This is fixed.
While working in a related area, I identified the likely causes of the problem by almost accidentally making happen more frequently and in a more predictable way.
As it turns out, we have two calls to action for the survey[1], one in the banner and one that lives as a popover on the bottom of the page (technically, and importantly for our case, in the left nav).
The page when constructed looks something like this:
<div class="js-survey-thing" data-cookie-info="...">BANNER</div>
...
<div class="left-nav">
<div class="js-survey-thing">POPOVER</div>
</div>
The code for wiring the UI looked like this:
var $notice = $('.js-survey-thing');
var cookieInfo = $notice.data('cookieInfo');
$notice.each(configureNotice);
function configureNotice() {
...
}
I ran into some trouble when refactoring the code to look closer to this:
$('.js-survey-thing').each(configureNotice);
function configureNotice() {
var $notice = $(this);
var cookieInfo = $notice.data('cookieInfo');
...
}
Since the popover CTA didn't have data-cookie-info
, the code for configuring the sidebar failed to retrieve the cookie information and wrote the dismissed state to an unnamed cookie.
A similar thing would happen and trigger this bug's behavior if the DOM looked like this when the configuration JavaScript ran:
<div class="left-nav">
<div class="js-survey-thing">POPOVER</div>
</div>
...
<div class="js-survey-thing" data-cookie-info="...">BANNER</div>
In this case $('.js-survey-thing').data('cookieInfo');
returns null (or undefined?) because data
returns the contents of the data attribute from the first element it encounters.
So, do we ever enter a state where the DOM looks like this when the JavaScript runs, and do we do it in a limited set of circumstances that would make it unlikely for developers to repro, causing months of confusion and frustration for the entire public platform team?
Yes, we do!
If you look at your screen recording, you see that you don't have a popover in the lower left corner of the screen and you don't have a left navigation of any kind. Instead you have a hamburger menu in the top corner of your screen which brings up the left navigation in a dialog. This dialog lives inside the topbar element above the survey banner. The code that moves the element there fires before we call the survey code, so dismissing the banner never writes to the right place.
This hamburger menu behavior is configured by a user preference. Of course, very few users have this setting turned on and no one had it turned on in their local environments, so we would get infrequent but persistent bug reports that we were never able to reproduce. The moral here? Every conditional increases complexity? Complex systems fail in complex ways? Never rule out the frontend?
My fix was to make sure both survey CTAs had the required data attributes and continue with my refactoring of the UI code. There's obvious performance costs here, partially offset by gzip compression, but it improves the resilience to this kind of issue.
Hopefully this was the true root cause and we don't see it reported again next month.
[1] It seems odd that we have two on the page at the same time, but it turns out to be surprisingly effective at driving completion with different user types.