Previously we were using a message `tw-auto-save-wiki` to trigger an
autosave. The message was generated by certain UI actions such as
saving a tiddler. The trouble was that the message was being processed
before the wiki change event for the accompanying change had had a
chance to percolate. The end result was that the dirty indicator was
staying lit when using autosave.
The new approach abandons the autosave message and instead triggers the
autosave in the wiki change event when a relevant change occurs.
One happy side effect of these changes is that the dirty indicator now
works as expected with the client server edition - ie, when typing in a
draft tiddler the dirty indicator will flash briefly, and then clear
when the sync mechanism has completed saving the draft.
Importing an encrypted wiki ordinarily doesn’t place the password in
the password vault on the basis that one ought to be able to import
from a file without automatically inheriting its password.
Now there’s a configuration option that can be used by the upgrade
plugin to cause the password vault to be updated with any password
entered by the user. The end result is that the user only needs to
enter their password once.
Previously any refreshing of the content of a modal would cause a
crash. The problem is the way that we steal the root widget for the
render trees used in the modal. The root widget is tied to the
container DOM node for the main content area, which isn’t actually a
parent of the modal DOM nodes, hence the confusion for the refresh
mechanism.
We were parsing the boot tiddlers, making them into a widget and then
refreshing the widget tree. The problem is that subsequent chances to
the boot tiddlers themselves wouldn’t be picked up as part of the
refresh.
Now we indirectly parse those UI boot tiddlers through a transclusion,
which does get refreshed in the desired way.
1. Moved some methods out of boot.js because they are not needed until
after bootup
2. Added alternate message for editing an overridden shadow tiddler
3. Minor style tweaks
This is an experimental module to help us measure the performance of
the refresh cycle and the filter mechanism. Not intended to replace the
performance measurement features in browser developer tools, just to
make it easier to automate performance checks cross-browser.
The immediate purpose is to help in refactoring the filter mechanism.
The recent change to encapsulate the wiki store “tiddlers” object has
hurt the performance of filters, and it’s going to be helpful to have
decent measurements while refactoring that code.
I’m still not convinced that this stuff should be in the core, and may
well end up removing it after the present refactoring cycle.
Now we get decent visual indication of sync errors, for instance. Still
work to do to coalesce alerts so that the screen doesn’t fill up with
them after an interval. And probably we should add a button to clear
all alerts.