* CI: Leave log level at INFO for frontend tests
* CI: Disable frontend admin tests for non-admin workflow
* CI: Disable import/export rate limiting for frontend tests
* tests: fix importexport tests
The testing approach was redone to fix numerous issues:
* Even if the tests had been working, none of them would have caught
https://github.com/ether/etherpad-lite/issues/4808 because they
didn't exercise the client-side import logic. Now they do.
* Follow-up logic was not in the `helper.waitFor()` callback like it
should have been. Now the code uses `async` and `await` to ensure
proper execution order.
* All `$.ajax()` calls used `async: false`. Now they're properly
asynchronous.
* The `helper.waitFor()` condition callbacks threw instead of
returning false.
* The string comparisons didn't allow for different attribute
order (e.g., `<ol start="1" class="list-number1">` vs. `<ol
class="list-number1" start="1">`). Now `Node.isEqualNode()` is
used to reduce fragility. (`Node.isEqualNode()` is not perfect, so
the tests are still a bit fragile: If class names or style strings
are in a different order then `Node.isEqualNode()` will return
false even if the nodes are semantically equivalent.)
Co-authored-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@rhansen.org>
Co-authored-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@rhansen.org>
I'm not sure how these tests ever worked. I guess some version of
Node.js and npm come pre-installed on the ubuntu-latest images?
I would have prefered to use Node.js v10 because that is our current
minimum supported version, but we have a surprising number of tests
that don't work on Node.js v10 (mostly due to `assert.match()`, which
was added in Node.js v12).
Travis placed an unnecessary breaking restriction on our tests and failed to respond within 72 hours to our complaint. This has forced us to introduce Github Actions to manage our testing. This is hopefully a temporary measure while Travis either gets itself together or we find a non-Github requirement.