Categories before:
> Now, today, tomorrow, Friday…
Categories after:
> Now, later today, tomorrow Friday…
This reduces the ambiguity of ‘now’ vs ‘today’, and keeping the word
‘later’ suggests what this features is about.
This implementation here is a bit hacky, but it works…
The options for scheduling a job by time should be grouped by day,
because a long list of 96 options is not very usable.
On the server side, this commit generates label for the next 4 days in
a friendly format (ie today/tomorrow/Sunday/Monday)
The Javascript component for choosing a time was built in a kind of
old-school jQuery way, where it manipulated the elements on the page.
The complexity of introducing groups of options was just too much for
this pattern, because it involves storing a lot of state in the DOM.
This commit completely rewrites the JS to:
- read the initial options and groups from the HTML and store them
in the object
- use Hogan to completely re-render the UI from a series of Mustache
templates, each of which represents a state of the UI and takes the
inital options and groups
- filter the choices to show when the today/tomorrow/… buttons are
clicked
If you want to send a job on Monday morning, you should be able to
schedule it on Friday. You shouldn’t need to work on the weekend.
96 hours is a full 4 days, so you can schedule a job at any time on
Friday for any time on Monday.
We’ve checked with the information assurance people, and they’re OK
with us holding the data for this extra amount of time.
This commit changes the choose time form from showing one radio button
for each of the next 24 hours to one for each of the next 96 hours. It
changes the labels from ‘9am’ to ‘Monday at 9am’ so it’s clear which
day you’re choosing.
The test for non-gov.uk domains adding services is still relevant, but
probably makes more sense in `test_add_services.py`.
The others are no longer relevant now the ‘All services’ page has gone.
werkzeug's internal workings keep files under 500kb in memory, and files
greater than 500kb as a TemporaryFile
(https://github.com/pallets/werkzeug/blob/0.11-maintenance/werkzeug/formparser.py#L38)
when we encounter a CSV or TSV, we call normalise_newlines, which invokes
`.read()`, however when we were passing straight into pyexcel, we called
`file.getvalue()` - this exists on BytesIO (small files) but not on
TemporaryFile objects (large files) - we were seeing 500 errors
In research we’ve seen people mix up the service ID and API key because
they’re both 36 character UUIDs. We can’t get rid of the service ID
because it’s used to look up the API key.
Instead, we should change API key to be one long string, which contains
both the service ID, API key and (optionally) the name of the key. For
example:
```
casework_production-8b3aa916-ec82-434e-b0c5-d5d9b371d6a3-dcdc5083-2fee-4fba-8afd-51f3f4bcb7b0
```
We still need to keep the old, separate, key and service ID for a while
until people have updated their clients. But they’re now both on this
page, rather than on two separate pages, which should make for less
fussing anyway.
This shouldn’t be rolled out until the new clients are available.
- [ ] https://github.com/alphagov/notifications-python-client/pull/36
- [ ] https://github.com/alphagov/notifications-node-client/pull/10
- [ ] https://github.com/alphagov/notifications-ruby-client/pull/15
- [ ] https://github.com/alphagov/notifications-java-client/pull/38
- [ ] PHP????
Was using the wrong attribute name on the instance of `RecipientCSV`
(needed to match 19df1eb4ef/notifications_utils/recipients.py (L156) )
The ‘can’t show file contents’ message wasn’t showing up, now it is.
We want to limit the number of rows someone can have in a job, because
it gets too slow to process the file otherwise.
This should be the first error that a user sees, because we can’t work
out if there are other errors until they’ve got the file down to a
processable size.
This also means adding a message to say that the file can’t be displayed
if it doesn’t contain any processed rows.
***
https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/129830161
This PR changes the flow to change an email address.
Once the user enter their password, they are told "Check your email".
An email has been sent to them containing a link to notify which contains an encrypted token.
The encrypted token contains the user id and new email address. Once the link is clicked the user's email address is updated to the new email address.
They are redirected to the /user-profile page.
Also in this commit is an update from flask.ext.login to flask_login.
These are out of date now and potentially misleading.
Adds a new error page for HTTP `410 GONE`. Looks like the 404 page, but
returns the appropriate error code to be a good web citizen.
You can’t properly use a normal key when your service is in trial mode.
It’s theoretically useful to create a live key in preparation for going
live. This utitily outweighs the confusion it causes for people creating
their first keys in trial mode.
We should just remove the confusing option.
Basically:
- shows all the months from start of given financial year to now or end
of given financial year (whichever is earliest)
- shows a breakdown of free and paid text messages for each of these
months
Depends on:
- [x] https://github.com/alphagov/notifications-api/pull/699
The activity page was AJAXified in
https://github.com/alphagov/notifications-admin/pull/952 but this
didn’t take pagination into account.
So if you visited page 2, the contents of the page would be replaced by
Javascript with the contents of page 1. So you’d never be able to see
anything beyond page 1, expect for a brief fraction of a second when the
page loaded.
This commit makes sure the AJAX request uses whatever page parameter is
in the URL of the original page.