We’ve done this already for services with the upload letters permission.
And all services can upload letters now.
But we’re still returning it in the JSON response we use to AJAX-ify the
page.
Since the jobs response can query stats for up to 50 jobs at a time this
puts some load on the API/database. Hopefully this might drop that load
a bit.
The default is 2 seconds and this will mean that we are halving traffic
for these ajax calls which can only be good for trying to limit queries
on the database.
I think the user impact on this will likely not be noticable.
Debatable whether we should up them all even further to 10 seconds but
this is definitely a quick although maybe small win.
flask_login moves from `user_id` to `_user_id`. unfortunately, this
isn't backwards compatible as if an old cookie only has the old
`user_id`, then flask_login won't find `_user_id` so will mark the user
as unauthenticated.
this code will manually migrate the three flask login cookie variables,
before the flask_login code runs, so that it doesn't freak out
flask_login sets a bunch of variables in the session object. We only use
one of them, `user_id`. We set that to the user id from the database,
and refer to it all over the place.
However, in flask_login 0.5.0 they prefix this with an underscore to
prevent people accidentally overwriting it etc. So when a user logs in
we need to make sure that we set user_id manually so we can still use
it.
flask_login sets a bunch of variables on the `flask.session` object.
However, this session object isn't the one that gets passed in to the
request context by flask - that one can only be modified outside of
requests from within the session_transaction context manager (see [1]).
So, flask_login populates the normal session and then we need to copy
all of those values across.
We didn't need to do this previously because we already set the
`user_id` value on line 20 of tests/__init__.py, but now that
flask_login is looking for `_user_id` instead we need to do this
properly.
[1] https://flask.palletsprojects.com/en/1.1.x/testing/#accessing-and-modifying-sessions
There was a bug that displayed the error message with 2 red error boxes around the error message.
Also need another else to handle a new error message from the API, the old one can be removed after the API is deployed. But this can go first. I tested this branch with API master and the API branch with the change. I tested one off SMS and a CSV upload.
Some of the tests for buttons on the uploads page were not testing that
the right button was present / absent. There are hidden cookie buttons
in the HTML which means that we were sometimes finding one of these on
the page instead of the intended button.
On the service settings page, we changed the service setting buttons to
links some time ago, so tests that the buttons weren't on the page were
always passing.
flask_login sets a bunch of variables in the session object. We only use
one of them, `user_id`. We set that to the user id from the database,
and refer to it all over the place.
However, in flask_login 0.5.0 they prefix this with an underscore to
prevent people accidentally overwriting it etc. So when a user logs in
we need to make sure that we set user_id manually so we can still use
it.
flask_login sets a bunch of variables on the `flask.session` object.
However, this session object isn't the one that gets passed in to the
request context by flask - that one can only be modified outside of
requests from within the session_transaction context manager (see [1]).
So, flask_login populates the normal session and then we need to copy
all of those values across.
We didn't need to do this previously because we already set the
`user_id` value on line 20 of tests/__init__.py, but now that
flask_login is looking for `_user_id` instead we need to do this
properly.
[1] https://flask.palletsprojects.com/en/1.1.x/testing/#accessing-and-modifying-sessions
Replaced `$gutter` and similar variables such as `$gutter-half` with the
`govuk-spacing()` static spacing function. This uses `govuk-spacing()`
instead of `$govuk-gutter` because `$govuk-gutter` should only be used
for the gaps in between grid columns and we were mostly using `$gutter`
to add more space around elements.
There are other places in the SCSS files where we had hardcoded a
measurement in px which could be replaced with `govuk-spacing`, but this
commit only replaces the existing uses of `$gutter`.
We had 7 classes in _grids.scss named `.column-...` which were being
used to give a certain column width. These worked by using `@include
grid column()`, which is now deprecated.
`.column-whole` and `.column-three-quarters` can be removed and replaced
with `govuk-grid-column-full` and `govuk-grid-column-three-quarters`
respectively. The other column classes don't have a direct replacment in
GOV.UK Frontend. To get round this, we overwrite the `$govuk-grid-width`
SASS map in `extensions.scss` to add in extra widths, then use this with
the `govuk-grid-column` mixin to create new classes in for our custom
widths in `_grids.scss`
Stopped using `#content` on the product page - this was from GOV.UK elements.
Also removed the `override-elements-content` class since the page looks
the same without it.
Now that scheduled jobs are mixed in with regular jobs it looks weird
for the sort order to be different. This makes the sort order
consistently go from furthest in the future to furthest in the past.
The old sort order made sense when scheduled jobs were displayed
separately on the dashboard.