This uses the `hasPassword` value to render a password placeholder in edit mode.
The placeholder will indicate to the user that a password is present, but will not allow to show the password.
- addressed AI comments
- fix tab indexing
- added username to the title of Remove user modal
- ensured "Invalid password" is not in the errors object before a password is filled in
- removing a user with empty user, password and ssh key fields does not prompt "Remove user" modal
- check for duplicate username
- focus on new user tab
- remove redundant tabIndex
This adds support for multiple users in the Wizard. The users are rendered in tabs and can be both added and removed. When clicking on remove button, modal pops up to inform user that the changes cannot be undone.
Neither password nor SSH keys are further required, making it possible to create a user with just a username.
Removing/adding some periods for the sake of consistency.
I believe the description of the step should end with a period, helped texts and options should not (at least that's the prevailing pattern in the Wizard as of now).
The Intercom team has some ideas about helping new users determine which
security profile is right for them. Tracking differentiates between
"vanilla" OpenSCAP and Compliance so that any messages from Intercom can
be targeted.
Adds a Hostname customization test that creates a BP, edits BP, exports and imports it back and verifies the BP content.
This test also servers as a template for other customization tests. Includes a refactor of existing helper functions.
resourceGroup is used in useEffect, so if assigned a new array to it
every time this function is called, it would cause the useEffect to run
every time, leading to an infinite loop. This is because useEffect uses
Object.is to determine if the value has changed, and [] creates a new
array every time. Thus, we use a constant empty array to avoid this
issue.
Alternatively JSON.stringify(resourceGroup), or a deep comparison could
be used as a useEffect dependency, but that feels like just a waste
of resources.
Since we support pem, cer, and der, we'd have to validate against each
of these on the frontend. Let's just check that the file is not empty,
and leave this upto users. On top of that, concatenated certificates are
supported, validating that would be too much. This commit also switches
token expiration error into a warning.
The jwt decode dependency helps us to keep track of the token that is
present in the Satellite command. jwt-decode is the most popular
dependency for the job, and very easy to use.
This Popover will inform users that despite being available in Insights
Image Builder in production, the WSL images for RHEL are not officially
supported by Red Hat.
The AWS regions indicator that is currently baked into each row
containing an AWS image is currently off by one due to incorrect
parentheses in the code.
This is now fixed, so it displays '(1)' when there is one region (which
is the default, us-east-1) instead of '(0)' which was both wrong and
confusing.