Convertir modales de controladores legacy a la API del nuevo componente DModal

:information_source: If you’re implementing a new Modal, check out the main docs here. This topic describes how to migrate an existing controller-based Modal to the new Component-based API.

In the past, Discourse used an Ember-Controller-based API for rendering modals. To invoke the modal, you would pass a string with the name of the controller to showModal(). Under the covers, this made use of Ember’s Route#renderTemplate API, which is deprecated in Ember 3.x and will be removed in Ember 4.x.

To allow Discourse to upgrade to Ember 4.x and beyond, we’ve introduced a new component-based API for modals. This new API embraces Ember’s ‘declarative’ design patterns, and aims to provide clean DDAU (data down actions up) semantics.

Step 1: Move Files

Move the controller JS file and the template file to the /components/modal directory. This makes them a ‘colocated component’ which can be imported just like any other JS module.

Step 2: Update the JS file

Then, update the component JS definition to extend from @ember/component instead of @ember/controller [1]. Remove the ModalFunctionality mixin and update any uses of its functions according to the table below:

Before After
flash() and clearFlash() Create a flash property in your component and pass it to the @flash argument of <DModal>. By default the alert will be styled with the alert class which is a copy of the ‘error’ class, but it can be overridden using the @flashType argument.
showModal() Import the showModal function from discourse/lib/show-modal
closeModal action Invoke the closeModal argument which is automatically passed into your component

Old-style Modal Controllers would live ‘forever’, which meant we had to manually cleanup state. With the new Component-based API, the component will be created and destroyed when the modal is shown/hidden. In many cases that means your old lifecycle hooks are no longer required.

If you still need some lifecycle-based logic, use this table:

Before After
onShow() Use standard Ember component lifecycle (init() or Ember modifier)
afterRender Use standard Ember component lifecycle (init() or Ember modifier)
beforeClose() create a wrapper around the @closeModal argument which is passed into your component. Pass a reference to your close wrapper into DModal like <DModal @closeModal={{this.myCloseModalWrapper}}>
onClose() Use standard Ember component lifecycle (willDestroy() or Ember modifier)

Step 3: Update the Template

Replace the <DModalBody> wrapper with <DModal>. Add some new attributes:

  • Pass through the new @closeModal argument
  • Add an explicit class. To match the old behavior, take your controller filename and add -modal.

For example, if your modal controller was called close-topic.js, the new <DModal> invocation would look something like this:

<DModal @closeModal={{@closeModal}} class="close-topic-modal">

If the DModalBody invocation includes any other arguments, update them based on the table below:

Before After
@title="title_key" @title={{i18n "title_key"}}
@rawTitle="translated title" @title="translated title"
@subtitle="subtitle_key" @subtitle={{i18n "subtitle_key"}}
@rawSubtitle="translated subtitle" @subtitle="translated subtitle"
@class @bodyClass
@modalClass Use angle-bracket syntax with regular html attribute: <DModal class="blah">
@titleAriaElementId Use angle-bracket syntax with regular html attribute: <DModal aria-labelledby="blah">
@dismissable, @submitOnEnter, @headerClass Unchanged

If there was any footer content rendered after the old <DModalBody> component, use the new <:footer> named block to introduce it inside <DModal>. When using any named blocks, the body content should be wrapped in <:body></:body>. For example:

<DModal @closeModal={{@closeModal}}>
  <:body>
    Hello world, this is the content of the modal
  </:body>
  <:footer>
    This is the footer content. A `.modal-footer` wrapper will be added
    automatically
  </:footer>
</DModal>

Step 4: Update the showModal call sites

Previously, modals would be rendered using the showModal API, which would take a string (the controller name) and a number of opts. It would return an instance of the controller which could be manipulated:

import showModal from "discourse/lib/show-modal";

export default class extends Component {
  showMyModal() {
    const controller = showModal("my-modal", {
      title: "My Modal Title",
      modalClass: "my-modal-class",
      model: { topic: this.topic },
    });

    controller.set("updateTopic", this.updateTopic);
  });
}

To render new component-based Modals you should inject the ‘modal’ service (or access it using something like getOwner(this).lookup("service:modal")) and call the show() function.

show() takes a reference to the new Component class as the first argument. The only opt still supported is ‘model’, which can be used to pass all data/actions required for your Modal.

No reference to the component instance will be returned. Instead, show() returns a promise which will resolve when the modal is closed. The promise will resolve with any data which was passed to @closeModal.

import MyModal from "discourse/components/my-modal";
import { service } from "@ember/service";

export default class extends Component {
  @service modal;

  showMyModal() {
    this.modal.show(MyModal, {
      model: { topic: this.topic, updateTopic: this.updateTopic },
    });
  });
}

Alternatively, migrate to the declarative API described in the main DModal documentation.

The functionality of the old options can be replicated as follows:

Old showModal opt Solution
admin n/a for component - remove it
templateName n/a for components - remove it
title move to <DModal @title={{i18n "blah"}}>
titleTranslated move to <DModal @title="blah">. This could be computed based on data from model if needed
modalClass move to <DModal class="blah">
titleAriaElementId move to <DModal aria-labelledby="blah">
panels Use the <:headerBelowTitle> named block to implement tabs in your component (example)
model unchanged

Step 5: Tests

Any tests should largely remain the same. The most common issue are:

  • Modals no longer have a default class based on their name. Classes must be specified explicitly in the template (see beginning of Step 3)

  • The d-modal wrapper no longer persists in the DOM when the modal is closed. To check all modals are closed, use a check like assert.dom('.d-modal').doesNotExist()

Profit!

Your modal should now work as it did before. To take further advantage of the new API, you may want to consider replacing showModal calls with a declarative strategy, and converting your Modal to be a Glimmer component.

Examples

Here are some example commits which demonstrate converting some of Discourse core’s modals to the new API:


This document is version controlled - suggest changes on github.


  1. Classic Ember Components are recommended in this guide because they provided the easiest migration path from Ember Controllers. But for simple modals, or if you’re happy to spend some time refactoring, modern Glimmer components are the better choice. ↩︎

20 Me gusta

Esto se ve muy bien. Me da esperanza de que pueda convertir mis modales a Ember 4. Apenas entiendo el código de Ember que escribo, así que escribir documentación que pueda entender no es fácil. Muchas gracias por esto.

8 Me gusta

¡Gracias por el tutorial! Ver los ejemplos fue muy útil. Pude arreglar mi modal de plugin personalizado roto en una hora.

4 Me gusta

Estoy trabajando en esta conversión ahora mismo, pero me encuentro con un problema:

Anteriormente, nuestro modal no tenía un controlador/definición de JS correspondiente, y podíamos mostrar el modal a través de showModal($HBS_FILE_NAME). Dado que el nuevo show() requiere que se pase un componente, necesito introducir esta definición de JS (¿es esta una suposición correcta?).

Agregué algo como:

import Component from '@glimmer/component';

export default class SomeModal extends Component {

  constructor() {
    super(...arguments);
    console.log('Modal constructor')
  }
}

y tengo el archivo .hbs anterior (con los cambios necesarios en DModal) tanto en el directorio /components/modal con el mismo nombre de archivo. Al intentar renderizar el modal (a través de getOwner(this).lookup("service:modal").show(SomeModal)), veo mi registro del constructor impreso en la consola, pero el modal no se renderiza.

¿Se necesita alguna otra configuración en el controlador/definición de JS para este cambio? ¡Cualquier orientación sería muy apreciada!

No lo necesitas si no vas a añadir ningún código.

Puedes tener solo el archivo .hbs.

discourse-templates, por ejemplo, no tiene un archivo JS correspondiente para la plantilla handlebars del modal.

¿Adaptaste tu plantilla handlebars siguiendo las instrucciones?

¿Hay algún error en la consola?

2 Me gusta

¡Gracias por tus comentarios! Un enorme :facepalm: de mi parte, había movido los archivos al directorio .../discourse/templates/components/modal, en lugar de .../discourse/components/modal. Ahora todo funciona como se esperaba (con o sin el controlador .js), ¡gracias!

3 Me gusta

¿Podrías mostrarme cómo llamar a showModal() desde un script dentro de un archivo head_tag.html? En mi caso, necesito usar

document.querySelector(".actions .double-button .toggle-like");

para capturar el evento de clic, verificar la condición y luego mostrar un modal personalizado.

1 me gusta

¡Realmente aprecio el esfuerzo que hiciste aquí para documentar esto tan claramente, David!

He logrado eliminar casi todas las deprecaciones para 3.2 en una tarde en nuestro plugin más grande.

3 Me gusta

¿Cómo se accede ahora a una ventana modal existente en core para modificarla?

En el pasado, usé esto (que ya no funciona):
api.modifyClass("controller:poll-ui-builder", {

En este caso particular, el nombre de la clase parece estar bien declarado y sin cambios.

2 Me gusta

Dependiendo de lo que necesites modificar, creo que la mejor solución sería usar un PluginOutlet para inyectar tu código personalizado, o un PluginOutlet Wrapper para reemplazar/mostrar condicionalmente la implementación principal. (Puedes enviar una PR para añadir un outlet si no está disponible).

Si realmente quieres usar modifyClass, todavía debería ser posible, es solo que el modal es ahora un componente y está anidado en components/modal, por lo que accederías a él así:

api.modifyClass("component:modal/poll-ui-builder", {
   pluginId: "tu-plugin-personalizado-id",

   // inserta código personalizado
});
4 Me gusta