Theme javascript is now minified using Terser, just like our core/plugin JS bundles. This reduces the amount of data sent over the network.
This commit also introduces sourcemaps for theme JS. Browser developer tools will now be able show each source file separately when browsing, and also in backtraces.
For theme test JS, the sourcemap is inlined for simplicity. Network load is not a concern for tests.
Previously, compiling theme 'extra_js' was done with a number of steps. Each theme_field would be compiled into its own value_baked column, and then the JavascriptCache content would be built by concatenating all of those compiled values.
This commit streamlines things by removing the value_baked step. The raw value of all extra_js theme_fields are passed directly to the ThemeJavascriptCompiler, and then the result is stored in the JavascriptCache.
In itself, this commit should not cause any behavior change. It is designed to open the door to more advanced compilation features which have interdependencies between different source files (e.g. template colocation, sourcemaps).
On sites that were seeded with a general category id and that category
was deleted prior to the fix in efb116d2bd
this migration will reset the SiteSetting.general_category_id back to
the default because there is no longer a corresponding category for it.
This is to fix a composer bug that occurs if there is a
SiteSetting.general_category_id value present that doesn't match an
existing category.
Normally, arguments passed to components are lazily evaluated. `get prefixElementColors` will only be evaluated for `@prefixType="span"`. However, when using the Ember Inspector in development, arguments are eagerly evaluated and their values displayed in the inspector. Therefore we need to make sure that getters can always be evaluated without exceptions being thrown.
This allows plugins to colocate component JS and HBS under `/plugins/{name}/assets/javascripts/discourse/components`.
`discourse-presence` is updated to use this new pattern, which also serves as an integration test for this part of the build pipeline.
Ember's default resolver only looks for components/services/etc. which are namespaced under the app's `modulePrefix` (`discourse`, in our case). To use addon components/services/etc., the addon must re-export them in its `app/` directory.
In order to support plugins, our custom resolver does a 'suffix match'. This has an unintended side-effect of matching things which are not part of the discourse app or themes/plugins. We've come to rely on this for a few in-repo addons like `select-kit`, `admin` and `wizard`.
This unrestricted 'suffix matching' can cause some very unexpected behaviour. For example, the ember-inspector browser extension has a module called `ember_debug/service/session`. When looking up `service:session`, our resolver was choosing that third-party service over our own Session service. This means Discourse fails to boot when the Ember Inspector is open.
This commit restricts the 'suffix matching' to a known set of namespaces. This brings us one step closer to the default Ember Resolver implementation, and reduces the chance of unexpected behaviour like the ember-inspector issue.
This commit also updates the `dialog-holder` addon to export its service under the app directory, so that we don't need to account for it in the resolver. We may want to consider doing the same for things like `select-kit` and `truth-helpers`, but is beyond the scope of this commit.
Displays a sidebar section link to admin users when
`default_sidebar_categories` site setting has not been configured for the
site.
Internal Ref: /t/73500
RS256 was added for Windows Hello and as a side effect we speculatively added
RS384 and RS512. These ciphers were not tested and are now failing on solo
keys. It may be the case that the ciphers are not configured correctly on
our side. It may be the case that this is a Solo key bug.
Regardless, we are removing the ciphers and will only consider adding them
again if absolutely needed.
Tab order acts strangely in Chrome when the last focusable element in a
modal is a radio group: it switches focus to the address bar. This is a
problem, because for keyboard users, it becomes very hard to return to
the previous context.
This PR adds a focusable "Cancel" button, whose mere presence fixes the
issue.
The previous implementation would attempt to fetch groups using the end-user's Google auth token. This only worked for admin accounts, or users with 'delegated' access to the `admin.directory.group.readonly` API.
This commit changes the approach to use a single 'service account' for fetching the groups. This removes the need to add permissions to all regular user accounts. I'll be updating the [meta docs](https://meta.discourse.org/t/226850) with instructions on setting up the service account.
This is technically a breaking change in behavior, but the existing implementation was marked experimental, and is currently unusable in production google workspace environments.