ref https://linear.app/tryghost/issue/ENG-1266
- Mexico changed tz to not participate in DST
- our package was a couple years behind, so we likely have fixes for
other countries/regions, too
ref https://linear.app/tryghost/issue/CFR-4/
- added request queueing middleware (express-queue) to handle high
request volume
- added new config option `optimization.requestQueue`
- added new config option `optimization.requestConcurrency`
- added logging of request queue depth - `req.queueDepth`
We've done a fair amount of investigation around improving Ghost's
resiliency to high request volume. While we believe this to be partly
due to database connection contention, it also seems Ghost gets
overwhelmed by the requests themselves. Implementing a simple queueing
system allows us a simple lever to change the volume of requests Ghost
is actually ingesting at any given time and gives us options besides
simply increasing database connection pool size.
---------
Co-authored-by: Michael Barrett <mike@ghost.org>
- this version is written in TS, but was published a few months ago and
needs to be bumped here
- also updates a previous deep include into the library, which was
unnecessary anyway
refs: https://github.com/TryGhost/Toolbox/issues/188
- some of our older packages used a pattern for linting which missed using test config for linting tests
- we need this to be consistent so that we can add more eslint rules for testing
- two packages also didn't use the lib pattern, which made the lint pattern error - so this was fixed as well
- we previously used `@stdlib/utils` instead of the child package
`@stdlib/copy`, which is a lot smaller and contains our only use of
the parent
- this saves 140+MB of dependencies
- we keep ending up with multiple versions of the depedency in our tree,
and it's causing problems when comparing instances
- the workaround I'm implementing for now is to bump the package
everywhere and set a resolution so we only have 1 shared instance
- hopefully we can come up with a better method down the line
- there's a weird situation when we have mixed versions of the
dependency because different libraries try to compare instances
- this brings the usage up to 1.2.21 so we can fix the build for now
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Toolbox/issues/501
- this reverts commit 48dda23554
- also includes a resolution for `@elastic/elasticsearch` so we don't
run a version that is potentially problematic - see referenced issue
for context
- this was all getting terribly behind so I've done several things:
- majority of `@tryghost/*` except Lexical packages
- gscan + knex-migrator to remove old `@tryghost/errors` usage
- bumped lockfile
refs https://ghost.slack.com/archives/C02G9E68C/p1670215917451249
When a member is deleted, and we receive an opened event for an email to
that member. We threw an uncaught Bookshelf EmptyResponse error.
- This change makes fetching the member not a requirement when handling
that event in the last seen at updater.
- It also adds try catches for all event listeners in the last seen at
updater
- cleaned up unused dependencies
- adds missing dependencies that are used in the code
- this should help us be more explicit about the dependencies a package
uses
- because of how the npm scripts were set up, we were running the full
Admin integration tests during the unit tests phase of CI
- this commit renames the majority of `test` to `test:unit` in the
package.json files, and aliases `test` to `test:unit`
- special packages like Admin have no-op'd `test:unit` scripts so we
don't end up running its tests
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Toolbox/issues/354
- these repository links made sense when they were in different repos
and published to NPM but we don't publish these packages any more
- this commit deletes those keys from the files
- we're going to be pinning all dependencies within the monorepo
- this shouldn't change anything anyway because we're using the same
version across all packages
- these packages are split apart for local development, but will be
bundled into Ghost when publishing
- therefore, these packages won't be published so we are resetting the
versions to make them cleaner