Prior to this commit, we had a default Glimmer component that was responsible for handling generic rendering of notifications in the user menu, and many notification types had a custom Glimmer component that inherited from the default component to customize how they were rendered. That implementation was less than ideal because it meant plugins would have to create Glimmer components to customize notification types added by them and that would make the surface area of the API too big.
This commit changes the implementation so there's only one Glimmer component for rendering notifications, and then notification types that need to be customized can create a regular JavaScript class - `renderDirector` in the code - that provides the Glimmer component with the content it should display. We also introduce an API for plugins to register a renderer for a notification type or override an existing one.
Some of the changes are partially extracted from https://github.com/discourse/discourse/pull/17379.
This will allow consumers to inject it using `topicTrackingState: service()` in preparation for the removal of implicit injections in Ember 4.0. `topic-tracking-state:main` is still available and will print a deprecation notice.
Ideally we would convert topic-tracking-state into a true service, rather than registering a model instance into the registry. However, inter-dependencies between service injections make this very difficult to achieve. We don't want to block Glimmer Component work, so this commit does the minimum for now.
When the route of the link is equal to the active route, we promote it
out of the "more..." links drawer and display it directly under the
community section. This commit fixes a bug where the secondary links in
the "more..." links drawer was not being marked as active.
Follow-up to e09fd7cde2
This commit extends the existing API bridge for supporting custom
general links in the old hamburger menu in Sidebar to support custom
footer links. Custom footer links can be added to the old hamburger
menu via the `api.decorateWidget("hamburger-menu:footerLinks")` API.
Footer links are added into the secondary section of the "More..." links
drawer in the Community section of the sidebar.
In the current hamburger menu dropdown, we have a link which allows users to toggle between mobile and desktop view on mobile and touch devices. This commit brings the same behaviour to sidebar.
Follow-up to ce9eec8606.
When the review-index route is entered, we listen to the `/reviewable_counts` (or `/reviewable_counts/<user_id>` when the new user menu is enabled) channel so we can listen for changes to reviewables and update the UI accordingly. However, we currently don't unsubscribe when leaving the route which means each time the route is entered, we setup a new listener causing the browser to do unnecessary work and potentially state leakage.
This will allow consumers to inject it using `site: service()` in preparation for the removal of implicit injections in Ember 4.0. `site:main` is still available and will print a deprecation notice.
Now that we have a "more..." links drawer, we can move some of the links
in footer into the links drawer. The footer itself does not have much
horizontal or vertical space for us to work with and hence limits the
amount of links which we can add to it.
Before this commit, links with routes that require multiple models were
incorrectly displayed as the active link in the
Sidebar::MoreSectionLinks component because we were only checking if the
routeName was active.
This will allow consumers to inject it using `session: service()` in preparation for the removal of implicit injections in Ember 4.0. `session:main` is still available and will print a deprecation notice.
Follow up to 4d3c1ceb44, this commit
shows the SMTP response in the admin email sent list and also moves the
topic/post link into a new column. Reply key is now in its own column.
This commit reverts partially https://github.com/discourse/discourse/pull/17543.
Service appEvents was not being injected in ScreenTrack. This causes
`this.appEvents.trigger("topic:timings-sent", data);` to fail and the error is
swallowed by the `catch` on the promise.
This caused a regression on plugins that rely on this event to implement other
behaviors.
This will allow consumers to inject it using `currentUser: service()` in preparation for the removal of implicit injections in Ember 4.0. `current-user:main` is still available and will print a deprecation notice.
Previously we were preventing circular dependencies by looking up the service before adding it as an injection for future-initialized services. This works, but it means that the order of service injection is important, and we cannot have two services auto-injected into each other.
This commit takes a different approach. It removes the `lookup`, and instead adds a dummy injection which prevents the service being injected into itself during initialization. This allows us to have circular auto-imports, without breaking the injection resolver by injecting a service into itself.
Having them all in one place is much easier to reason with. It also means we can handle them without needing 'fake' registrations (which can sometimes cause odd behavior). This commit just moves the deprecation logic - it does not introduce any new deprecations.
* FEATURE: Add case-sensitivity flag to watched_words
Currently, all watched words are matched case-insensitively. This flag
allows a watched word to be flagged for case-sensitive matching.
To allow allow for backwards compatibility the flag is set to false by
default.
* FEATURE: Support case-sensitive creation of Watched Words via API
Extend admin creation and upload of Watched Words to support case
sensitive flag. This lays the ground work for supporting
case-insensitive matching of Watched Words.
Support for an extra column has also been introduced for the Watched
Words upload CSV file. The new column structure is as follows:
word,replacement,case_sentive
* FEATURE: Enable case-sensitive matching of Watched Words
WordWatcher's word_matcher_regexp now returns a list of regular
expressions instead of one case-insensitive regular expression.
With the ability to flag a Watched Word as case-sensitive, an action
can have words of both sensitivities.This makes the use of the global
Regexp::IGNORECASE flag added to all words problematic.
To get around platform limitations around the use of subexpression level
switches/flags, a list of regular expressions is returned instead, one for each
case sensitivity.
Word matching has also been updated to use this list of regular expressions
instead of one.
* FEATURE: Use case-sensitive regular expressions for Watched Words
Update Watched Words regular expressions matching and processing to handle
the extra metadata which comes along with the introduction of
case-sensitive Watched Words.
This allows case-sensitive Watched Words to matched as such.
* DEV: Simplify type casting of case-sensitive flag from uploads
Use builtin semantics instead of a custom method for converting
string case flags in uploaded Watched Words to boolean.
* UX: Add case-sensitivity details to Admin Watched Words UI
Update Watched Word form to include a toggle for case-sensitivity.
This also adds support for, case-sensitive testing and matching of Watched Word
in the admin UI.
* DEV: Code improvements from review feedback
- Extract watched word regex creation out to a utility function
- Make JS array presence check more explicit and readable
* DEV: Extract Watched Word regex creation to utility function
Clean-up work from review feedback. Reduce code duplication.
* DEV: Rename word_matcher_regexp to word_matcher_regexp_list
Since a list is returned now instead of a single regular expression,
change `word_matcher_regexp` to `word_matcher_regexp_list` to better communicate
this change.
* DEV: Incorporate WordWatcher updates from upstream
Resolve conflicts and ensure apply_to_text does not remove non-word characters in matches
that aren't at the beginning of the line.
In the old `decorateWidget("hamburger-menu:generalLinks", callbackFn)`
API, the return value of the callback function can either return a
`route` or `href`. The API bridge added in
de54bdd73d supported `route` but not `href` and
hence the need for this commit.
The old hamburger menu widget was customizable via the
`api.decorateWidget("hamburger-menu:generalLinks")` plugin API. As the
hamburger menu is going to be replaced by the sidebar dropdown, we need
a way to smoothly transit plugins and theme components to the new
sidebar. This commit makes a best effort attempt to bridge
`api.decorateWidget` with `api.addCommunitySectionLink`. If an error is
encountered, a deprecation notice is logged.
This will allow consumers to inject it using `siteSettings: service()` in preparation for the removal of implicit injections in Ember 4.0. `site-settings:main` is still available and will print a deprecation notice.