Summary:
Adds Mail Merge Plugin
- Adds new table components to component kit
- Adds new extension points to allow dragging and dropping into composer contenteditable and participant fields and customizing participant fields
- Adds new decorators and other misc updates
- #1608
Test Plan: TODO
Reviewers: bengotow, evan
Reviewed By: bengotow, evan
Differential Revision: https://phab.nylas.com/D2895
Summary:
This diff is designed to dramatically speed up new window load time for
all window types and reduce memory consumption of our hot windows.
Before this diff, windows loaded in ~3 seconds. They now boot in a couple
hundred milliseconds without requiring to keep hot windows around for
each and every type of popout window we want to load quickly.
One of the largest bottlenecks was the `require`ing and initializing of
everything in `NylasExports`.
I changed `NylasExports` to be entirely lazily-loaded. Drafts and tasks
now register their constructors with a `StoreRegistry` and the
`TaskRegistry`. This lets us explicitly choose a time to activate these
stores in the window initalization instead of whenever nylas-exports
happens to be required first.
Before, NylasExports was required first when components were first
rendering. This made initial render extremely slow and made the proposed
time picker popout slow.
By moving require into the very initial window boot, we can create a new
scheme of hot windows that are "half loaded". All of the expensive
require-ing and store initialization is done. All we need to do is
activate the packages for just the one window.
This means that the hot window scheme needs to fundamentally change from
have fully pre-loaded windows, to having half-loaded empty hot windows
that can get their window props overridden again.
This led to a major refactor of the WindowManager to support this new
window scheme.
Along the way the API of WindowManager was significantly simplifed.
Instead of a bunch of special-cased windows, there are now consistent
interfaces to get and `ensure` windows are created and displayed. This
DRYed up a lot of repeated logic around showing or creating core windows.
This also allowed the consolidation of the core window configurations into
one place for much easier reasoning about what's getting booted up.
When a hot window goes "live" and gets populated, we simply change the
`windowType`. This now re-triggers the loading of all of the packages for
the window. All of the loading time is now just for the packages that
window requires since core Nylas is there thanks to the hot window
mechanism.
Unfortunately loading all of the packages for the composer was still
unnaceptably slow. The major issue was that all of the composer plugins
were taking a long time to process and initialize. The solution was to
have the main composer load first, then trigger another window load
settings change to change the `windowType` that loads in all of the
plugins.
Another major bottleneck was the `RetinaImg` name lookup on disk. This
requires traversing the entire static folder synchronously on boot. This
is now done once when the main window loads and saved in a cache in the
browser process. Any secondary windows simply ask the backend for this
cache and save the filesystem access time.
The Paper Doc below is the current set of manual tests I'm doing to make
sure no window interactions (there are a lot of them!) regressed.
Test Plan: https://paper.dropbox.com/doc/Window-Refactor-UYsgvjgdXgVlTw8nXTr9h
Reviewers: juan, bengotow
Reviewed By: bengotow
Differential Revision: https://phab.nylas.com/D2916
Summary:
Up until now, we've been requiring that every plugin control in the composer take the draftClientId, retreive the session, listen to it, build state from the draft, etc. This is a huge pain and is hard to explain to newcomers becaus it frankly makes no sense.
In 0.3.45 we made it so that the ComposerView always has a non-null draft and session. (It isn't rendered until they're available). In this diff, I just pass those through to all the plugins and remove all the session retrieval cruft.
Almost none of the buttons have state of their own, which I think is appropriate.
They do render on every keystroke, but they were already running code (to recompute their state) on each keystroke and profiling suggests this has no impact.
Prepare for immutable
In preparation for Immutable models, make the draft store proxy returns a !== draft if any changes have been made. This means you can safely know that a draft has changed if `props.draft !== nextProps.draft`
Test Plan: Run tests
Reviewers: juan, evan
Reviewed By: juan, evan
Differential Revision: https://phab.nylas.com/D2902
Summary:
- Removes controlled focus in the composer!
- No React components ever perfom focus in lifecycle methods. Never again.
- A new `Utils.schedule({action, after, timeout})` helper makes it easy to say "setState or load draft, etc. and then focus"
- The DraftStore issues a focusDraft action after creating a draft, which causes the MessageList to focus and scroll to the desired composer, which itself decides which field to focus.
- The MessageList never focuses anything automatically.
- Refactors ComposerView apart — ComposerHeader handles all top fields, DraftSessionContainer handles draft session initialization and exposes props to ComposerView
- ComposerHeader now uses a KeyCommandRegion (with focusIn and focusOut) to do the expanding and collapsing of the participants fields. May rename that container very soon.
- Removes all CommandRegistry handling of tab and shift-tab. Unless you preventDefault, the browser does it's thing.
- Removes all tabIndexes greater than 1. This is an anti-pattern—assigning everything a tabIndex of 0 tells the browser to move between them based on their order in the DOM, and is almost always what you want.
- Adds "TabGroupRegion" which allows you to create a tab/shift-tabbing group, (so tabbing does not leave the active composer). Can't believe this isn't a browser feature.
Todos:
- Occasionally, clicking out of the composer contenteditable requires two clicks. This is because atomicEdit is restoring selection within the contenteditable and breaking blur.
- Because the ComposerView does not render until it has a draft, we're back to it being white in popout composers for a brief moment. We will fix this another way - all the "return unless draft" statements were untenable.
- Clicking a row in the thread list no longer shifts focus to the message list and focuses the last draft. This will be restored soon.
Test Plan: Broken
Reviewers: juan, evan
Reviewed By: juan, evan
Differential Revision: https://phab.nylas.com/D2814
Summary:
Allow for injection into the composer's list of recipients to indicate
something about each recipient (i.e. for the PGP plugin, allow an
indicator as to whether or not each recipient has a PGP key
available)
Test Plan: Tested locally
Reviewers: juan
Reviewed By: juan
Subscribers: bengotow
Differential Revision: https://phab.nylas.com/D2761
Summary:
This diff implements a behavior change described in https://github.com/nylas/N1/issues/1722.
Reply buttons should prefer to focus an existing draft in reply to the same message, if one is pristine, altering it as necessary to switch between reply / reply-all. If no pristine reply is already there, it creates one.
Reply keyboard shortcuts should do the same, but more strictly - the shortcuts should switch between reply / reply-all for an existing draft regardless of whether it's pristine.
This diff also cleans up the DraftStore and moves all the draft creation itself to a new DraftFactory object. This makes it much easier to see what's going on in the DraftStore, and I also refactored away the "newMessageWithContext" method, which was breaking the logic for Reply vs Forward between a bunch of different helper methods and was hard to follow.
Test Plan: They're all wrecked. Will fix after concept is greenlighted
Reviewers: evan, juan
Reviewed By: juan
Differential Revision: https://phab.nylas.com/D2776
Summary:
WIP
Remove the mode prop from everywhere, use NylasEnv.isComposerWindow() instead
Test Plan: Run updated tests
Reviewers: drew, evan
Reviewed By: evan
Differential Revision: https://phab.nylas.com/D2766
Summary:
Previously we always created <blockquote class="gmail_quote"> to wrap quoted text. This is not correct.
Gmail uses blockquotes only when it wants visual indentation, and <div>s to wrap other quoted text, like forwarded
messages which are not displayed indented.
This diff updates N1 to match Gmail exactly. Note that for replies, Gmail actually nests a blockquote.gmail_quote
inside a div.gmail_quote.
I also updated signature handling because it turns out the regexp that was removing existing signatures would blow
away any and all divs until it reached a <blockquote> tag.
Test Plan: See updated specs. Manually tested by creating a thread in Google Inbox and then performing fwd and reply in both N1 and Inbox. Results match.
Reviewers: juan, evan
Reviewed By: evan
Differential Revision: https://phab.nylas.com/D2750
Summary:
This diff also adds an account version number to the config so that the AccountStore can tell whether it should reload accounts (depending on whether it was the instance making tthe changes.)
This diff also fixes a tiny issue where un-opened composers threw an exception if you changed accounts.
Test Plan: New tests
Reviewers: evan, drew, juan
Reviewed By: juan
Subscribers: juan
Differential Revision: https://phab.nylas.com/D2726
Summary:
- Fixes#1239
- Adds action in composer view to indicate when draft partcipants have
changed. This seemed like the simplest way to listen for this change without
adding another extension point
- Updates signature plugin to listen to this action and update signature
accordingly
- Adds test
Test Plan: - Unit tests
Reviewers: evan, bengotow
Reviewed By: bengotow
Differential Revision: https://phab.nylas.com/D2614
This fixes#1341, but is more restrictive:
- You cannot switch From: accounts if the draft was retrieved from the sync engine (authored via Gmail or via another copy of N1. The sync-engine gives drafts a non-null threadId)
- You cannot switch From: accounts if the draft is a forward from an existing thread.
These two restrictions are unfortunately necessary to ensure that we don't have to download attachments we don't have to re-upload them to another account on the sync-engine. We could write code for this in the future but it's going to be gross.
If you had multiple composers on a single thread, all but the last
composer would lose its participants. This was because once it loaded the
participants would blur and trigger a request to set the participants to
blank. That request was async so by the time it was resolved the draft was
loaded and the request erroneously went through
We can come up with a new UX for this later, but for now this is important for consistency with the Reply/Reply-All/Forward picker and others in the app that perform actions rather than changing selection. Also makes it possible to choose to "Send and Archive" /without/ making it the future default, which will be nice when there are many you may want infrequently.
Summary:
The goal is to let us see what plugins are throwing errors on Sentry.
We are using a Sentry `tag` to identify and group plugins and their
errors.
Along the way, I cleaned up the error catching and reporting system. There
was a lot of duplicate error logic (that wasn't always right) and some
legacy Atom error handling.
Now, if you catch an error that we should report (like when handling
extensions), call `NylasEnv.reportError`. This used to be called
`emitError` but I changed it to `reportError` to be consistent with the
ErrorReporter and be a bit more indicative of what it does.
In the production version, the `ErrorLogger` will forward the request to
the `nylas-private-error-reporter` which will report to Sentry.
The `reportError` function also now inspects the stack to determine which
plugin(s) it came from. These are passed along to Sentry.
I also cleaned up the `console.log` and `console.error` code. We were
logging errors multiple times making the console confusing to read. Worse
is that we were logging the `error` object, which would print not the
stack of the actual error, but rather the stack of where the console.error
was logged from. Printing `error.stack` instead shows much more accurate
stack traces.
See changes in the Edgehill repo here: 8c4a86eb7e
Test Plan: Manual
Reviewers: juan, bengotow
Reviewed By: bengotow
Differential Revision: https://phab.nylas.com/D2509