refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Toolbox/issues/169
- There was not much clarity around how the tokens created for the versioned API audience would behave when non-versioned API is introduced. The tests added here illustrate the tokens being forward compabible (created for versioned -> verified at non-versioned API) and not backwards combatible (created for non-versioned -> verified at versioned)
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Toolbox/issues/169
- Before releasing Ghost v5 we would like to move all canary-related URLs to a non-versioned format, which will become a default in v5.
- 'canary' is by definition unstable, so breaking any unprepared client explicitly using the canary is expected
- Removed the aliased /content/ and /admin/ apps from app.js because with updated configuration they become duplicates of 'canary' endpoints
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Toolbox/issues/169
- As Ghost prepares to drop API versioning in future major release it the authentication mechanism should take into account non-versioned token audience support. The audience for non-versioned api requests would be limited to "admin" rather than "canary/admin"
refs: https://github.com/TryGhost/Toolbox/issues/168
- All of our unversioned tests should be running against canary already
- These tests are erroneously running on the wrong version
We're going to be dropping the idea of having multiple versions of the API in each Ghost version.
Because this has not achieved the goal of making it easier to make breaking changes, but it has
created an ordinate amount of technical debt and maintenance overhead.
As we know this is going away in the next major, there is no benefit to us constantly running tests
that check if those versions still work, especially given how long they take.
Instead we're starting work to ensure that all of our test work on canary, and that canary has
excellent test coverage so that we can be sure that our one API version works really well and that
any changes, no matter how subtle are deliberate, tracked and understood.
- this is a small part of a bit of cleanup of our test files
- the goal is to make the existing tests clearer with a view to making it easier to write more tests
- this makes the test structure follow the codebase structure more closely
- eventually we will colocate the tests as we break the codebase down further