Commit Graph

7 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
chris48s
14892e3943 Implement a pattern for dealing with upstream APIs which are slow on the first hit; affects [endpoint] (#9233)
* allow serviceData to override cacheSeconds with a longer value

* prevent [endpoint] json cacheSeconds property exceeding service default

* allow ShieldsRuntimeError to specify a cacheSeconds property

By default error responses use the cacheLength of
the service class throwing the error.

This allows error to tell the handling layer the maxAge
that should be set on the error badge response.

* add customExceptions param

This

1. allows us to specify custom properties to pass to the exception
   constructor if we throw any of the standard got errors
   e.g: `ETIMEDOUT`, `ECONNRESET`, etc
2. uses a custom `cacheSeconds` property (if set on the exception)
   to set the response maxAge

* customExceptions --> systemErrors

* errorMessages --> httpErrors
2023-06-13 21:08:43 +01:00
Pierre-Yves B
23c0406bed Migrate from CommonJS to ESM (#6651) 2021-07-09 12:53:55 +01:00
François Hodierne
0d8a2d5ca0 Update to eslint 6.8.0 [appveyor githubissuedetail packagist] (#4489)
* update to eslint 6.8.0 and related packages

* Fixes for no-prototype-builtins

* Updates for explicit-function-return-type

* Add ignores for no-explicit-any

* update to eslint 6.8.0 and related packages

* Fixes for no-prototype-builtins

* Updates for explicit-function-return-type

* Add ignores for no-explicit-any

* package: activate eslint-config-standard

* apply updated eslint configuration

* lint: apply eslint feedback after rebase

* Update lockfile

* Update lockfile

* Restore missing deps

* Update lockfile

* Re-add eslint-plugin-node

* Add eslint-plugin-standard and eslint-plugin-react-hooks

* Clean lint

Co-authored-by: Paul Melnikow <github@paulmelnikow.com>
2020-02-29 11:06:36 -06:00
chris48s
a75b9b3c8c document exceptions (#3961) 2019-09-08 20:58:45 +00:00
Paul Melnikow
ce0ddf93fc Inject secrets into the services (#3652)
This is a reworking of #3410 based on some feedback @calebcartwright left on that PR.

The goals of injecting the secrets are threefold:

1. Simplify testing
2. Be consistent with all of the other config (which is injected)
3. Encapsulate the sensitive auth-related code in one place so it can be studied and tested thoroughly

- Rather than add more code to BaseService to handle authorization logic, it delegates that to an AuthHelper class.
- When the server starts, it fetches the credentials from `config` and injects them into `BaseService.register()` which passes them to `invoke()`.
- In `invoke()` the service's auth configuration is checked (`static get auth()`, much like `static get route()`).
- If the auth config is present, an AuthHelper instance is created and attached to the new instance.
- Then within the service, the password, basic auth config, or bearer authentication can be accessed via e.g. `this.authHelper.basicAuth` and passed to `this._requestJson()` and friends.
- Everything is being done very explicitly, so it should be very clear where and how the configured secrets are being used.
- Testing different configurations of services can now be done by injecting the config into `invoke()` in `.spec` files instead of mocking global state in the service tests as was done before. See the new Jira spec files for a good example of this.

Ref #3393
2019-07-09 23:14:36 -04:00
Paul Melnikow
3733de6232 Rewrite GitHub commit status (#3186)
* WIP

* Parse the error response

* Clarify

* Restore one test

* Add a schema
2019-03-10 18:43:37 -05:00
Paul Melnikow
fc12b591db Reorganize BaseService-related modules (#2831)
Ref #2698
2019-01-22 23:52:13 -05:00