Currently when bulk-awarding a badge that can be granted multiple times, users in the CSV file are granted the badge once no matter how many times they're listed in the file and only if they don't have the badge already.
This PR adds a new option to the Badge Bulk Award feature so that it's possible to grant users a badge even if they already have the badge and as many times as they appear in the CSV file.
* FEATURE: add penalty history when silencing a user
Display penalty history (last 6 months) when silencing/suspending a user
* FEATURE: allow default penalty values to be chosen
Adds a site setting that designates default penalty values in hours.
Silence/suspend modals will auto-fill in the default values, but otherwise
will still allow moderators to pick and overwrite values as normal.
First silence/suspend: first value
Second silence/suspend: second value
etc.
Penalty counts are forgiven at the same rate as tl3 promotion requirements do.
Co-authored-by: jjaffeux <j.jaffeux@gmail.com>
There is a big difference between regular watched words and regular
expressions and this has been confusing in the past. This notice adds
an explanation.
This commit also reorganizes the code of the test modal.
Note that this commit will also disable daily grouping for datasets with more than 30 data points. This will also smartly do the grouping by month when grouping a full year.
It was not clear that replace watched words can be used to replace text
with URLs. This introduces a new watched word type that makes it easier
to understand.
1. It defaults to `cache: true` already
2. Setting it to `false` for non-GET request doesn't do anything
3. We were correcting `cache: false` GET requests to use `cache: true`
…so setting it to anything at all, for any type of request doesn't make sense (anymore)
When editing the files for a theme in the admin dashboard, typing "cmd+s" (a common key-binding to save in most text editors) used to engage the browser's default "save page" dialogue.
This commit adds a key-binding to the ace editor that saves the file.
Now, the "cmd+s" (and "ctrl+s" for windows) key-binding does the same action as the save button.
When the admin creates a new custom field they can specify if that field should be searchable or not.
That setting is taken into consideration for quick search results.
Note that this is only applied on date-input and not the old date-picker for now.
This commit is also slightly modifying admin report dates form to ensure the native picker is correctly used, as a result: it doesn’t auto refresh on date change and fixes a border bug.
To add an extra layer of security, we sanitize settings before shipping them to the client. We don't sanitize those that have the "html" type.
The CookedPostProcessor already uses Loofah for sanitization, so I chose to also use it for this. I added it to our gemfile since we installed it as a transitive dependency.