* Serve translation files from the karma server
* Port UserSettingsStore to ES6 exports because the test runner
gets confused by ES6 importing a commonjs module
* Remove extra spaces in translations strings for MELS
* Fix 'his/her' back to be 'their'
* Change test to expect singular 'invitation' for a single person
(there may be multiple invitations, but IMO this should be
'rejected n invitations' and we can play with the wording later,
I don't think the singular is any worse than the plural).
* set language in the MELS tests (and wait for it to complete)
* Don't bother setting lang in other tests for now
Don't include src in resolve root for the karma test, as otherwise
modules from react sdk get pulled in instead of npm libraries like
'extend' which breaks everything in really subtle ways.
- Instead of using one attribute, use one that might just contain one token
- Use the first token when tracking a child
- Mandate that no commas can be in individual tokens
By adding a way to wait a short time for a component to appear in
the DOM, so we don't get flakey failures like this when we change
something to returning a promise that needs to resolve before the
component actually appears.
It seems that a number of the tests had started failing when run in
Chrome. They were fine under PhantomJS, but the MegolmExport tests only work
under Chrome, and I need them to work...
Mostly the problems were timing-related, where assumptions made about how
quickly the `then` handler on a promise would be called were no longer
valid. Possibly Chrome 55 has made some changes to the relative priorities of
setTimeout and sendMessage calls.
One of the TimelinePanel tests was failing because it was expecting the contents
of a div to take up more room than they actually were. It's possible this is
something very environment-specific; hopefully the new value will work on a
wider range of machines.
Also some logging tweaks.
For some reason, update webpack causes the promise to no longer
complete by the next tick. Change the test to not depend on how
fast the promise goes through.
Fix scroll up, down pagination test
NB: this test may not fail on Travis, although it did fail locally without a fix: #563.
Once the test has scrolled the panel to the top, to the earliest events, it should be able to forward paginate, because some degree of unpagination occurs. This does assume that unpagination will occur when scrolling to the beginning of the events and that unpagination should allow pagination again in the same direction.
Instead of checking that the first event is no longer the first event (varies due to unpagination), check instead that the most recent event can be seen when scrolling all the way down to the bottom of the TimelinePanel.
Scrolling past the bottom of content seems to have strange behaviour, which isn't a useful part of the test. So now the test will scroll down until the last event instead.
Instead of using a window of a fixed number of events, unpaginate based on the distance of the viewport from the end of the scroll range.
The ScrollPanel uses the scrollTokens to convey to its parent (the TimelinePanel, in this case) the point to unpaginate up to. The TimelinePanel then takes a chunk of events off the front or back of `this.state.events` using `timelineWindow.unpaginate`.
Fixes https://github.com/vector-im/vector-web/issues/2020
The 'should load new events even if you are scrolled up' test was sometimes
failing. It turned out that pagination *sometimes* wasn't starting soon enough
after setting the scrollTop, and awaitPaginationCompletion was incorrectly
believing it to have already been and gone.
Add an awaitScroll to make sure that we wait long enough for the pagination to
begin.