22 Aug, 2013

1 commit


21 Mar, 2013

1 commit

  • Some tests were breaking because since Selenium Driver 2, hidden
    elements aren't available for interaction. However some elements started
    to get unaccessible because some depend on hover on other elements and
    the current version of Capybara doesn't support hover yet.
    
    Avoid interaction with hidden elements is nice, but for the sake of
    having the tests running while there isn't any touchable way of
    displaying those elements through adequate methods, I'm overriding this
    behaviour of Selenium Driver 2 with: Capybara.ignore_hidden_elements =
    true.
    Rodrigo Souto
     

05 Mar, 2013

2 commits


10 Dec, 2012

1 commit


19 Jan, 2012

1 commit


22 Mar, 2011

1 commit


16 Dec, 2010

1 commit


10 Dec, 2010

1 commit


09 Dec, 2010

1 commit


26 Oct, 2010

1 commit


21 Sep, 2010

1 commit


20 Sep, 2010

2 commits


14 Aug, 2010

1 commit

  • Implemented cache policy:
    
      * the homepage is cached for 5 minutes by default. This time can be
        configured with the =home_cache_in_minutes= attribute in the environment.
      * non-profile pages are cached for 15 minutes by default. This time can be
        configured with the =general_cache_in_minutes= attribute in the
        environment.
      * profile pages are cached for 15 minutes by default. This time can be
        configured in the =profile_cache_in_minutes= attribute in the environment.
      * The account controller (/account/*) is not cached at all.
      * The environment administration area (/admin/*) is not cached at all.
      * The profile administration area (/myprofile/*) is not cached at all.
      * Since Varnish will not cache any request that involves cookies:
        * Authenticated users will not benefit from the cache.
        * Cookies are not allowed for unauthenticated users. So, when a response is
          being prepared for an unauthenticated user, all cookies are wiped out.
    
    The contents of the login block and the login/logout part of the header is now
    loaded via an AJAX call to /account/user_data. This way we can cache almost all
    pages without caching user-specific data.
    
    We are also changing substantially how the flash[:notice] messages work. From
    now on, instead of setting flash[:notice], we must set session[:flash]. It will
    work more or less like before, except that session[:notice] will be consumed by
    the AJAX call to /account/user_data that is done during all page loads instead
    of being consumed automatically by Rails. The only exception to this is the
    media_panel, because it uses a different layout.
    
    (ActionItem1608)
    Antonio Terceiro
     

23 Jul, 2010

1 commit