This overhauls the user interface for the group email settings management, aiming to make it a lot easier to test the settings entered and confirm they are correct before proceeding. We do this by forcing the user to test the settings before they can be saved to the database. It also includes some quality of life improvements around setting up IMAP and SMTP for our first supported provider, GMail. This PR does not remove the old group email config, that will come in a subsequent PR. This is related to https://meta.discourse.org/t/imap-support-for-group-inboxes/160588 so read that if you would like more backstory.
### UI
Both site settings of `enable_imap` and `enable_smtp` must be true to test this. You must enable SMTP first to enable IMAP.
You can prefill the SMTP settings with GMail configuration. To proceed with saving these settings you must test them, which is handled by the EmailSettingsValidator.
If there is an issue with the configuration or credentials a meaningful error message should be shown.
IMAP settings must also be validated when IMAP is enabled, before saving.
When saving IMAP, we fetch the mailboxes for that account and populate them. This mailbox must be selected and saved for IMAP to work (the feature acts as though it is disabled until the mailbox is selected and saved):
### Database & Backend
This adds several columns to the Groups table. The purpose of this change is to make it much more explicit that SMTP/IMAP is enabled for a group, rather than relying on settings not being null. Also included is an UPDATE query to backfill these columns. These columns are automatically filled when updating the group.
For GMail, we now filter the mailboxes returned. This is so users cannot use a mailbox like Sent or Trash for syncing, which would generally be disastrous.
There is a new group endpoint for testing email settings. This may be useful in the future for other places in our UI, at which point it can be extracted to a more generic endpoint or module to be included.
This commit extends functionality of the expired invites tab, making
it more similar to the pending tab. It also implements a different
layout for mobile.
* Fixes an issue where long translations cause layout issues
* Fixes an issue where the alignment shifts when switching between signup/login
* Makes some of the margin/padding more consistent
* Removes duplicate .login-modal and .create-account classes and replaces them with .login-modal-body and .create-account-body
* Adds another color transformation so we could remove prefers-color-scheme... the problem with that was that my OS' UI might be set to something different than my Discourse preferences (prefers-color-scheme only responds to OS UI settings)
Included:
* DEV: Span can't contains divs
* DEV: Drop extra elements
* UX: Tweak `group` layout to fix button alignment
* UX: Add space between "Members" and "(N)"
This PR adds an edit button to the topic timer info message which opens the modal.
Also, I have cleaned up a few more places where we were referencing "topic status update" which is what these were called prior to being called topic timers.
The category settings for auto-close topic hours has now also been modified to use the new relative-time-picker component.
Finally, the relative-time-picker input step and min is dynamic based on mins/other intervals selected, see https://review.discourse.org/t/feature-relative-time-input-for-timers-and-bookmarks-and-promote-auto-close-after-last-post-timer-12063/19204/7?u=martin
This PR revamps the topic timer UI, using the time shortcut selector from the bookmark modal.
* Fixes an issue where the duration of hours/days after last reply or auto delete replies was not enforced to be > 0
* Fixed an issue where the timer dropdown options were not reloaded correctly if the topic status changes in the background (use `MessageBus` to publish topic state in the open/close timer jobs)
* Moved the duration input and the "based on last post" option from the `future-date-input` component, as it was only used for topic timers. Also moved out the notice that is displayed which was also only relevant for topic timers.
- The icon for the “view all” controls in the panels have no accessible alternative.
- Because the “Log Out” and "Do Not Disturb" elements in the preferences tab are an <a> element without an href attribute, it is not keyboard focusable and therefore not keyboard focusable. Use a button element instead.
Safari overlays its own nav at the bottom 10% or so of the screen. This
makes buttons in that area virtually unclickable, so to ensure buttons
there are reachable, we need to add enough bottom padding to menu panels.
* Move new/edit category modals to its own page
* Fix JS tests
* Minor fixes to new-category UI
* Add mobile toggle
* Use global pretender endpoint so plugins can benefit too
* Alignment fix
* Minor review fixes
* Styling refactor
* Move some SCSS out of the modal
This removes fixed positioning from d-header and the topic timeline.
Plugins, themes and components that use the above/below header plugin outlet will likely need some margin/padding adjustments.
* REFACTOR: reworks all the search-advanced-options panel
This commit includes the following changes:
- prevents any mutation of external (to the component) values
- get rid of observers
- uses @action
- minor UI tweaks
- dropped the unecessary debounce
- drops all the legacy code for badges/groups which is not being used
- replaces user-selector by user-chooser and improves multi-select to not show `search` if maximum has been reached
Most importantly this refactor should fix multiple bugs due to _update() being called multiple times if searchTerm was empty and other various bugs where some changes in searchTerm was not applied to the sidebar.
This moves the logic for horizontally placing the topic progress wrapper from the JS component to SCSS. Doing so means it is more easily overridable by themes and plugins.
This also changes the left/right spacing from 1em to 2em for non-mobile screens (it fits better on iPad portrait especially).
The emoji-picker is a specific piece of code as it has very strong performance requirements which are almost not found anywhere else in the app, as a result it was using various hacks to make it work decently even on old browsers.
Following our drop of Internet Explorer, and various new features in Ember and recent browsers we can now take advantage of this to reduce the amount of code needed, this rewrite most importantly does the following:
- use loading="lazy" preventing the full list of emojis to be loaded on opening
- uses InterserctionObserver to find the active section
- limits the use of native event listentes only for hover/click emojis (for performance reason we track click on the whole emoji area and delegate events), everything else is using ember events
- uses popper to position the emoji picker
- no jquery code
- Add a metadata-row class
- Remove wrapper tags from user-card-after-metadata and user-card-before-badges outlets
- Correct max-height for mobile card
A first step to adding automatic dark mode color scheme switching. Adds a new SCSS file at `color_definitions.scss` that serves to output all SCSS color variables as CSS custom properties. And replaces all SCSS color variables with the new CSS custom properties throughout the stylesheets.
This is an alpha feature at this point, can only be enabled via console using the `default_dark_mode_color_scheme_id` site setting.
Uses a thin border as indicator that element is in focus for all editable items in the composer (inputs, select kit, textarea).
Disables a default iOS style that has a blinking background color on inputs/textareas
Component is only used in mobile category lists, no need to have it available globally
Uses opacity instead of color manipulation to deliver the same effect
This reverts commit 20780a1eee.
* SECURITY: re-adds accidentally reverted commit:
03d26cd6: ensure embed_url contains valid http(s) uri
* when the merge commit e62a85cf was reverted, git chose the 2660c2e2 parent to land on
instead of the 03d26cd6 parent (which contains security fixes)