We have been struggling lately finding site settings due to 30 setting limit
This was introduced for performance reasons a while back but is no longer as
needed given that ember is faster.
Additionally searching is hard, so allow people to use fuzzy search against
setting name.
As part of another regression, we realized that the plugins tab is visible to moderators, but they cannot interact with anything inside without triggering authorization errors.
This change hides the plugin tab for non-admin users.
In some languages, labels on the site settings navigation menu
get truncated. This adds titles to menu items, so users can see
untruncated labels on hover.
Moving the `grantBadge` action out of the actions hash caused it to clash with a method of the same name from the GrantBadgeController mixin. This commit renames the action.
The implementation previously generated a descriptor with an `initializer()`, and bound the function to the `this` context of the initializer. In native class syntax, the initializer of a descriptor is only called once, with a `this` context of the constructor, not the instance.
This commit updates the implementation so that it generates the bound function on-demand using a getter. This is the same strategy employed by ember's built-in `@action` decorator.
Unfortunately, this use of a getter means that the `@observes` decorator does not support being directly chained to `@debounce`. It throws the error "`observer must be provided a function or an observer definition`". The workaround is to put the observer on its own function, which then calls the debounced function. Given that we're aiming to reduce our usage of `@observes`, we've accepted the need for this workaround rather than spending the time to patch the implementation of `@observes`.
Async, modern syntax, no `on()` component hooks, const extraction, sorted props, template tweaks, and a small filtering bugfix (filtering could throw errors after saving a category-selection setting)
This commit implements many changes to topic and comments embedding. It
deprecates the class_name field from EmbeddableHost and suggests using
the className parameter. discourse_username parameter has been
deprecated and it will fetch it from embedded site from the author or
discourse-username meta.
See the updated code sample from Admin > Customize > Embedding page.
* FEATURE: Add className parameter for Discourse embed
* DEV: Hide class_name from EmbeddableHost
* DEV: Deprecate class_name field of EmbeddableHost
* FEATURE: Use either author or discourse-username meta tag
* DEV: Deprecate discourse_username parameter
* DEV: Improve embed code sample
When installing themes using the "Install this theme component" button
on meta.discourse.org, we pass the repo name and URL via query params.
However, these stick. So if a user cancels the installation, on the
next navigation to the same route, they'll see the modal again.
This PR clears the query params of the controller when dismissing the
modal.
The JS component definition is in the admin bundle, but the template was in the main bundle. This was identified while attempting to colocate component templates in the discourse/app directory
This commits adds the ability to add a header to the embedded comments
view. One use case for this is to allow `postMessage` communication
between the comments iframe and the parent frame, for example, when
toggling the theme of the parent webpage.
In a private plugin, we need to show an error message containing HTML
when the Grant Admin action fails. This change introduces a new flag
(`html_message: true`) that when used will allow the dialog to render
the HTML tags in the error message correctly.
The `tagName` argument is now deprecated. This commit uses a codemod (https://github.com/discourse/discourse-ember-codemods/tree/main/transforms/extract-plugin-outlet-tagname) to automatically remove the `@tagName` from all PluginOutlet invocations, and create a matching wrapper element so that the HTML structure is unchanged. We may want to remove some/all of these wrappers entirely in future, but that would be a riskier change which we should tackle on a case-by-case basis.