Additionally correctly handle cookie path for authentication_data
There were two bugs that exposed an interesting case where two discourse
instances hosted across two subfolder installs in the same domain
with oauth may clash and cause strange redirection on first login:
Log in to example.com/forum1. authentication_data cookie is set with path /
On the first redirection, the current authentication_data cookie is not unset.
Log in to example.com/forum2. In this case, the authentication_data cookie
is already set from forum1 - the initial page load will incorrectly redirect
the user to the redirect URL from the already-stored cookie, to /forum1.
This removes this issue by:
* Setting the cookie for the correct path, and not having it on root
* Correctly removing the cookie on first login
* Preload custom fields for BookmarkQuery and add preload callback. Copy TopicQuery preload methodology to allow plugins to preload data for the BookmarkQuery. This fixes assigned plugin custom fields N1
* Include topic tags in initial query to avoid tags N1
Related: discourse/discourse-assign#63
I think this issue is caused by a current regression in ember
https://github.com/emberjs/ember.js/issues/18147
but using `id` works just fine in templates. This also appears to be the
only template file we are using `elementId` directly in the template.
Based on reports here https://meta.discourse.org/t/improved-bookmarks-with-reminders/144542
* Because the `userHasTimezone` property was computed and we were checking on an (essentially) global object, ember was not aware that the user timezone had changed because it changed in a different place. instead set the timezone as internal state for the modal on show and base the computed property off of that so it mutates correctly
* The tap-tile components were in the admin folder completely unnecessarily, move them out into the main discourse folder otherwise noone else can use the new bookmarks (icon + text is missing)
* DEV: Replace User.unstage and User#unstage API with User#unstage!
Quoting @SamSaffron:
> User.unstage mixes concerns of both unstaging users and updating params which is fragile/surprising.
> u.unstage destroys notifications and raises a user_unstaged event prior to the user becoming unstaged and the user object being saved.
User#unstage! no longer updates user attributes and saves the object before triggering the `user_unstaged` event.
* Update one more spec
* Assign attributes after unstaging
* Improve the bookmark mobile on modal so it doesn't go all the way to the edge and the custom datetime input is easier to use
* Improve the rake task for syncing so it does not error for topics that no longer exist and batches 2000 inserts at a time, clearing the array each time
As another step toward fully dreprecating query parameter authentication
in API requests this change prevents an admin dashboard message from
showing up if using a whitelisted route like rss feeds or the
mail-receiver route.
* Cosmetic fixes for the bookmark modal
* Do not show "later today" when the later time will be > 5pm
* When a custom reminder time is selected, store it in localStorage. The next time the modal is opened, if the last datetime is > now, then a new tile with "Last" will be shown that lets the user reselect that same time.
* Also add an explicit "No Reminder" option that is selected by default
Meta report: https://meta.discourse.org/t/short-url-secure-uploads-s3/144224
* if the show_short route is hit for an upload that is
secure, we redirect to the secure presigned URL. however
this was not taking into account multisite so the db name
was left off the path which broke the presigned URL
* we now use the correct url_for method if we know the
upload (like in the show_short case) which takes into
account multisite
In development, if the ApplicationController is reloaded, then, previous
to this commit we were emitting an instance of the previous RenderEmpty
class, but rescuing from the reloaded instance.
Looking up RenderEmpty by its fully qualified name fixes this.
On some sites when bootstrapping communities it is helpful to bootstrap
with a "light weight" invite code.
Use the site setting `invite_code` to set a global invite code.
In this case the administrator can share the code with
a community which is very easy to remember and then anyone who has
that code can easily register accounts.
People without the invite code are not allowed account registration.
Global invite codes are less secure than indevidual codes, in that they
tend to leak in the community however in some cases when starting a brand
new community the security guarantees of invites are not needed.