I have been unable to figure out a way of testing this usefully (as I fear it would require creating several thousands of objects), but existing tests pass and a manual test with ~400k topics succeeds after the fix, while it would hang indefinitely and/or consume all disk space before the fix.
I have reported the initial problem and my findings in https://meta.discourse.org/t/topic-reset-all-highest-exhausts-all-available-disk-space/333837
* DEV: join/leave presence chat-reply when streaming
This commit ensures that starting/stopping a chat message with the streaming option will automatically make the creator of the message as present in the chat-reply channel.
* implements start/stop reply
* not needed
The primary key is usually a bigint column, but the foreign key columns
are usually of integer type. This can lead to issues when joining these
columns due to mismatched types and different value ranges.
This was using a temporary plugin / test API to make tests pass. After
more careful consideration, we concluded that it is safe to alter the
tables directly.
We are moving away from the mobile-specific template pattern in favor of logical `{{#if}}` statements. This brings us closer to a standard Ember app, makes testing easier, and reduces duplicate code.
This commit includes some minor refactoring in the resolver & component-templates initializer, so that the mobile lookups happen on desktop, without actually being used. This allows us to print the deprecation message consistently, to improve visibility to developers.
Meta topic: https://meta.discourse.org/t/stumped-about-launcher-rebuild-app-error-process-pid-2096/333876?u=osama.
Follow up to 19672faba6.
The migration that adds the invite link to the sidebar determines the position of the link by looking up the max position that a primary link has and inserts the invite link at the max position plus 1. This approach works fine for most sites, however, sites that have deleted all primary links from the sidebar will fail because the max position will be `nil` which blows up the migration.
This commit addresses this edge case by falling back to looking up the min position of secondary links, or to zero if there're also no secondary links, and then inserts the invite link at the min position minus 1.
This commit fixes the (?) tooltips for reports on
the admin dashboard on mobile.
The fix is that float-kit instances can now have different triggers
and un-triggers for mobile and desktop, and float-kit is now aware
of the site being in mobile view.
Example usage:
```
@triggers={{hash mobile=(array "click")}}
```
So now, if you press on the tooltip trigger on mobile it shows
correctly, and on desktop both hover and click can be used.
---------
Co-authored-by: Joffrey JAFFEUX <j.jaffeux@gmail.com>
Currently the tracking for clicked links are injected into the HTML in a span tag. This leads to the link counter value being highlighted when copying and pasting. Additionally, any means for using CSS to hide link counters result in a gap due to it occupying a specific width.
With this change, we make link counters appear in a data attribute on the link element and visually shown with CSS `::after` element.
We are moving away from the mobile-specific template pattern in favor of logical `{{#if}}` statements. This brings us closer to a standard Ember app, makes testing easier, and reduces duplicate code.
We are moving away from the mobile-specific template pattern in favor of logical `{{#if}}` statements. This brings us closer to a standard Ember app, makes testing easier, and reduces duplicate code.
We are moving away from the mobile-specific template pattern in favor of logical `{{#if}}` statements. This brings us closer to a standard Ember app, makes testing easier, and reduces duplicate code.
We are moving away from the mobile-specific template pattern in favor of logical `{{#if}}` statements. This brings us closer to a standard Ember app, makes testing easier, and reduces duplicate code.
We are moving away from the mobile-specific template pattern in favor of logical `{{#if}}` statements. This brings us closer to a standard Ember app, makes testing easier, and reduces duplicate code.
Docking is a leftover from older header code, it looks like it is no
longer used in the app. This helper was registering a scroll event
listener to check if the header should be docked or not. Initially, a
"docked" class was added to the body element. This class persisted
through the lifecycle of the app and the scroll event was doing no
useful work.
Some older themes may still use it in CSS, that will cause a regression,
from a quick look at existing code, the surface area should be small
(2-3 themes). It's worth removing the event listener for performance
reasons. We could possibly add the class "docked" statically to the body
element, but it's redundant. It's best to clean up the relevant CSS in
themes, where applicable.
* DEV: Implement uploads command entrypoint
- Setup Thor UploadsCommand for CLI
- First pass at modularizing various parts of the exising `uploads_import` script
* DEV: First attempt at modularizing missing uploads fixer task
Move missing upload fix to a dedicated uploads task implementation unit
* DEV: First attempt at modularizing missing uploads uploader task
Move uploader to a dedicated uploads task implementation unit
* DEV: First attempt at modularizing missing uploads optimizer task
Move optimizer to a dedicated uploads task implementation unit
* DEV: Various follow up fixes to get optimization working
- Start threads early
- Improve "log" message formatting
- Add missing `copy_to_tempfile` method on "uploader" task
* DEV: Refactor a bit more
Deduplicate and move most of threading premitives to base task as-is
* DEV: Remove redundant condition in uploads db migration
* DEV: More deduplication
Move task retry logic to base class and tidy up other implementation
details carried over from the existing script
DEV: Add import support for Topic Voting plugin
- Implemented bulk import functionality specifically for topic_voting_votes.
- Updated the method name from import_votes to import_post_voting_votes for improved clarity and maintainability.
- Co-authored-by: Gerhard Schlager <gerhard.schlager@discourse.org>
This commit adds a new "Community title" field to the about config page. This field controls the `short_site_description` setting, which is shown in the browser tab for key pages such categories pages and topic lists.
Internal topic: t/140812.
When adding threads to DM channels in #29170 we intentionally didn't add them to the My Threads section. However this makes it easy to miss notifications as we don't get the new thread badge on the sidebar and footer tabs (drawer/mobile). However they were also missing from the chat header and sidebar too, which is fixed with this PR.
When a new thread or a reply to an existing thread is created within a DM channel (either 1:1 or group), we now show the standard badges like we do for public channels.
We now also show the green dot in the sidebar for My Threads and public channels when they contain an unread watched thread.
This commit changes the uploads:secure_upload_analyse_and_update
and uploads:disable_secure_uploads to no longer rebake affected
posts inline. This just took way too long, and if the task stalled
you couldn't be sure if the rest of it completed.
Instead, we can update the baked_version of affected posts and
utilize our PeriodicalUpdates job to gradually rebake them. I added
warnings about increasing the site setting rebake_old_posts_count and
the global setting max_old_rebakes_per_15_minutes before doing this
as well.
For good measure, the affected post IDs are written to a JSON file too.