Previously, we were checking that a CSS selector string didn't have some
page-related content, which, of course it didn't.
Now we check against the actual content of the selector, we use a more
semantic selector, and we add an additional expectation for the text
that _should_ be there, as an additional sanity check.
A user viewing the TODOs page will see a 404 if there are mentioned labels
in multiple different projects. This is likely a caching bug and only occurs
when Markdown rendering occurs across multiple projects, which is why it's so
tricky to reproduce. This is what I think is happening:
1. LabelReferenceFilter#references_in encounters label ~X for ProjectA and finds the label in the DB as id = 1.
2. LabelReferenceFilter.references_in yields [1, 'X', nil, ...]
3. Since project_ref is nil, AbstractReferenceFilter#project_from_ref_cache caches nil => ProjectA.
4. LabelReferenceFilter#references_in encounters label ~Y for ProjectB and finds the label in the DB as id = 2.
5. LabelReferenceFilter.references_in yields [2, 'Y', nil, ...]
6. AbstractReferenceFilter#project_from_ref_cache lookups nil and returns ProjectA. It was supposed to be ProjectB.
7. A is the wrong project, so the label lookup fails.
This MR caches Markdown references if the key is present.
Closes#17898
We now only create two Todos instead of 21 when testing pagination, and
we've updated the test to be less brittle when dealing with slower CI
environments.