- This is a really specific piece of code related to validating models against our internal schema.js format
- This doesn't make sense without a schema.js file
- It does depend on the internal validator and validate tools - but those are used elsewhere too, and can reasonably be moved out of the codebase
- I don't see schema.js moving out of the codebase any time soon. We can move the validator but it would be a class that requires schema via DI
- For now my focus is on getting the data/validation tooling separated and making clear sense
- Improving data/schema can come later :)
- The data/validation module is made up of several loosely related things with lots of dependencies
- Separating out the various components makes it possible to see what's what, and importantly what has complex dependencies
- validator + validate probably go togetheri in an external module, the other two files should probably have their own homes in related areas of ghost e.g. schema -> data/schema/validate.js
- Traditionally all of Ghost's public-facing text was written in British English
- We're changing that to US English because that's more common
- US English should also be used in code e.g. properties are called color not colour
- most of these changes are in comments, but I've changed them so that we have US English in front of us always
- fixed a few other typos I noticed whilst there
refs c873899e49
- as of `bson-objectid` v2.0.0, this library exports the function
to generate an ObjectID directly, and then you need to use `.toHexString()`
to get the 24 character hex string - 6696f27d82
- this commit removes all uses of `.generate()` and replaces with this
change
closes#12001
* Moved settings validation to the model
This moves the settings validation out of the validation file and into
the model, as it is _only_ used there.
It also sets us up in the future for custom validators on individual
settings.
* Improved validation of stripe_plans setting
- Checks `interval` is a valid string
- Checks `name` & `currency` are strings
* Moved stripe key validation into model
The stripe key settings are all nullable and the regex validation fails
when the input is `null`. Rather than reworking the entirety of how we
validate with default-settings validation objects, this moves the
validation into methods on the Settings model.
* Added tests for new setting validations
Adds tests for both valid and invalid settings, as well as helpers
making future tests easier and less repetitive
- All var declarations are now const or let as per ES6
- All comma-separated lists / chained declarations are now one declaration per line
- This is for clarity/readability but also made running the var-to-const/let switch smoother
- ESLint rules updated to match
How this was done:
- npm install -g jscodeshift
- git clone https://github.com/cpojer/js-codemod.git
- git clone git@github.com:TryGhost/Ghost.git shallow-ghost
- cd shallow-ghost
- jscodeshift -t ../js-codemod/transforms/unchain-variables.js . -v=2
- jscodeshift -t ../js-codemod/transforms/no-vars.js . -v=2
- yarn
- yarn test
- yarn lint / fix various lint errors (almost all indent) by opening files and saving in vscode
- grunt test-regression
- sorted!
- move all test files from core/test to test/
- updated all imports and other references
- all code inside of core/ is then application code
- tests are correctly at the root level
- consistent with other repos/projects
Co-authored-by: Kevin Ansfield <kevin@lookingsideways.co.uk>