Replace the fleet-maintained app record for "iMazing Profile Editor" with the full "iMazing" app. Deleted the old input file and added a new input for imazing; renamed output paths and updated app metadata (bundle identifier, slug, categories). Bumped version to 3.5.2 and updated installer URL, install/uninstall script refs and SHA256. Updated frontend icon mapping and website routes to point to the new imazing slug, and adjusted fleet configs: workstation software slug, dynamic label query, and macOS patch policy to reference imazing/darwin and the new bundle identifier. <!-- This is an auto-generated comment: release notes by coderabbit.ai --> ## Summary by CodeRabbit * **New Features** * iMazing application (v3.5.2) now replaces iMazing Profile Editor with improved capabilities and enhanced functionality. * Application category updated from Developer tools to Utilities for better organization and discoverability. * **Updates** * Updated deployment configurations, system routes, and management policies to support iMazing across all managed environments and platforms. <!-- end of auto-generated comment: release notes by coderabbit.ai --> |
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| .editorconfig | ||
| .eslintignore | ||
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| .npmrc | ||
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| app.js | ||
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| README.md | ||
fleetdm.com
This is where the code for the public https://fleetdm.com website lives.
Bugs
To report a bug or make a suggestion for the website, create an issue in the fleet GitHub repository.
Testing locally
See https://fleetdm.com/handbook/engineering#test-fleetdm-com-locally
Deploying the website
To deploy changes to the website to production, merge changes to the main branch. If the changes affect the website's code, or touch any files that the website relies on to build content, such as the query library, osquery schema, docs, handbook, articles, etc., then the website will be redeployed.
Wondering how this works? This is implemented in a GitHub action in this repo. Check out the code there to see how it works! For help understanding what
sails runandnpm runcommands in there do, check the scripts inwebsite/package.jsonand inwebsite/scripts/.
Changing the database schema
To deploy new code to production that relies on changes to the database schema or other external systems (e.g. Stripe), first put the website in "maintenance mode" in Heroku. Then, make your changes in the database schema. Next, if you have a script to fix/migrate existing data, go ahead and run it now. (e.g. sails run fix-or-migrate-existing-data). Then, merge your changes and wait for the deploy to finish. Finally, switch off "maintenance mode" in Heroku.
Note that entering maintenance mode prevents visitors from using the website, so it should be used sparingly, and ideally at low-traffic times of day.
Warning: Doing an especially sensitive schema migration? There is a potential timing issue to consider, thanks to an infrastructure change that eliminated downtime during deploys by using Heroku's built-in support for hot-swapping. Read more in https://github.com/fleetdm/fleet/issues/6568#issuecomment-1211503881
Wiping the production database
I hope you know what you're doing. The "easiest" kind of database schema migration:
sails_datastores__default__url='REAL_DB_URI_HERE' sails run wipe
Then when you see the sailboat, hit CTRL+C to exit. All done!