* Initial commit of accept user during set password flow
* changed new org user from accepted to invited // moved another check to token accept function
* Revised some white space // Moved business logic to UserService
* Fixed UserServiceTest
* Removed some white-space
* Removed more white-space
* Final white-space issues
* facilitate linking/unlinking existing users from an sso enabled org
* added user_identifier to identity methods for sso
* moved sso user delete method to account controller
* fixed a broken test
* Update AccountsController.cs
* facilitate linking/unlinking existing users from an sso enabled org
* added user_identifier to identity methods for sso
* moved sso user delete method to account controller
* fixed a broken test
* added a token to the existing user sso link flow
* added a token to the existing user sso link flow
* fixed a typo
* added an event log for unlink ssoUser records
* fixed a merge issue
* fixed a busted test
* fixed a busted test
* ran a formatter over everything & changed .vscode settings in .gitignore
* chagned a variable to use string interpolation
* removed a blank line
* Changed TokenPurpose enum to a static class of strings
* code review cleanups
* formatting fix
* Changed parameters & logging for delete sso user
* changed th method used to get organization user for deleting sso user records
Co-authored-by: Kyle Spearrin <kspearrin@users.noreply.github.com>
Following the paradigms illustrated in "Working Effectively with Legacy
Code", this commit introduces at least one test for each service class
implementation. This test is a simple construction test -- we just
create each service and assert that it exists. Each test suite includes
a comment instructing the developer who comes next to remove the
constructor test. We don't want to keep these tests as the codebase
matures, as they aren't useful in the longterm. They only prove that we
have that class under test.
Where test suites failed to construct their associated classes, we skip
the test but leave behind the implementation. This is by design, so that
as the constructors for those classes change, we are forced to keep the
test suite current by leaning on the compiler.