* feat: add installExtension integration test
This adds a new helper function called `runCodeServerCommand` along with
a test for `--install-extension`. We can use this approach for writing
integration tests (i.e. testing a real code-server build, CLI commands,
etc).
* refactor: s/ test:standalone with test:integration
This replaces our integration approach to use Jest instead of a single
bash script. By doing this, we will be able to easily maintain and add
to our integration test suite.
* refactor: filter unit tests
Now that our integration tests also use Jest, we need to update our unit
test script to ignore `test/integration`.
* refactor: add SKIP_SUBMODULE_DEPS to postinstall
* refactor: add SKIP_SUBMODULE_DEPS to postinstall
* fixup!: skip submod deps
* refactor: move runCodeServerCommand into sep. file
When Jest runs a test, it loads all the files and imports for that test.
This means you might be "requiring" code that's unrelated to your tests.
This leads to unexpected errors depending on where the code runs.
Moved this file to avoid GLIBC and other errors relaed to argon2 when
running integration tests in CI.
* fizup: formatting
* fizup: increase timeout
* refactor: use fixture in installExtension test
Instead of relying on a network to install an extension, we use a
fixture - vsix file in the repo. This is also faster.
* feat: add integration test for listExtensions
* chore: ignore integration fixtures
* fixup: formatting
* fixup: remove custom-hacks.css
* fixup: formatting
* Update test/integration/installExtension.test.ts
Co-authored-by: Asher <ash@coder.com>
* Update test/integration/listExtensions.test.ts
Co-authored-by: Asher <ash@coder.com>
* Update test/integration/installExtension.test.ts
Co-authored-by: Asher <ash@coder.com>
* Update test/integration/listExtensions.test.ts
Co-authored-by: Asher <ash@coder.com>
* fixup: contributing integration tests section
* fixup: update ci/readme
* fixup: use RELEASE_PATH in test-integration.sh
* refactor: unzip vsix for listExtensions
* refactor: use exec instead of spawn
* Update docs/CONTRIBUTING.md
Co-authored-by: Asher <ash@coder.com>
* Update test/integration/listExtensions.test.ts
Co-authored-by: Asher <ash@coder.com>
* Update test/integration/listExtensions.test.ts
Co-authored-by: Asher <ash@coder.com>
* Update test/integration/listExtensions.test.ts
Co-authored-by: Asher <ash@coder.com>
* refactor: use different default binary path
* fixup!: formatting
Co-authored-by: Asher <ash@coder.com>
* chore: upgrade Code to 1.66
* docs: update docs for Code upgrades
* fixup!: docs
* chore: update vscode submodule
* chore: update integration patch
* chore: update node-version patch
* chore: update github-auth patch
They completely changed how auth is handled for GitHub in
https://github.com/microsoft/vscode/pull/145424 so our patch may not
work. Will need to test and revisit.
* refactor: remove postinstall patch
It appears they renamed postinstall.js to postinstall.mjs and removed
the use of `rimraf` which means our patch is no longer needed! 🎉b0e8554cce
* chore: refresh local-storage patch
* chore: refresh service-worker patch
* chore: bulk refresh patches
* fixup!: docs formatting
* refactor: remove unused last-opened patch
* fixup!: formatting docs
* fixup!: formatting docs
* refactor: remove rsync postinstall
* Revert "refactor: remove rsync postinstall"
This reverts commit 8d6b613e9d779ba18d0297710614516cde108bcf.
* refactor: update postinstall.js to .mjs
* feat(patches): add parent-origin bypass
* docs(patches): add notes for testing store-socket
* docs(patches): update testing info for node-version
* refactor(patches): delete github-auth.diff patch
* docs(patches): add notes for testing connection-type
* fixup!: delete github-auth patch
* fixup!: update connection type testing
* docs(patches): add notes to insecure-notification.diff
* docs(patches): add nots for update-check.diff
* fixup!: remove comma in integration patch
* fix(e2e): disable workspace trust
* refactor: add --no-default-rc for yarn install
* feat(patches): remove yarnrc in presinstall
* fixup!: silly mistake
* docs: add note about KEEP_MODULES=1
* docs(patches): add testing notes for node-version
* refactor(patches): remove node-version
It appears this is no longer needed due to the `remote/package.json` now which
targets node rather than electron.
* fixup!: add cd ../.. to code upgrade instructions
* fixup!: add note to yarn --production flag
* fixup!: make parent-origin easier to upstream
* Revert "refactor(patches): delete github-auth.diff patch"
This reverts commit 31a354a34345309fadc475491b392d7601e51a32.
* Revert "fixup!: delete github-auth patch"
This reverts commit bdeb5212e8c7be6cadd109941b486a4bcdae69fa.
* Merge webview origin patch into webview patch
* Remove unused post-install patch
* Prevent builtin extensions from updating
* Refresh sourcemaps patch
* Update Node to v16
This matches the version in ./lib/vscode/remote/.yarnrc.
I changed the engine to exactly 16 since if you use any different
version it will just not work since the modules will have been built for
16 (due to the .yarnrc).
* Replace fs.rmdir with fs.rm
Node is showing a deprecation warning about it.
* Update github-auth patch
The local credentials provider is no longer used when there is a remote
so this code moved into the backend web credential provider.
* Prevent fs.rm from erroring about non-existent files
We were using fs.rmdir which presumably did not have the same behavior
in v14 (in v16 fs.rmdir also errors).
* Install Python 3 in CentOS CI container
Co-authored-by: Asher <ash@coder.com>
* Move integration types into code-server
This will be easier to maintain than to have it as a patch.
* Disable connection token
Using a flag means we will not need to patch it out. I think this is
new from 1.64?
* Add product.json to build process
This way we do not have to patch it.
* Ship with remote agent package.json
Instead of the root one. This contains fewer dependencies.
* Let Code handle errors
This way we will not have to patch Code to make this work and I think it
makes sense to let Code handle the request.
If we do want to handle errors we can do it cleanly by patching their
error handler to throw instead.
* Move manifest override into code-server
This way we will not have to patch it.
* Move to patches
- Switch submodule to track upstream
- Add quilt to the process
- Add patches
The node-* ignore was ignoring one of the diffs so I removed it. This
was added when we were curling Node as node-v{version}-darwin-x64 for
the macOS build but this no longer happens (we use the Node action to
install a specific version now so we just use the system-wide Node).
* Use pre-packaged Code
* Move Code to a submodule
Closes#4901.
* Base Code cache on hash and re-enable node_modules cache
The current setup appears to only rebuild VS Code if the dependencies
change but we need to rebuild it if anything changes.
I also re-enabled the commented out node_modules caches. They look like
they should work to me with the submodule method. I think the problem
occurred because Code itself was being installed in the yarn step.
* Add test extension
This will let us test extension-related features (like the proxy URI).
I removed the environment variables in the script because they override
the ones you set yourself. We still set defaults in constants.ts.
* Add changelog entry for VSCODE_PROXY_URI
* Add terminal test for VSCODE_PROXY_URI
* Update VS Code
This adds the VSCODE_PROXY_URI environment variable.
* Implement last opened functionality
Fixes https://github.com/cdr/code-server/issues/4619
* Fix test temp dirs not being cleaned up
* Mock logger everywhere
This suppresses all the error and debug output we generate which makes
it hard to actually find which test has failed. It also gives us a
standard way to test logging for the few places we do that.
* Use separate data directories for unit test instances
Exactly as we do for the e2e tests.
* Add integration tests for vscode route
* Make settings use --user-data-dir
Without this test instances step on each other feet and they also
clobber your own non-test settings.
* Make redirects consistent
They will preserve the trailing slash if there is one.
* Remove compilation check
If you do a regular non-watch build there are no compilation stats so
this bricks VS Code in CI when running the unit tests.
I am not sure how best to fix this for the case where you have a build
that has not been packaged yet so I just removed it for now and added a
message to check if VS Code is compiling when in dev mode.
* Update code-server update endpoint name
* Add tests for relativeRoot
* Remove path.posix.join
Since this is for file system paths it feels incorrect to use it on
URL paths as they are different in many ways.
* Rewrite cookie path logic
Before we relied on the client to resolve the base given to it by the
backend against the path.
Instead have the client pass that information along so we can resolve it
on the backend. This means the client has to do less work.
* Do not remove out directory before watch
This is re-used for incremental compilation.
Also remove del since that was the only use (and we can use fs.rmdir in
the future if we need something like this).
* Remove unused function resolveBase
The watch script was reloading the web server after every extension
compilation which is not necessary plus VS Code will not even be ready
at that point anyway.
Instead restart when the main compilation is finished. The string to
match with includes a "with" because otherwise it would match "Finished
compilation extensions" which is not the main compilation task where we
actually need to restart the web server.
I also replaced this.log with console.log because the former does not
include a newline and it appears we want newlines with all
these (otherwise the next log starts on the same line which looks odd).
I removed the cache clean as well because the cache is meant to stay
there to speed up builds.
The "Starting watch-client" string no longer appears in the latest build
output. We could look for "Finished compilation with" to avoid
restarting when other tasks restart (since they also include the name
i.e. "Finished compilation extensions with 0 errors") but I figure we
might as well restart code-server when any compilation task completes in
case other tasks include changes that need to be reloaded.
* Use frozen lockfile for test dependencies in CI
This might be causing more Playwright issues.
* Bump Playwright
Mostly just to trigger a reinstall of dependencies since it is cached
and still failing.
Once updated it errors saying install needs to run so add that too.
* fix(testing): revert change & fix playwright tests
* fix(constants): add type to import statement
* refactor(e2e): delete browser test
This test was originally added to ensure playwright was working.
At this point, we know it works so removing this test because it doesn't help
with anything specific to code-server and only adds unnecessary code to the
codebase plus increases the e2e test job duration.
* chore(e2e): use 1 worker for e2e test
I don't know if it's a resources issue, playwright, or code-server but it seems
like the e2e tests choke when multiple workers are used.
This change is okay because our CI runner only has 2 cores so it would only use
1 worker anyway, but by specifying it in our playwright config, we ensure more
stability in our e2e tests working correctly.
See these PRs:
- https://github.com/cdr/code-server/pull/3263
- https://github.com/cdr/code-server/pull/4310
* revert(vscode): add missing route with redirect
* chore(vscode): update to latest fork
* Touch up compilation step.
* Bump vendor.
* Fix VS Code minification step
* Move ClientConfiguration to common
Common code must not import Node code as it is imported by the browser.
* Ensure lib directory exists before curling
cURL errors now because VS Code was moved and the directory does not
exist.
* Update incorrect e2e test help output
Revert workers change as well; this can be overridden when desired.
* Add back extension compilation step
* Include missing resources in release
This includes a favicon, for example. I opted to include the entire
directory to make sure we do not miss anything. Some of the other
stuff looks potentially useful (like completions).
* Set quality property in product configuration
When httpWebWorkerExtensionHostIframe.html is fetched it uses the web
endpoint template (in which we do not include the commit) but if the
quality is not set it prepends the commit to the web endpoint instead.
The new static endpoint does not use/handle commits so this 404s.
Long-term we might want to make the new static endpoint use commits like
the old one but we will also need to update the various other static
URLs to include the commit.
For now I just fixed this by adding the quality since:
1. Probably faster than trying to find and update all static uses.
2. VS Code probably expects it anyway.
3. Gives us better control over the endpoint.
* Update VS Code
This fixes several build issues.
* Bump vscode.
* Bump.
* Bump.
* Use CLI directly.
* Update tests to reflect new upstream behavior.
* Move unit tests to after the build
Our code has new dependencies on VS Code that are pulled in when the
unit tests run. Because of this we need to build VS Code before running
the unit tests (as it only pulls built code).
* Upgrade proxy-agent dependencies
This resolves a security report with one of its dependencies (vm2).
* Symlink VS Code output directory before unit tests
This is necessary now that we import from the out directory.
* Fix issues surrounding persistent processes between tests.
* Update VS Code cache directories
These were renamed so the cached paths need to be updated. I changed
the key as well to force a rebuild.
* Move test symlink to script
This way it works for local testing as well.
I had to use out-build instead of out-vscode-server-min because Jest
throws some obscure error about a handlebars haste map.
* Fix listening on a socket
* Update VS Code
It contains fixes for missing files in the build.
* Standardize disposals
* Dispose HTTP server
Shares code with the test HTTP server. For now it is a function but
maybe we should make it a class that is extended by tests.
* Dispose app on exit
* Fix logging link errors
Unfortunately the logger currently chokes when provided with error
objects.
Also for some reason the bracketed text was not displaying...
* Update regex used by e2e to extract address
The address was recently changed to use URL which seems to add a
trailing slash when using toString, causing the regex match to fail.
* Log browser console in e2e tests
* Add base back to login page
This is used to set cookies when using a base path.
* Remove login page test
The file this was testing no longer exists.
* Use path.posix for static base
Since this is a web path and not platform-dependent.
* Add test for invalid password
Co-authored-by: Teffen Ellis <teffen@nirri.us>
Co-authored-by: Asher <ash@coder.com>
This uses the current dev build by default but can be overidden with
CODE_SERVER_TEST_ENTRY (for example to test a release or some other
version).
Each instance has a separate state directory. This should make
parallelization work.
This also means you are no longer required to specify the password and
address yourself (or the extension directory once we add a test
extension). `yarn test:e2e` should just work as-is.
Lastly, it means the tests are no longer subject to yarn watch randomly
restarting.