This PR adds the first use of Uppy in our codebase, hidden behind a enable_experimental_image_uploader site setting. When the setting is enabled only the user card background uploader will use the new uppy-image-uploader component added in this PR.
I've introduced an UppyUpload mixin that has feature parity with the existing Upload mixin, and improves it slightly to deal with multiple/single file distinctions and validations better. For now, this just supports the XHRUpload plugin for uppy, which keeps our existing POST to /uploads.json.
This PR adds uppy to the project with a custom JS build and the shims needed to import it into our JS code. We need a custom build of Uppy because we do not use webpack for our JS modules/build. The only way to get what you want from Uppy is to use the webpack modules or to include the entire Uppy project including all plugins in a single JS file. This way we can just use the plugins we actually want. Future PRs will actually use Uppy!
It's been awhile since we have supported IE11 so it should be safe to remove
IntersectionObserver now.
From a TODO task in this repo:
> drop when we eventually drop IE11
Announcement of when we removed IE11 support:
https://meta.discourse.org/t/137984/40?u=blake
Highlight.js changed their default branch from master to main. This switches to the @highlightjs/cdn-assets package, thus sidestepping the problem. It's a slightly cleaner integration though (no need to build locally anymore).
To prevent opaque cache files, now all the CDN files will be requested in 'cors' mode if the cdn_cors_enabled global setting is enabled. Before enabling the setting, should enable the cors in the CDN server by adding the response header `access-control-allow-origin: *` or `access-control-allow-origin: https://discourse.example.com.`
And other external file requests other than CDN will not be cached if the response type is opaque.
This moves the library into our lib folder, and refactored it to more
modern Javascript. I've kept the MIT license at the top of the file.
Doing this allows us to import it as a library in Ember CLI and ditch
yet another global variable.
We updated version of moment and moment-timezone as our current versions are outdated making Discourse Dates broken on places where timezone had updates, like here in Brazil.
This also update highlightJS to the latest version and corrected a test that relied on a no longer supported locale in
moment.
This reverts commit e3de45359f.
We need to improve out strategy by adding a cache breaker with this change ... some assets on CDNs and clients may have incorrect CORS headers which can cause stuff to break.
* DEV: Don't lint core files when target == plugins
* Prettier the plugin/*.js files
* Update eslintignore/prettierignore
* Add eslint-plugin-ember and eslint-plugin-node
* Properly lint all js files in all plugins
* LINT: run prettier on test/*.js files
* DEV: Run prettier checks on test/*.js files
* ESLint plugins' assets/javascripts and test/javascripts directories only
The poll breakdown modal replaces the grouped pie charts feature.
Includes:
* MODAL: Untangle `onSelectPanel`
Previously modal-tab component would call on click the onSelectPanel callback with itself (modal-tab) as `this` which severely limited its usefulness. Now showModal binds the callback to its controller.
"The PR includes a fix/change to d-modal (b7f6ec6) that hasn't been extracted to a separate PR because it's not currently possible to test a change like this in abstract, i.e. with dynamically created controllers/components in tests. The percentage/count toggle test for the poll breakdown feature is essentially a test for that d-modal modification."
Update sinon.js to 9.0.2 to access async fake timers https://sinonjs.org/releases/v9.0.2/fake-timers/ which can then be used with acceptance tests (previously useFakeTimers didn't work with await, e.g. for visit).
Fix the bookmark acceptance test that was time based to use these new fake timers.
Add a fakeTime function that uses moment and the provided date string + timezone to freeze time using useFakeTimers and return a clock.
Add a timeStep function that accepts a clock from fakeTime and a function to run. Once the function is run we call clock.tickAsync(1000) to progress the fake clock forward 1s to progress promises/callbacks.
This is to help with the migration to Ember CLI. In the current running
version of Discourse everything should be the same as before, just with
a few extra files that are not used. However, using Ember CLI this can
be installed as an Ember addon.
Co-Authored-By: Jarek Radosz <jradosz@gmail.com>