Old check is jquery is(':visible') no longer works because we use css property visibility hidden (for animation to work properly), and not display none
In the following commits Sebastian is going to edit three files. This change is
necessary make evident what he is going to modify, because some of them are old
vendorized libraries whose history we might want to reconstruct.
No functional changes.
Command:
sed --in-place 's/[[:space:]]*$//' src/static/js/farbtastic.js
sed --in-place 's/[[:space:]]*$//' src/static/js/gritter.js
sed --in-place 's/[[:space:]]*$//' tests/frontend/specs/change_user_color.js
With commit 44186ed (tests: remove loadSettings.js for backend tests.)
the loading of the settings in backendtests changed. One test spec
was not updated.
The old loadSettings.js was a way of customizing settings upon load, because
the Settings module did not offer this functionality. But it did not work well,
since all the default settings were not loaded.
Let's get rid of loadSettings.js for the bulk of the tests (the "backend"
specs). For the "container" specs, we'll keep it in place until/if we rewrite
Settings.js making it less brittle.
Clearing the authorship colors of a document with at least two authors, and then
undoing that action caused a disconnect from the pad.
This change disallows undoing clearing authorship colors in order to prevent
the problem from affecting users, and adds the relative test coverage.
This is a change of behaviour, and is documented in the changelog.
Fixes#2802 (sidestepping it).
This is allowed starting from fc661ee13a ("core: allow URL parameters and POST
bodies to co-exist"), which landed in Etherpad 1.8.0. For the discussion, see
issue #3568.
This change only slightly modifies the bahaviour of travis/runner.sh, but:
1. speeds up the tests, because it does not install dependencies before running
them. Dependencies are already installed by .travis.yml in its "install"
section;
2. if for some reason Etherpad does not start, there is a sudden failure,
instead of launching the front end tests anyway, and then having to wait 10
minutes for them to time out;
3. it is compatible with a different way of installing etherpad dependencies
("npm ci" instead of "npm install"), whereas the previous one broke. This
will probably be introduced in a while, so this change future-proofs for it
(see #3778).
4. it is more robust, because it detects more reliably the paths, and changes
between them correctly;
Please note that the script now requires bash instead of a generic posix shell.
This may break on platforms which default to a different shell (FreeBSD, MacOS?)