This commit adds support for cody ignore settings to the SvelteKit app. When cody is disabled on the instance or for the user, the cody button and sidebar are not shown anymore. Likewise if the repository is excluded from cody, the buttons and sidebar are not shown. The implementation was inspired by `useCodyIngore.ts`, but simplified for use in the SvelteKit app. It seems that the file exclusion logic is not actually used for the sidebar and thus was omitted. It also seems that for the sidebar itself we are only checking whether the current repository is excluded or not, which lets us simplify the whole setup and simply pass a boolean (store) from the data loader, indicating whether cody is enabled or not. Furthermore I introduced zod to validate that the value of `codyContextFilters.raw`, which is typed as `JSONValue`, has the expected shape. We've run into issues in the past where such values have just been cast to the expected Typescript type. zod adds runtime validation. Note that we use JSON schema base validation (with `ajv`) in some places, but that requires importing and sending the whole JSON schema to the client, which is something I'd like to avoid. The advantage JSON schema is that we also use it for generating Go code. We should find a way to use JSON schema but generate specific validators at build time. There are also other libraries that do runtime validation and are smaller but they don't necessarily allow asynchronous validation (which we want to do because we only want to import the `re2js` library when necessary; of course we could organize the code differently but it's nice to be able to encapsulate this logic) ## Test plan Manual testing and new integration tests. |
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| .. | ||
| branded | ||
| browser | ||
| build-config | ||
| client-api | ||
| codeintellify | ||
| cody-context-filters-test-dataset | ||
| cody-shared | ||
| cody-ui | ||
| common | ||
| eslint-plugin-wildcard | ||
| extension-api | ||
| extension-api-types | ||
| http-client | ||
| jetbrains | ||
| observability-client | ||
| observability-server | ||
| shared | ||
| storybook | ||
| template-parser | ||
| testing | ||
| vscode | ||
| web | ||
| web-sveltekit | ||
| wildcard | ||
| BUILD.bazel | ||
| README.md | ||
Frontend packages
List
- web: The web application deployed to http://sourcegraph.com/
- browser: The Sourcegraph browser extension adds tooltips to code on different code hosts.
- vscode: The Sourcegraph VS Code extension.
- extension-api: The Sourcegraph extension API types for the Sourcegraph extensions. Published as
sourcegraph. - extension-api-types: The Sourcegraph extension API types for client applications that embed Sourcegraph extensions and need to communicate with them. Published as
@sourcegraph/extension-api-types. - sandboxes: All demos-mvp (minimum viable product) for the Sourcegraph web application.
- shared: Contains common TypeScript/React/SCSS client code shared between the browser extension and the web app. Everything in this package is code-host agnostic.
- branded: Contains React components and implements the visual design language we use across our web app and e.g. in the options menu of the browser extension. Over time, components from
sharedandbrandedpackages should be moved into thewildcardpackage. - wildcard: Package that encapsulates storybook configuration and contains our Wildcard design system components. If we're using a component in two or more different areas (e.g.
web-appandbrowser-extension) then it should live in thewildcardpackage. Otherwise the components should be better colocated with the code where they're actually used. - search: Search-related code that may be shared between all clients, both branded (e.g. web, VS Code extension) and unbranded (e.g. browser extension)
- storybook: Storybook configuration.
Further migration plan
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Fix circular dependency in TS project-references graph wildcard package should not rely on web and probably shared, branded too. Ideally it should be an independent self-contained package.
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Decide on package naming and update existing package names. Especially it should be done for a shared package because we have multiple
sharedfolders inside of other packages. It's hard to understand from where dependency is coming from and it's not possible to refactor import paths using find-and-replace. -
Investigate if we can painlessly switch to
npmworkspaces. -
Content of packages shared and branded should be moved to wildcard and refactored using the latest FE rules and conventions. Having different packages clearly communicates the migration plan. Developers first should look for components in the wildcard package and then fall-back to legacy packages if wildcard doesn't have the solution to their problem yet.
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shared contains utility functions, types, polyfills, etc which is not a part of the Wildcard component library. These modules should be moved into utils package and other new packages: e.g. api for GraphQL client and type generators, etc.
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Packages should use package name (e.g.
@sourcegraph/wildcard) for imports instead of the relative paths (e.g.../../../../wildcard/src/components/Markdown) to avoid long relative-paths and make dependency graph between packages clear. (Typescript will warn if packages have circular dependencies). It's easy to refactor such isolated packages, extract functionality into new ones, or even into new repositories.