Before this commit chat was applying a fixed height on everything under the `/chat` route. It's only really needed on the channel page with the composer at the bottom of the page.
This commits makes the following changes:
- moves height limitation from `#main-outlet-wrapper` to `.chat-channel`
- makes browse channel page and members list page full height and rely on main document scrollbar
- adds height computation for draft header and direct message creator block to ensure the height is correct when creating a draft channel
- makes chat index full height to rely on the browser scrollbar. As a result the <kbd> + </kbd> button used on mobile to create a direct message as been moved out of `<ChannelsList>` into the chat index template
- sidebar height was relying on chat setting a max height, as a result the height computation of sidebar has been changed to work correctly, especially with an opened keyboard on mobile or ipad
Watched words were converted to regular expressions containing \W, which
handled only ASCII characters. Using [^[:word]] instead ensures that
UTF-8 characters are also handled correctly.
What is the problem?
The main problem here is that we were incorrectly registering the same `onStateChange` callback with `TopicTrackingState`
each time a user reads a post. When a user reads a post, the state in `TopicTrackingState` is updated and it triggers all
the `onStateChange` callbacks which have been registered. In the `CommunitySection` class, we register a callback which
would then call the `onTopicTrackingStateChange` method for each link in the class. For the `EverythingSectionLink` class,
this would lookup the state in `TopicTrackingState` to get a new count of unread/new topics and update the `totalUnread` and
`totalNew` properties which are tracked. For some reason that I have yet to figure out, updating the either of the tracked properties
would result in Ember rerendering the entire `{{#each this.sections as |section|}}` in `component/sidebar/user/custom-sections.hbs`
template. Note that `this.sections` refers to a `@cached` getter in the `SidebarUserCustomSections` class. The problem is that
the `sections` getter is initializing a new bunch of sidebar sections related classes without calling the teardown function.
As a result, we end up registering new `onStateChange` callbacks in `TopicTrackingState` in `CommunitySection` without
removing the old ones. Over time, the number of callbacks build up and we end up slowing down the application. While we do
not know the reason why defining a getter for the `sections` is causing the entire block to re-render, I realized that
it is dangerous to use a getter for `sections` here since we have very little control on when the cached is broken.
Instead, I moved the `sections` getter to a tracked property instead where the property is updated via `appEvents`. With
this change, updating the tracked properties in `EverythingSectionLink` is no longer triggering a complete re-render of the
said block above. We also now call `teardown` on the section objects that has been initialised before updating the `sections`
property.
An extensibility point we support server side is setting meta_data
(topic / post custom fields) with the composer payload.
Previous to this change even though we had a lot of setup code we never
actually sent the payload.
This ensures that on create we send meta_data.
- Update welcome topic copy
- Edit the welcome topic automatically when the title or description changes
- Remove “Create your Welcome Topic” banner/CTA
- Add "edit welcome topic" user tip
a373bf2 updated the behavior of replace-emoji so that the input is treated as unsafe-by-default. fancy_title is already escaped, so we need to mark it as html-safe to avoid it being double-escaped.
There is no need to html-safe the result of replace-emoji - it's already done as part of the helper.
### What is the problem?
It is possible to pass an arbitrary value to the limit parameter in `TagsController#search`, and have it flow through `DiscourseTagging.filter_allowed_tags` where it will raise an error deep in the database driver. MiniSql ensures there's no injection happening, but that ultimately results in an invalid query.
### How does this fix it?
This change checks more strictly that the parameter can be cleanly converted to an integer by replacing the loose `#to_i` conversion semantics with the stronger `Kernel#Integer` ones.
**Example:**
```ruby
"1; SELECT 1".to_i
#=> 1
Integer("1; SELECT 1")
#=> ArgumentError
```
As part of the change, I also went ahead to disallow a limit of "0", as that doesn't seem to be a useful option. Previously only negative limits were disallowed.
### Background
When SSRF detection fails, the exception bubbles all the way up, causing a log alert. This isn't actionable, and should instead be ignored. The existing `rescue` does already ignore network errors, but fails to account for SSRF exceptions coming from `FinalDestination`.
### What is this change?
This PR does two things.
---
Firstly, it introduces a common root exception class, `FinalDestination::SSRFError` for SSRF errors. This serves two functions: 1) it makes it easier to rescue both errors at once, which is generally what one wants to do and 2) prevents having to dig deep into the class hierarchy for the constant.
This change is fully backwards compatible thanks to how inheritance and exception handling works.
---
Secondly, it rescues this new exception in `UserAvatar.import_url_for_user`, which is causing sporadic errors to be logged in production. After this SSRF errors are handled the same as network errors.
This fixes a bug in the create invite API where if you passed in an
integer for the group_ids field it would fail to add the user to the
specified group.
The issues fixed:
1. Previously all static pages (e.g. login-required landing page, /tos, /privacy, forgot-password) were wrapped in the faq-read-tracking component
2. All these pages shared one controller with methods that were relevant to one route
3. There were two route-generating functions: `static-route-builder` and `build-static-route` 🤣
4. They were using the deprecated `renderTemplate()` API
5. A slight misuse of Ember API (`controllerFor()`)
6. Small mark-faq-read related bugs
added site toggle functionality through site settings
added tests to implemented feature
Introduced suggested correction
renamed find_new_topic method and deleted click_new_topic_button method
Currently the /new-category url can be accessed by moderators, regardless of whether the Site Setting for moderators_manage_categories_and_groups is true or false.
On top of this, non authorized users can also access this page but shows errors (no 404 loaded).
Since the 404 redirect happens within Ember, we need to allow the site setting value to be accessed within JS.
After this change all non admin users will see a 404 for this route, the exception being moderators if the moderators_manage_categories_and_groups setting has a value of true.
/t/73360
The problem
When selecting text and clicking the "Edit" button that pops up, this opens up the Fast Edit dialog.
The fast edit feature doesn't work well with non standard characters (non-ascii). If the user selects a string of text that contains non-ascii characters, sometimes they won't save. It is non-obvious to the user why this is happening. This issue occurs more frequently when editing content that is written in non-english languages, as fast-edit doesn't work well with non-ascii characters. We currently do a global replace on a couple of the more obvious quotation marks when the fast edit dialog attempts to save, but there are too many edge cases for foreign language content.
The solution
We can fix this issue by using a catch-all approach for non-ascii characters before the user clicks the edit button to bring up the fast edit dialog. Then we can fallback to the full composer to edit their text, which has much better support for non-ascii characters.
What does this regex do?
The regex used matches any character that is not within the ASCII range of 0x00 to 0x7F, which includes all control characters and non-ASCII characters.
This regex pattern can be used to match any character that is not a standard ASCII character, such as accented characters, non-Latin characters, and special symbols.
We were giving topics with repeated words extra weight in search index.
This meant that it was trivial to stuff words into title to dominate in search
given we search for exact title matches first.
The following tweak means that:
`invite invited invites`
and
`invite some stuff`
Both rank the same for title searching.
Titles are short and punchy, duplicating words should not give special
weight.
Requires a full reindex to take effect.
This commit fixes an issue where the Likes Received notification
count in the user digest email was not affected by the
since/last_seen date for the user, which meant that no matter
how long it had been since the user visited the count was
always constant.
Now instead for the Likes Received count, we only count the
unread notifications of that type since the user was last
seen.
This improves keyboard navigation in and out of select-kit components.
The improvements include:
- `Tab` will now dismiss the dropdown once the active element is outside
the select-kit element
- pressing `Escape` will not bubble, this is most noticeable in the
composer, pressing `Esc` there now when a dropdown is expanded will not
dismiss the composer
- `Shift+Tab` will also dismiss the dropdown once focus is outside it
The problem
The fast edit feature doesn't work well with non standard characters (non-ascii). If the user selects a string of text that contains non-ascii characters, then the edit won't save.
The solution
The best solution is to catch those non-ascii characters before the user clicks the edit button to bring up the fast edit dialog. Then we can fallback to the full composer to edit their text, which has much better support for non-ascii characters.
What does this regex do?
The regex used to catch this is [^\x00-\x7F], which matches any character that is not within the ASCII range of 0x00 to 0x7F, which includes all control characters and non-ASCII characters.
This regex pattern can be used to match any character that is not a standard ASCII character, such as accented characters, non-Latin characters, and special symbols.
The current limit (250 characters) is too low, as we have some
translations used for our badge descriptions that result in a
description length of 264 characters.
To be on the safe side, the limit is now set to 500 characters.
Ember's implicit injections feature is removed in Ember 4.x. We want to give ourselves more time to migrate to explicit injections, so this commit re-implements our implicit injections as extensions to the base framework classes.
Incremental migration to newer patterns can be achieved using the `@disableImplicitInjections` class decorator (available from `discourse/lib/implicit-injections').
This resolves and unsilences the `implicit-injections` deprecation.
A category's slug can be encoded when
`SiteSetting.slug_generation_method` has been set to "encoded". As a
result, we have to support non ASCII characters as well.
Change mechanism handling `more` button for sidebar.
Before it was using HTML details tag.
To make tests more reliable, we are switching to use ember runloop.
What is the problem?
The TopicTrackingState is a service on the client side that is used to store
state of topics which is new or has unread posts for a given user. The state
is updated via various means and the one in concern here is whenever we load
a new topic list from the server. When a topic list is loaded from the server,
we sync this new topic list with the states in TopicTrackingState. There is also
a hard limit on the number of states that is stored by TopicTrackingState for
performance reasons and the limit is currently set to 4000. It was noticed that
once this limit has been reached, syncing a topic list with TopicTrackingState can
result in the registered state change callbacks to be called unnecessarily. This
is because during `TopicTrackingState#sync` we call `TopicTrackingState#removeTopic`
if the topic in question is neither new or unread to a user. However, `TopicTrackingState#removeTopic`
would call `TopicTrackingState#_afterStateChange` even if nothing was removed.
What is the fix?
This commit fixes the problem by checking that `TopicTrackingState#_afterStateChange` is only
called in `TopicTrackingState#removeTopic` when a topic is actually removed.
This amends it so our cached counting reliant specs run in synchronize mode
When running async there are situations where data is left over in the table
after a transactional test. This means that repeat runs of the test suite
fail.
- Ensure changing timezones are reflected immediately in the date-time-input (the computed property was missing a dependent key)
- Ensure date-input doesn't lose timezone information (calling `toDate()` causes moment timestamps to lose timezone information)
This was created to resolve issues in the discourse-calendar plugin (https://github.com/discourse/discourse-calendar/pull/399)