plugin
- make website builds production build as before
- Run the production build in CI to make sure it’s working
- Build the frontend on Heroku