This is no longer used, as individual books have been added to support
different GUI tests. If there is anything here that we later decide we
need to keep for whatever reason, the needed content can be brought back
as new GUI test books. Otherwise, the guide and other books should cover
most things here.
This adds the all-summary GUI test book which can be used for general
purpose tests that need a few pages to exercise all the different kinds
of items.
This adds the ability to use multiple books for the GUI tests. This is
helpful since some tests need special configuration, and sharing the
same book can make it difficult or impossible to test different
configurations. It also makes it difficult to make changes to the
test_book since it can affect other tests.
This works by placing the books in the tests/gui/books directory. The
test runner will automatically build all the books. The gui tests can
then just access the DOC_PATH with the name of the book.
Books are now saved in a temp directory to make it easier to use the
DOC_PATH variable, instead of being tests/gui/books/book_name/book which
is a little awkward.
Following commits will restructure the existing book. This is just a
mechanical move.
This test is failing on CI. I don't know why, as I cannot reproduce
locally. Perhaps it is due to the update to browser-ui-test? Or perhaps
some events from the new nav bar are delaying something?
This adds dynamic navigation of headers of the current page in the
sidebar. This is intended to help the user see what is on the current
page, and to be able to more easily navigate it. The "current" header is
tracked based on the scrolling behavior of the user, and is marked with
a small circle. This includes automatic folding to help keep it from
being too unwieldy on a page with a lot of nested headers.
This includes the `output.html.sidebar-header-nav` option to disable it.
I'm sure there are tweaks, fixes, and improvements that can be made. I'd
like to get this out now, and iterate on it over time to make
improvements.
This adds the ability to pass options to browser-ui-test, which can help
with debugging or doing things like snapshot work. It's maybe not the
cleanest since it doesn't support space-separated args, but should be
good enough.
This changes all HTML IDs so that they have the `mdbook-` prefix. This
should help avoid ID conflicts between internal IDs and IDs from user
content such as section headers.
This is a relatively disruptive change and has a high risk of breaking
something. However, I think I have covered everything, and if anything
is missed, hopefully it will get detected.
I did not change class names since the chance of a collision is much
smaller than with IDs. However, that is something that could be
considered in the future.
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/mdBook/issues/880
These tests have been flaky, and in general it was probably unwise to
try to rely on an external site like this. I was unable to determine
exactly why the test is failing. The page loads, and then puppeteer
throws an error.
I don't know if it is really feasible to bring these back in some form.
It's probably more effort than it is worth.
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/mdBook/issues/2765
This adds the ability to redirect URLs with `#` fragments. This is
useful when section headers get renamed or moved to other pages.
This works both for deleted pages and existing pages.
The implementation requires the use of JavaScript in order to manipulate
the location. (Ideally this would be handled on the server side.)
This also makes it so that deleted page redirects preserve the fragment
ID. Previously if you had a deleted page redirect, and the user went to
something like `page.html#foo`, it would redirect to `bar.html` without
the fragment. I think preserving the fragment is probably a better
behavior. If the new page doesn't have the fragment ID, then no harm is
really done. This is technically an open redirect, but I don't think
that there is too much danger with preserving a fragment ID?
The reason the ACE editor was failing to load the rust syntax
highlighting is because the syntax highlighting was being created
*after* the editor was created. If the editor is created first, then ACE
tries to load `ace/mode/rust`. Since it isn't already defined, it tried
to compute the URL and load it manually. However, since the URLs now
have a hash in it (via https://github.com/rust-lang/mdBook/pull/1368),
it was unable to load.
The solution here is to make sure `ace/mode/rust` is defined before
creating the editors. Then ACE knows that it can just load the module
directly instead of trying to fetch it from the server.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/mdBook/issues/2700
This fixes a problem where the search was not displaying in
sub-directories. The problem was that `searcher.js` only exists in one
place, and was loading `searchindex.json` with a relative path. However,
when loading from a subdirectory, it needs the appropriate `..` to reach
the root of the book.