Previously we had no role set for various topic links, nor did we have any
headers.
This teaches screen readers that topic links in topic lists are to be treated
as H2. We opted for this less radical change cause a change of the element
type would probably result in many broken themes.
Confirmed on NVDA you can very quickly breeze through topic lists now. Minor
edge case is pinned topics which can be a bit annoying due to multiple links.
NVDA does not detect HTML5 articles as regions. This explicitly sets a
region with an aria-label denoting post numbers making it much easier to
know where you are in a topic.
Note role: article which is more semantically correct is not respected by
NVDA d/D shortcut, hence the much more generic "region" role.
The crash:
```
Uncaught TypeError: Ember.keys is not a function
```
Repro:
- visit home page
- click new topic
- navigate to your messages by clicking your avatar (top right), then enveloppe icon, and finally the bottom chevron
- click New Message
- click cancel in the composer, it should crash
Watched words are always regular expressions, despite watched_words_
_regular_expressions being enabled or not. Internally, wildcard
characters are replaced with a regular expression that matches any non
whitespace character.
This is two fixes:
1. Ember CLI's proxy did not support 3xx redirects so a redirect was
failing.
2. We were not passing query parameters to the `bootstrap.json` endpoint
to correctly handle previewing themes (and other occasional options.)
If you finished reviewing the initially loaded items, and there're more in the queue, load them.
Also, when fast-tracking the pending items updates, use the reviewable_count returned by the perform result. Calling "result.reviewable_count" returns undefines.
This fixes the following error I've been seeing lately in RubyMine:
> Error:Your `bin/bundle` was not generated by Bundler, so this binstub cannot run.
> Replace `bin/bundle` by running `bundle binstubs bundler --force`, then run this command again.
The auto restart logic was sending a USR2 to the parent process without checking what the parent process actually was. In some situations, it might not be the `bin/unicorn` supervisor.
This commit switches to use a global variable for the supervisor PID. This will be much less prone to unexpected behavior.
This patch remembers the last id for the `file-change` event and uses it
to initialize the client side watcher. This should help fix the issue
where styles are not reloaded client side if the browser refreshed.
* FIX: Hide tag watched words if tagging is disabled
These 'autotag' words were shown even if tagging was disabled.
* FIX: Make autotag watched words case insensitive
This commit also fixes the bug when no tag was applied if no other tag
was already present.
Email change requests are never deleted no matter if they completed
successfully or not. The abandoned requests have the disadvantage of
showing up as unconfirmed emails in user's preferences page.
This is a recent regression introduced by https://github.com/discourse/discourse/pull/12937 which makes it so that when looking at a user profile that is not your own, specifically the category and tag notification settings, you would see your own settings instead of the target user. This is only a problem for admins because regular users cannot see these details for other users.
The issue was that we were using `scope` in the serializer, which refers to the current user, rather than using a scope for the target user via `Guardian.new(user)`.
However, on further inspection the `notification_levels_for` method for `TagUser` and `CategoryUser` did not actually need to be accepting an instance of Guardian, all that it was using it for was to check guardian.anonymous? which is just a fancy way of saying user.blank?. Changed this method to just accept a user instead and send the user in from the serializer.
* DEV: Allow wildcards in Oneboxer optional domain Site Settings
Allows a wildcard to be used as a subdomain on Oneboxer-related SiteSettings, e.g.:
- `force_get_hosts`
- `cache_onebox_response_body_domains`
- `force_custom_user_agent_hosts`
* DEV: fix typos
* FIX: Try doing a GET after receiving a 500 error from a HEAD
By default we try to do a `HEAD` requests. If this results in a 500 error response, we should try to do a `GET`
* DEV: `force_get_hosts` should be a hidden setting
* DEV: Oneboxer Strategies
Have an alternative oneboxing ‘strategy’ (i.e., set of options) to use when an attempt to generate a Onebox fails. Keep track of any non-default strategies that were used on a particular host, and use that strategy for that host in the future.
Initially, the alternate strategy (`force_get_and_ua`) forces the FinalDestination step of Oneboxing to do a `GET` rather than `HEAD`, and forces a custom user agent.
* DEV: change stubbed return code
The stubbed status code needs to be a value not recognized by FinalDestination
In production, each Unicorn child process will currently hold the
default locale in memory on first load. Instead, we should preload it in
the Unicorn master process so that the memory is immediately shared when
forking.
Also, the translations are only memoized on first load now and is
adding considerable overhead to the first few requests after a fresh
boot.
When issuing the discobot certificate, we were not closing the
iframe tag, which meant that the final message instruction to
the user was swallowed up.
We have a few places in the code where we need to validate various email related settings, and will have another soon with the improved group email settings UI. This PR introduces a class which can validate POP3, IMAP, and SMTP credentials and also provide a friendly error message for issues if they must be presented to an end user.
This PR does not change any existing code to use the new service. I have added a TODO to change POP3 validation and the email test rake task to use the new validator post-release.
Normally we'd use `ember-auto-import` for this, but it's not run on
our admin tree due to the quirky way we load it conditionally.
Instead we'll append it at the bottom like our Rails app does.