If a note is created with a POST request via API (`/projects/:id/notes`) status
code 400 is returned instead of 404. The resource itself exists but the request
is incomplete. Specs added to check different status codes when accessing, creating
and updating notes.
If a milestone is created via API but no title given then status code 400 (Bad request)
is returned instead of 404. A small helper method handles the errors collection of a
milestone.
Creating a comment to an existing merge request via API without providing a note
returns a status code 400 now, suggesting a bad request. The reason for this
is the resource itself (MR) exists but the required property is not set.
Using the API library to create or update a merge request at the moment a 404 error is returned.
This is fine when the merge request in question does not exist, but does not provide good
information that for example a required attribute is missing.
A status code of 400 (Bad request) is returned when creating or updating a merge request
when either `source_branch` or `target_branch` is missing. A status code of 409 is returned
when `source_branch` and `target_branch` are the same. Tests are added for these cases.
The attempt to revoke project access for a user that was not member of the
project results in a 500 Internal Server error where it actually should
result in a 200 OK since after the operation, the user is not member of
the project. This turns the operation into an idempotent call that can
be repeated with no ill effects.
Updated the spec and changed the code accordingly. However, the result differs
slightly, as we can't return the users project access level if the user was not
member. I'm not aware if anybody relies on the result of this call.
Fixes#2832
In case we rescue from a fatal error, we want the error and the backtrace to
the error logged, so we can debug later on. This change injects the configured
logger from the rails app to the grape API and logs error as well as backtrace
in a rails-like fashion.
A new queue of "project_web_hook" is used to process web hooks asynchronously, allowing each to succeed/fail (and be retried) independently.
(Basically, project web hooks now process the same as system hooks.)