Schema:
- add account_id to tables it was missing from
- make account_id a required column everywhere
- add [account_id] indexes, or add `account_id` to existing indices
Models:
- add `belongs_to :account` to all models (default to using a domain
model's account whenever possible)
- add account_id in all the necessary fixtures
- add account_id to insert_all hashes
- pass account_id to a few initialize calls
Miscellaneous:
- update the import script to set account_id
Note that I'm not adding account_id to the join tables primarily
because I couldn't think of an easy way to populate it without making
it a full Join model, and that was more work than I have time to take
on right now.
These are mainly because the fixture's UUIDs are deterministic rather
than time-sortable, and more places where we need to correct the fixture
IDs as well.
* Bind sessions to identities
* Remove references to the identity token
* Move email changes to identity
* Move account menu into a turbo-frame
* Create tenants from a tenanted route
This is the first step of a multi-step SaaS engine extraction.
Looking ahead to an open source release, we need to make sure that
local authentication is treated as an "official" option, and not just
a hack I added for Kevin to do load testing outside our DC. So this PR
gets to green, and adds a CI step in "local authentication" mode.
This all probably feels a little hacky to you, Reader, but the goal of
this change is to ease the next step, which will be extracting the
37id and Queenbee integrations into a proprietary "SaaS mode" engine.
In service of that goal, this commit simply wraps all of the dependent
code and tests with a conditional check on
`config.x.local_authentication`.
The access involvement changes exposed that this test wasn't doing what it said it was. For this to be a self-assignment the event creator and assignee need to be the same