- Use 'cheap-source-map' webpack config on low-memory machines
This results in worse quality sourcemaps in browser dev tools, but it significantly reduces memory use in our webpack build. In approximate local testing it drops from 1100mb to 590mb. This should make the rebuild process on low-memory machines much faster and less likely to trigger OOM errors.
In development, and on higher-memory machines, the higher-quality 'source-map' option is maintained.
- Disable Webpack's built-in `minimize` feature. Embroider already applies Terser after the webpack build is complete. There is no need to double-minimize the output.
- Update ember-cli-progress-ci to print to stderr instead of stdout. For some reason, pups (used by discourse_docker) buffers the stdout of commands and only prints when they are finished. stderr does not have this same limitation, so switching will mean sysadmins can see the progress of the ember build in real-time.
Given the number of variables it's hard to promise exact numbers. But, in my tests on a DO droplet with 1GB RAM (+2GB swap), this reduced the `ember build` portion of a `./launcher rebuild app` from ~50 minutes to ~15 minutes.
* Simplify config nav link generation to always inject the Settings
tab
* Auto-redirect to the first non-settings config link (if there is one)
when the user lands on /admin/plugins/:plugin_id
* Add `extras` to admin plugin serializer so plugins can add more
data on first load
* Add PikadayCalendar page object for system specs, extracted from the
CalendarDateTimePicker to make it more generic.
Those were all low hanging fruits - all were already glimmer components, so this was mostly merging js and hbs files and adding imports.
(occasionally also adds/fixes class names)
In this PR we introduced an admin sidebar for moderators - https://github.com/discourse/discourse/pull/26795
`What's new` and `all reports` links were missing as moderators have access to those pages.
At the moment, there is no way to create a group of related watched words together. If a user needed a set of words to be created together, they'll have to create them individually one at a time.
This change attempts to allow related watched words to be created as a group. The idea here is to have a list of words be tied together via a common `WatchedWordGroup` record. Given a list of words, a `WatchedWordGroup` record is created and assigned to each `WatchedWord` record. The existing WatchedWord creation behaviour remains largely unchanged.
Co-authored-by: Selase Krakani <skrakani@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Martin Brennan <martin@discourse.org>
This commit introduces a few changes as a result of
customer issues with finding why a topic was relisted.
In one case, if a user edited the OP of a topic that was
unlisted and hidden because of too many flags, the topic
would get relisted by directly changing topic.visible,
instead of going via TopicStatusUpdater.
To improve tracking we:
* Introduce a visibility_reason_id to topic which functions
in a similar way to hidden_reason_id on post, this column is
set from the various places we change topic visibility
* Fix Post#unhide! which was directly modifying topic.visible,
instead we use TopicStatusUpdater which sets visibility_reason_id
and also makes a small action post
* Show the reason topic visibility changed when hovering the
unlisted icon in topic status on topic titles
A change in relative picker was causing a serie of events which ultimately would cause the whole list of time options to be reset and re-rendered which would cause a new instance of the picker to be created, causing a reset.
The fix is using id in the each loop to help ember identify that it doesn’t have to re-render a specific component.
Selecting the +subcategories option does not work sometimes when "lazy
load categories" is enabled because the subcategories may not be
fetched. This ensures that subcategories are loaded by requesting them
before being used.
Our 'page_view_crawler' / 'page_view_anon' metrics are based purely on the User Agent sent by clients. This means that 'badly behaved' bots which are imitating real user agents are counted towards 'anon' page views.
This commit introduces a new method of tracking visitors. When an initial HTML request is made, we assume it is a 'non-browser' request (i.e. a bot). Then, once the JS application has booted, we notify the server to count it as a 'browser' request. This reliance on a JavaScript-capable browser matches up more closely to dedicated analytics systems like Google Analytics.
Existing data collection and graphs are unchanged. Data collected via the new technique is available in a new 'experimental' report.
Fixes two issues:
- frontend was reloading the page when clicking-to-remove avatar
- backend wasn't allowing resetting the setting by deleting all avatars
The `secondFactorMethod` property is defined as a @discourseComputed` which means it can't be overridden. Yet, we do override it in `app/assets/javascripts/discourse/app/components/security-key-form.js` and `app/assets/javascripts/discourse/app/components/second-factor-form.js` by doing `this.set("secondFactorMethod", ...)`.
This commit sets a default property `secondFactorMethod` on the `email-login` controller after the model has been loaded. Given this property is no longer computed, it can be set again at other places.
Followups:
- Ideally we would follow DDAU pattern but this is quite a significant refactor.
- The test I added is very limited, ideally we should start writing system specs for this, but it means having to deal with the email, it's a significant work.
This service-worker caching functionality was disabled by default in 1c58395bca, and the setting to re-enable was marked as experimental. Now we are dropping all the related logic.