Use the cooked version of the post and the quote to compare their content in
order to take into account the "typographer" option of the markdown pipeline.
The instagram onebox sometimes surrounds the image with an `<a>` tag, which was breaking the aspect ratio logic, and therefore causing posts to change height on load.
* Introduced fab!, a helper that creates database state for a group
It's almost identical to let_it_be, except:
1. It creates a new object for each test by default,
2. You can disable it using PREFABRICATION=0
This change both speeds up specs (less strings to allocate) and helps catch
cases where methods in Discourse are mutating inputs.
Overall we will be migrating everything to use #frozen_string_literal: true
it will take a while, but this is the first and safest move in this direction
* improved emoji support
- always optimize images as part of the task
- use the unicode standard ordering/naming for sections
* UX: more height for when there are recently used
This is a common pattern we see in tests. The `id` of the upload
is used to create the URL and we assume the `id` will always be
in a certain range which depends on the database.
When the S3 store was enabled, we were only applying the S3 CDN.
So all images stored locally, like the emojis, were never put on the local CDN.
Fixed a bunch of CookedPostProcessor test by adding a call to 'optimize_urls'
in order to get final URLs.
I also removed the unnecessary PrettyText.add_s3_cdn method since this is already
handled in the CookedPostProcessor.
It was getting caught in a `DistributedMutex` deadlock (twice!), which
meant this test was taking 120s to run.
I'm not sure why queue jobs was turned off here, because when I turn it
on the test passes and takes <2s instead.
This generates a 10x10 PNG thumbnail for each lightboxed image.
If Image Lazy Loading is enabled (IntersectionObserver API) then
we'll load the low res version when offscreen. As the image scrolls
in we'll swap it for the high res version.
We use a WeakMap to track the old image attributes. It's much less
memory than storing them as `data-*` attributes and swapping them
back and forth all the time.
Previously, the site setting was only effective on the client side of
things. Once the site setting was been reached, all oneboxes are not
rendered. This commit changes it such that the site setting is respected
both on the client and server side. The first N oneboxes are rendered and
once the limit has been reached, subsequent oneboxes will not be
rendered.
When creating lightboxes we will attempt to create 1.5x and 2x thumbnails
for retina screens, this can be controlled with a new hidden site setting
called responsice_post_image_sizes, if you wish to create 3x images run
SiteSetting.responsive_post_image_sizes = "1|1.5|2|3"
The default should be good for most of the setups as it balances filesize
with quality. 3x thumbs can get big.