- Seed the General category so that the general chat channel will have
a home
- Do not seed the Lounge category anymore
- Move the "Welcome to Site" topic to the General category
This commit makes a number of improvements to the DiscourseJsProcessor:
1. Remove dependence on the out-of-date Ember template compiler from the ember-rails gem; switch to modern template compiler
2. Refactor to make use of a proper module system with `define`/`require`
3. Introduce `babel-plugin-ember-template-compilation` to enable inline hbs compilation
The `mini-loader` is upgraded to support relative lookup and `require.has`, so that these new JS packages work correctly.
We were already compiling the markdown bundle via ember-cli, but that version was only being used in the test environment. This commit improves the implementation, and updates the filename so it's also used in production.
This commit also
- Removes the vendored copy of `markdown-it.js` and fetches from node_modules instead
- Updates `pretty_text.rb` to remove the custom sprockets-manifest-parsing
- Removes `pretty-text-bundle.js`, which was only being used by `pretty_text.rb`
This adds a new framework for accessible dialogs that will eventually replace bootbox. Under the hood, it uses the a11y-dialog package and an in-repo Ember addon. See PR for usage details.
If a topic is converted to a private message, all posters were invited
to the new private message. This included users who only whispered or
posted small actions.
The old logic did not make sense and hid the selector from regular users
even if they could tag PMs or showed selector for admins even if they
could not tag PMs.
The preload key was changed in e7a84948b9 but this location was missed. This caused an extra AJAX request and left the cached topic list in the PreloadStore, which would then be accidentally used when navigating to the next topic-list route.
Topic allowed user records were created for small actions, which lead to
the system user being invited in many private topics when the user
removed themselves or if a group was invited but some members already
had access.
This commits skips creating topic allowed user. They are already skipped
for the whisper posts.
If a user was granted a trust level, joined a group that granted a trust
level and left the group, the trust level was reset. This commit tries
to restore the last known trust level before joining the group by
looking into staff logs.
This commit also migrates old :change_trust_level user history records
to use previous_value and new_value fields.
This commit extends the plugin API introduced in 40fd82e2d1 to the `Bookmark` and `Notification` models. It also refactors the code that's responsible for loading items in the experimental menu to use `async`...`await` instead of `Promise`s.
This API allows plugins to transform a list of model objects before they're rendered in the UI. At the moment, this API is limited to items/lists of the experimental user menu, but it may be extended in the future to other parts of the app.
Additional context can be found in https://github.com/discourse/discourse/pull/18046.
The previous sprockets implementation was including admin-specific JS in the plugin's main JS file, which would be served to all users regardless of admin status. This commit achieves the same result under the ember-cli plugin asset compiler with one difference: the admin js is compiled into a separate file. That means that in future, we'll be able to make it loaded only for admins. For now though, it's loaded for everyone, just like before.
When preloading topic_list data we were giving it a 'preload key' which was loosely based on the parameters of the list. However, it did not include all parameters, and mismatches between client/server-side logic would cause the preloaded data to be ignored.
This commit simplifies things by using a single key for all topic_list preloading. This works on the assumption that "The first topic_list the JS app will load is the one which was preloaded". That assumption also existed to some extent in the old design, so we don't expect any regressions here.