This commit does not introduce functional changes, besides renaming
every mention of 'wizard' with 'setup assistant'. In order to run the
manager setup assistant use:
./flamenco-manager -setup-assistant
The change was introduced to favor more neutral and descriptive working
for this functionality. Thanks to Sybren for helping to get this done!
This adds a `-wizard` CLI option to the Manager, which opens a webbrowser
and shows the First-Time Wizard to aid in configuration of Flamenco.
This is work in progress. The wizard is just one page, and doesn't save
anything yet to the configuration.
Add a "Last Rendered" view to the webapp.
The Manager now stores (in the database) which job was the last
recipient of a rendered image, and serves that to the appropriate
OpenAPI endpoint.
A new SocketIO subscription + accompanying room makes it possible for
the web interface to receive all rendered images (if they survive the
queue, which discards images when it gets too full).
Show workers with their status, and allow clicking on a worker to activate
it and show its details (which currently is limited to just its ID). Does
include Vue Router handling of the active worker ID and CSS classes for
worker statuses.
This basically copies the `JobsTable` component to `workers/WorkersTable`.
The intention is that all the jobs-specific components will move into a
`jobs` subdirectory at some point.
The selection mechanism of Tabulator was getting in the way of having nice
navigation, as it would deselect (i.e. nav to "/") before selecting the
next job (i.e. nav to "/jobs/{job-id}").
The active job is now determined by the URL and thus handled by Vue Router.
Clicking on a job simply navigates to its URL, which causes the reactive
system to load & display it.
It is still intended to get job selection for "mass actions", but that's
only possible after normal navigation is working well.
Most of the code moved from `App.vue` to `views/JobsView.vue`.
Notification bar has its own component, and there are placeholder
"views" for Workers and Settings pages.
There is still some clunky handling of updates via SocketIO, as those
are a mix of job-specific and global (like SocketIO reconnection
events). The advantage of the current approach is that SocketIO
connections are closed when you leave the Jobs page, and reopened when
you enter the Workers page. My gut feeling says this is nice because it
ensures that all SocketIO connection-specific things are cleaned up when
you navigate.
The project was created with things (components, router, views) we don't
use at the moment. To keep a clearer separation between "our code" and
"example code", I just removed the latter.
Replace the Vue v2 webapp with a Vue v3 one, and embed the OpenAPI
client in the webapp itself (instead of being its own npm project).
- Vue v2.x -> v3.x
- Tabulator v4.x -> v5.1
- Moment JS -> replaced with Luxon JS
- Vue CLI/UI -> replaced with Vite