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Disable failing tests #1304

Merged
merged 6 commits into from
Jun 11, 2024
Merged

Disable failing tests #1304

merged 6 commits into from
Jun 11, 2024

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imobachgs
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Many UI tests are broken. The problem is that, while introducing changes in the new UI, you can break even more tests without noticing.

So let's disable the broken tests and make sure that the rest is passing.

@imobachgs imobachgs marked this pull request as ready for review June 11, 2024 09:08
@imobachgs imobachgs merged commit d488222 into new-ui-proposal Jun 11, 2024
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@imobachgs imobachgs deleted the disable-tests branch June 11, 2024 10:20
dgdavid added a commit that referenced this pull request Jun 13, 2024
As Agama has progressed, the original idea of a hyper-minimalist
interface has completely vanished. We have moved far away from the first
_SPA interactive interface_. The installation summary has lost all its
value and it is now a sort of navigation menu or index. Furthermore, it
is impossible to start with a valid configuration straight away due to
several reasons, such as

* The creation of a user it's mandatory since it cannot be relegated to
the first boot.
* The storage proposal algorithm [does not perform as many
attempts](#1159 (comment))
as it used to do in YaST.

Last but not least, it is way weird landing in a page with a big, green,
and enabled <kbd>Install</kbd> button that will prompt an error when
clicked before any other user interaction.

There is a [proposal to
improve](#778) that first
initial screen, but having in mind the Agama development progression I
believe that the current approach does not scale. Regrettably, looks
like a dead end.

With this in mind, I have been thinking a bit about an alternative that
I had on my to-do list for the future, which consisted of converting the
summary screen into a panel on the left and loading the content of each
section to the right (which would overlap the first on small devices).
It would solve two problems in one shot by stop forcing the user to
navigate back and forth to change between sections and stop wasting
available space on large screens. The key was to make better use of
react-router and embrace [nested
routes](https://reactrouter.com/en/main/start/overview#nested-routes) as
designed instead of fighting against them. Something perfectly doable.

However, as soon as I started writing some code to play with, I realized
that also embracing more heavily PatternFly would be enough to start
making it possible. Moreover, I concluded that it could even help to
solve many of the problems we currently have with the interface at many
levels.

So I got to work to carry out a small proof of concept with, among
others, following ideas in mind,

* Use PatternFly as much as possible to the point of looking familiar
with Cockpit UI but keeping some bits of Agama's identity (like
typography and colors, the absence of wizard, to allow the user to move
as freely as possible, etc)
* Reduce the number of components developed by us and help to improve
the existing ecosystem instead. After all, at this moment it is not
realistic to think that we can also develop and maintain a design and
components system (although I would like to do so, of course :P).
* Sensibly embrace the router: use a [data
router](https://reactrouter.com/en/main/routers/picking-a-router#using-v64-data-apis),
[nested
routes](https://reactrouter.com/en/main/start/overview#nested-routes),
[outlet
context](https://reactrouter.com/en/main/hooks/use-outlet-context), etc.
* Use [FormData
API](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/FormData) when
working with forms and/or evaluate the use of react-router
[Form](https://reactrouter.com/en/main/components/form)
* Keep an eye on the [next React
version](https://react.dev/blog/2024/04/25/react-19).
* Keep in mind that the number of internal states of some components can
be reduced by relying in the [URL as State
Management](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VenLRGHx3D4&t=602s) when
possible.


Indeed, it is A LOT of work to do, but I firmly believe it worth. Once
we finish the migration, we should be able to move forward more
efficiently and, hopefully, with less friction when taking UI decisions.
Don't get me wrong, we will still have work to do, decisions to make,
and specially things to improve, etc. We will even keep changing our
minds from time to time based on learned lessons or feedback gathered.
But with a bit of luck, we will have more time for these things.

**PLEASE REMEMBER** there will be a lot of details to define and many
others to polish after this PR gets merge, but in general terms this
new, streamlined layout gives us more room for placing almost everything
you will miss at first sight. **Little by little, please.**

Bonus: PatternFly already provides style guides, and we can build our
own on top of them since it will be inevitable that, at certain points
and due to the nature of Agama and our view/knowledge, we will take
slightly different decisions/paths.

## Related pull requests

- #1298
- #1299
- #1300
- #1301
- #1302
- #1303
- #1304
- #1305
- #1306
- #1307
- #1308
- #1309
- #1310
- #1312
- #1313
- #1315
- #1316
- #1317
- #1319
- #1320
- #1321
- #1322
- #1323
- #1324
- #1325
- #1326
- #1328
@imobachgs imobachgs mentioned this pull request Jun 27, 2024
imobachgs added a commit that referenced this pull request Jun 27, 2024
Prepare for releasing Agama 9. It includes the following pull requests:

- #1101
- #1202
- #1228
- #1231
- #1236
- #1238
- #1239
- #1240
- #1242
- #1243
- #1244
- #1245
- #1246
- #1247
- #1248
- #1249
- #1250
- #1251
- #1252
- #1253
- #1254
- #1255
- #1256
- #1257
- #1258
- #1259
- #1260
- #1261
- #1264
- #1265
- #1267
- #1268
- #1269
- #1270
- #1271
- #1272
- #1273
- #1274
- #1279
- #1280
- #1284
- #1285
- #1286
- #1287
- #1288
- #1289
- #1290
- #1291
- #1292
- #1293
- #1294
- #1295
- #1296
- #1298
- #1299
- #1300
- #1301
- #1302
- #1303
- #1304
- #1305
- #1306
- #1307
- #1308
- #1309
- #1310
- #1311
- #1312
- #1313
- #1314
- #1315
- #1316
- #1317
- #1318
- #1319
- #1320
- #1321
- #1322
- #1323
- #1324
- #1325
- #1326
- #1328
- #1329
- #1331
- #1332
- #1334
- #1338
- #1340
- #1341
- #1342
- #1343
- #1344
- #1345
- #1348
- #1349
- #1351
- #1352
- #1353
- #1354
- #1355
- #1356
- #1357
- #1358
- #1359
- #1360
- #1361
- #1362
- #1363
- #1365
- #1366
- #1367
- #1368
- #1371
- #1372
- #1374
- #1375
- #1376
- #1379
- #1380
- #1381
- #1383
- #1384
- #1385
- #1386
- #1387
- #1388
- #1389
- #1391
- #1392
- #1394
- #1395
- #1397
- #1398
- #1399
- #1400
- #1403
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2 participants