Every time the password reset form was loaded, the form submit event
listener was attached to a non-disposable DOM node rather than the DOM
node whose life scope was bound to the viewed page. As such, submitting
the form, leaving the page, returning back to it and sending the request
again caused the 'submit' event to fire twice - one time from the
non-disposed event handler and one from the current handler. This
resulted in the request being sent twice, and getting two confirmation
messages on the screen.
Fortunately, since the password reset requests are GET requests, they're
intercepted by the internal cache of the client API facade, so the
client just saw duplicate messages without the requests being actually
sent to the backend - meaning no extra mails were sent.
- Controller lifetime is bound to route lifetime
- View lifetime is bound to controller lifetime
- Control lifetime is bound to view lifetime
- Enhanced event dispatching
- Enhanced responsiveness in some places
- Views communicate user input to controllers via new event system
- Move controls to the "controls/" directory
- Make controls interface look similar to each other
- Prefix "private" methods and attributes with underscore
This commit introduces timer-less retry system:
1. Any change to URL is going to stop listening to any messages.
2. If a message is sent and there's no handler that could pick it up,
the message gets enqueued.
3. The message is sent again to the first handler that attaches itself
to given event type.
While in theory this is full of holes (no control over the first
handler), in practice, it works quite well.
Additionally, views.listenToMessages was attaching to completely wrong
DOM node; this commit fixes this as well.