Commit graph

6 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Scott Nonnenberg
998c35dcb3 Split configuration into low and high traffic files
Also, we're now handling config ourselves instead of using
electron-config and config dependencies.
2018-08-29 10:40:16 -07:00
Scott Nonnenberg
754d65ae2e Let's make it all pretty, shall we?
We missed a couple directories with previous attempts to turn this on
globally: app/ and libtextsecure/

Not to mention files in places we didn't expect: ts files that weren't
in the ts directory!

This turns prettier on for every file we care about (js, ts, tsx, md)
everywhere in the project but for a few key parts.
2018-05-02 13:40:57 -07:00
Scott Nonnenberg
64fe9dbfb2
Clean logs on start - and eslint/mocha with code coverage (#1945)
* Clean logs on startup; install server-side testing/linting

* Add eslint config, make all of app/ conform to its demands

* Add Node.js testing and linting to CI

* Lock project to Node.js 7.9.0, used by Electron 1.7.10

* New eslint error: trailing commas in function argumensts

Node 7.9.0 doesn't like trailing commas, but Electron does

* Move electron to devDependency, tell eslint it's built-in
2018-01-08 13:19:25 -08:00
Scott Nonnenberg
c94d4efd18
Beta versions support: SxS support, in-app env/instance display (#1606)
* Script for beta config; unique data dir, in-app env/type display

To release a beta build, increment the version and add -beta-N to the
end, then go through all the standard release activities.

The prepare-build npm script then updates key bits of the package.json
to ensure that the beta build can be installed alongside a production
build. This includes a new name ('Signal Beta') and a different location
for application data.

Note: Beta builds can be installed alongside production builds.

As part of this, a couple new bits of data are shown across the app:

- Environment (development or test, not shown if production)
- App Instance (disabled in production; used for multiple accounts)

These are shown in:

- The window title - both environment and app instance. You can tell
  beta builds because the app name, preceding these data bits, is
  different.
- The about window - both environment and app instance. You can tell
  beta builds from the version number.
- The header added to the debug log - just environment. The version
  number will tell us if it's a beta build, and app instance isn't
  helpful.

* Turn on single-window mode in non-production modes

Because it's really frightening when you see 'unable to read from db'
errors in the console.

* aply.sh: More instructions for initial setup and testing

* Gruntfile: Get consistent with use of package.json datas

* Linux: manually update desktop keys, since macros not available
2017-10-30 13:57:13 -07:00
Scott Nonnenberg
6b11f67dc6
Move logging to disk via bunyan
- Logging is available in main process as well as renderer process, and
  entries all go to one set of rotating files. Log entries in the
  renderer process go to DevTools as well as the console. Entries from
  the main process only show up in the console.
- We save three days of logs, one day per file in %userData%/logs
- The 'debug' object store is deleted in a new database migration
- Timestamps and level included in the new log we generate for publish
  as well as the devtools
- The bunyan API is exposed via windows.log (providing the ability to
  log at different levels, and save objects instead of just text), so we
  can move our code to it over time.

FREEBIE
2017-09-25 15:00:34 -07:00
David Balatero
5e5ca80a6e
Refactor configuration out into reusable files 2017-09-14 16:53:51 -07:00