Followup to b583872eed
and 54001060ea
Another place where we need to filter hashtag types to
only enabled ones is PrettyText, though the latter PR
above should also already make it so the correct priority
types are passed.
This is causing errors in the email processing workflow
for some customers (presumably ones with tagging disabled).
Why this change?
The test being changed in question has been flaky on our CI. However, we
are unable to view the screenshot of why it failed because
ActionDispatch will only take a screenshot of the default session upon
failure. At the same time, taking screenshot of all sessions
automatically upon failure is not possible via the official Capybara or
Rails APIs at the moment. Therefore, we're changing this system test to
avoid using two custom session and instead have the main assertion use
the default session such that any failures will provide us with a
screenshot.
When a type was disabled, the hashtag search _without_ a
term was erroring. This was because we weren't filtering
out the disabled types from types_in_priority_order first
like we were if there was a term provided.
This commit fixes that issue, and also makes it so
contexts_with_ordered_types and ordered_types_for_context
will only return hashtag types which are enabled.
* CHROME_LOAD_EXTENSIONS_MANIFEST - An env var with a path to a file
that contains one path per line. These are paths to extensions installed
in chrome that the user wants to load while running system specs.
Useful to run things like Ember Inspector.
* CHROME_DISABLE_FORCE_DEVICE_SCALE_FACTOR - On some systems the
--force-device-scale-factor=1 argument makes the UI for chrome
super small, add a way to disable this.
This commit fixes two issues with the thread list:
1. All threads were being shown regardless of whether the user had
a membership in the thread. This was happening because the list
and the channel share the same thread store, so if the channel
had OMs with threads we would load them and they showed in the list.
2. Threads created by the user from a staged thread would double up.
This is because the _cache in the channel threadsManager would use
the staged thread ID even after we'd replaced the object's ID with
the actual thread from the DB. The answer to this is to remove and
re-add the thread to the local cache with the actual ID.
This babel plugin is intended to supress the deprecation warnings
from building plugins, however, discourse-plugins does not actually
consume this plugin at all. Currently this happens to work due to
how the babel worker processes are shared and the timing/ordering
of the build, but it will stop working with the embroider build.
This commit extracts the plugin the a shared package so that it
can be properly consumed by discourse-plugins as well as core.
Performing a `Delete User`/`Delete and Block User` reviewable actions for a
queued post reviewable from the `review.show` route results in an error
popup even if the action completes successfully.
This happens because unlike other reviewable types, a user delete action
on a queued post reviewable results in the deletion of the reviewable
itself. A subsequent attempt to reload the reviewable record results in
404. The deletion happens as part of the call to `UserDestroyer` which
includes a step for destroying reviewables created by the user being
destroyed. At the root of this is the creator of the queued post
being set as the creator of the reviewable as instead of the system
user.
This change assigns the creator of the reviewable to the system user and
uses the more approapriate `target_created_by` column for the creator of the
post being queued.
- explicitly enables the jquery-integration. This was previously enabled by default, so no change in behavior for us
- enable template-only-glimmer-components. In core, we don't have any component templates under `templates/components`, so this flag has no effect. A shim, with associated tests, is introduced to preserve the old template-only 'classic component' behavior for themes and plugins.
We'd like to get this deprecation unsilenced before the 3.1 release so that theme/plugin developers see the messages and can make the necessary changes during the 3.2 release cycle. To avoid the remaining legacy core modals from creating overwhelming noise in the logs, deprecation messages for them are skipped.
When the app boots, Ember fires a `routeWillChange` event. This was causing us to set the `_trackView` flag in our ajax library, which would cause the next request to have the `Discourse-Track-View` header, despite not being relevant to the page view. Depending on the plugins/themes installed, this could lead to 'double counting' of pageviews. (because the initial HTML request is also counted as a page view)
This commit updates the the logic to ignore the first transition (by checking `transition.from`), and also introduces an acceptance test for the behaviour.
Co-authored-by: Régis Hanol <regis@hanol.fr>
* DEV: Fix and re-enable chat flakys
The early return in JS was added to prevent an error
from channel being null, and it's better to use known
users for the message fabrications in the specs.
* DEV: Use travel_to in drawer spec for thread tracking
Sometimes in the system test the datetime that is last
viewed for the channel for the user and the datetime for
the last message created_at is only microseconds of difference,
and we do not provide that level of fidelity in the MessageBus
serializer, so unreadThreadsCountSinceLastViewed is not
accurate.
Better to just utilize travel_to and move forward 1 minute in
time before sending the new message to easily differentiate.
Currently the dominant color attribute is only set for post images (not chat).
As a result, clicking lightbox images in chat will load the image within lightbox but also shows a JS error.
This change ensures that the dominant color is set before attempting to update the site theme color.
Adding a filter without a type parameter has been deprecated for the last three years, and was marked for removal in 2.9.0.
During this time we have had a few deprecation warnings in logs coming from Reports::Bookmarks.
The fallback was to set the type to the name of the filter. This change just passes the type (same as name) explicitly instead, and removes the deprecation fallback.
When we have subscriptions for new messages in a channel,
we also have special handling for messages in a thread. For
cases like DM channels where threads are made in the background
but not used in the UI, this is causing JS errors because we
are trying to fetch the thread but it returns 404.
We only want to do things with messages in threads if the
channel actually has threading enabled.
We have a number of raw comments indicating that certain methods and classes are deprecated and marked for removal. This change turn those comments into deprecation warnings so that we can 1) see them in the logs of our own hosting and 2) give some warning to self hosters.
Why this change?
The `legacy` navigation menu option for the `navigation_menu` site
setting will be removed shortly after the release of Discourse 3.1 in
the first beta release of Discourse 3.2. Therefore, we're adding an
admin dashboard warning to give sites on the `legacy` navigation menu a
heads up.
We need a nice way to only return some hashtag data
sources based on various site settings. This commit
adds an enabled? method that every hashtag data source
must implement. If this returns false the data source
will not be used at all for hashtag lookups or search.
Why was the test flaky?
The test relied on the fact that visiting a topic would marked its
post as unread. However, we did not actually stay on the topic long
enough in some cases for it to be considered read based on the logic in
our client side code.
This commit fixes the flakiness by ensuring that the post has actually
been read before navigating away.
What does this change do?
This commit removes the experimental label for a bunch of APIs that have
been used in production for quite some time at Discourse so that the
APIs can be released as part of Discourse 3.1
Why this change?
The user id in a fixture file was hardcoded to 666. Once we've
fabricated enough user objects until the sequence for `User#id` reaches
666, the specs in vanilla_body_parser_spec.rb will fail.
What is the fix here?
This commit increases the user id to a large integer which we will
likely never hit in the next 10-20 years.
To decide to use flip behavior select-kit will check if it's located inside a modal as a modal will scroll if overflown, however, when locating the select-kit element in the footer or header this is not the case. This commit will deactivate `flip` modifier only when used inside modal body.
On tablets like iPad where we allow channel and thread to be on the same screen, it was not possible to resize the panels due to code being thought for mouse events. This commit should now correctly allow for this.
The "resizer" has also been made larger to simplify touching.
No test as it's hard to test on iPad and dragging events are also complex.
On iOS we have a hack to prevent the viewport to move when focusing an input, however this code was targeting the textarea node through a global selector which is working fine on iOS as we only show one composer at a time but was failing on iPad as we show both channel and thread on the same screen. As a result `document.querySelector(".chat-composer__input")` was always targeting the first textarea on the screen which was the channel's composer, making it impossible to focus the thread's one.
Fixes an issue where this.selector value was not binded at the time of adding the event listener. Therefore when someone opens a chat channel that has images, the value of selector would change. I also moved the callback to a named function (rather than the default handleEvent).