Previously, we were storing custom svg sprite paths in the cache. This is a problem because sprites in themes get stored as uploads, and the returned paths were files in the temporary download cache which could sometimes be cleaned up, resulting in a broken cache.
I previously tried to fix this by skipping the missing files and clearing the cache, but that didn't work out well with CDNs. This PR stores the contents of the files in the custom_svg_sprites cache to avoid the problem of missing temp files.
Also, plugin custom icons are only included if the plugin is enabled.
In #12841, we started setting the ReviewableQueuedPost's target and topic after approving it instead of storing them in the payload. As a result, the reviewable_counts query started to include queued posts.
When a category is set to require approval, every post has an associated reviewable. Pointing that each post has an associated queued post is not necessary in this case, so I added a WHERE clause to skip them.
Having a large number of post-deploy migrations running out-of-numerical-sequence with pre-deploy migrations can be problematic. For example, if we have the sequence
- db/migrate/2017... - add column
- db/post_migrate/2018... - drop the column
- db/migrate/2021... - add the same column again
It will work fine in numerical order. But if you run the pre-deploy migrations **followed by** the post-deploy migrations, you will not get the same result.
Our post-deploy system is designed to allow for seamless upgrades of Discourse. However, it is reasonable for us to only support this totally seamless experience for a limited period of time. This commit moves all post_deploy migrations which are more than 1 year old (i.e. more than 2 major Discourse versions ago) into the regular pre-deploy migrations directory. This limits the impact of any edge cases caused by out-of-numerical-sequence migrations.
This adds the following columns to EmailLog:
* cc_addresses
* cc_user_ids
* topic_id
* raw
This is to bring the EmailLog table closer in parity to
IncomingEmail so it can be better utilized for Group SMTP
and IMAP mailing.
The raw column contains the full content of the outbound email,
but _only_ if the new hidden site setting
enable_raw_outbound_email_logging is enabled. Most sites do not
need it, and it's mostly required for IMAP and SMTP sending.
In the next pull request, there will be a migration to backfill
topic_id on the EmailLog table, at which point we can remove the
topic fallback method on EmailLog.
The other processing operations, such as fixing orientation or cropping,
can in rare cases increase the size of the uploaded image. Running the
downsize step after all these operations should create the best image
possible.
We had checks for the chrome binary in 3 different places
for tests and only one of them checked for google-chrome-stable,
which is problematic for Arch linux users (there are dozens of us!)
This PR moves all the code to one place and references it instead
of copying and pasting.
Before this change, calling `StyleSheet::Manager.stylesheet_details`
for the first time resulted in multiple queries to the database. This is
because the code was modelled in a way where each `Theme` was loaded
from the database one at a time.
This PR restructures the code such that it allows us to load all the
theme records in a single query. It also allows us to eager load the
required associations upfront. In order to achieve this, I removed the
support of loading multiple themes per request. It was initially added
to support user selectable theme components but the feature was never
completed and abandoned because it wasn't a feature that we thought was
worth building.
We already reject email replies to public topics via `SiteSetting.disallow_reply_by_email_after_days` and raising the `OldDestinationError`. This PR introduces similar behaviour for group inboxes, but without the rejection, and **only when SMTP is enabled for the group**.
If a reply is sent via email and the post is older than `SiteSetting.disallow_reply_by_email_after_days` days ago, then we create a new topic instead of making a reply in the old one and link back to the original topic. This is done to prevent long running group inbox discussions.
If a user posted a URL that appeared inside a Onebox, then the user
got a duplicate link notice. This was fixed by skipping those links in
Ruby.
If a user posted a URL that was Oneboxes and contained other links that
appeared in previous posts, then the user got a duplicate link notice.
This was fixed by skipping those links in JavaScript.
Before this fix we would display this exception:
```
Discourse::InvalidParameters:
value
```
After this fix we will display:
```
Discourse::InvalidParameters:
Invalid `x` value for `s3_region`
```
When we are emailing people from a group inbox, we are having
a PM conversation with them, as a support account would. In this
case mailing list headers do not make sense. It is not like a forum
topic where you may have tens or hundreds of participants -- it is a
conversation between the group and a small handful of people
directly contacting the group, often just one person.
The only header left in tact was List-Unsubsribe which is important
for letting people opt out to notifications.
* FIX: Allow SVG uploads if dimensions are a fraction of a unit
`UploadCreator` counts the number of pixels in an file to determine if it is valid. `pixels` is calculated by multiplying the width and height of the image, as determined by FastImage.
SVG files can have their width/height expressed in a variety of different units of measurement. For example, ‘px’, ‘in’, ‘cm’, ‘mm’, ‘pt’, ‘pc’, etc are all valid within SVG files. If an image has a width of `0.5in`, FastImage may interpret this as being a width of `0`, meaning it will report the `size` as being `0`.
However, we don’t need to concern ourselves with the number of ‘pixels’ in a SVG files, as that is irrelevant for this file format, so we can skip over the check for `pixels == 0` when processing this file type.
* DEV: Speed up getting SVG dimensions
The `-ping` flag prevents the entire image from being rasterized before a result is returned. See:
https://imagemagick.org/script/command-line-options.php#ping
The purpose of this is to allow us to catch regressions for a feature we've built recently that allows theme tests to run in production. We recently had a regression that we didn't notice for days, so to prevent that from happening again we'll use this in our internal CI pipelines.
The first thing we needed here was an enum rather than a boolean to determine how a directory_column was created. Now we have `automatic`, `user_field` and `plugin` directory columns.
This plugin API is assuming that the plugin has added a migration to a column to the `directory_items` table.
This was created to be initially used by discourse-solved. PR with API usage - https://github.com/discourse/discourse-solved/pull/137/
Profiling showed that we were roughly 10% of a request time creating all
the ActiveRecord objects for categories in the `Site` model on a site with 61 categories.
Instead of querying for the categories each time based on which categories the user can see,
we can just preload all of the categories upfront and filter out the
categories that the user can not see.
When dismissing new topics for the Tracked filter, the dismiss was
limited to 30 topics which is the default per page count for TopicQuery.
This happened even if you specified which topic IDs you were
selectively dismissing. This PR fixes that bug, and also moves
the per_page_count into a DEFAULT_PER_PAGE_COUNT for the TopicQuery
so it can be stubbed in tests.
Also moves the unused stub_const method into the spec helpers
for cases like this; it is much better to handle this in one place
with an ensure. In a follow up PR I will clean up other specs that
do the same thing and make them use stub_const.
Dir.glob does not guarantee file order and can change when ran on different machines.
This means that running asset precompilation on the exact same codebase will output
different content hashes.
Uploading lots of small files can be made significantly faster by parallelizing the `s3.put_object` calls. In testing, an UPLOAD_CONCURRENCY of 10 made a large restore 10x faster. An UPLOAD_CONCURRENCY of 20 made the same restore 18x faster.
This commit is careful to parallelize as little as possible, to reduce the chance of concurrency issues. In the worker threads, no database transactions are performed. All modification of shared objects is controlled with a mutex.
Unfortunately we do not have any existing tests for the `ToS3Migration` class. This change has been tested with a large site backup (120k uploads totalling 45GB)
When we call Bookmark.cleanup! we want to make sure that
topic_user.bookmarked is updated for topics linked to the
bookmarks that were deleted. Also when PostDestroyer calls
destroy and recover. We have a job for this already --
SyncTopicUserBookmarked -- so we just utilize that.
There are 2 changes in this PR:
1) Add a new environment variable called `DISCOURSE_SKIP_CSS_WATCHER` to disable our stylesheet watcher, and make the `qunit:test` rake task set this variable on the Unicorn/Rails server it spins up to disable our stylesheet watcher when running the tests because it doesn't really need it.
2) Print more Chrome logs (such as network/security errors) to the console.
Since we use the event to perform additional validations on the file, we should check if it added any errors to the upload before saving it. This change makes the UploadCreator more consistent since we no longer have to rely on exceptions.
Adds a new `smtp_group_id` column to `EmailLog` which is filled in if the mail `from_address` matches a group's `email_username`. This is for easier debugging, so we know which emails have been sent via group SMTP.
Fixes our backend spec suite in GitHub Actions CI. For more information about the Docker issue see: https://github.com/docker/for-linux/issues/1015
(It's possible that error could also happen in dev/production, though thankfully that hasn't happened yet afaik)
When replying to a user_private_message email originating from
a group PM that does _not_ have a reply key (e.g. when replying
directly to the group's SMTP address), we were mistakenly linking
the new post created from the reply to the OP and the user who
created the topic, based on the first IncomingEmail message ID in
the topic, rather than using the correct reply to user and post number
that the user actually replied to.
We now use the In-Reply-To header to look up the corresponding EmailLog
record when the user who replied was sent a user_private_message email,
and use the post from that as the reply_to_user/post.
This also removes superfluous filtering of incoming_email records. After
already filtering by message_id and then addressed_to_user (which only
returns incoming emails where the to, from, or cc address includes any
of the user's emails), we were filtering again but in the ruby code for
the exact same conditions. After removing this all existing tests still
pass.
If force_https is enabled all resource (including markdown preview and so on) will be accessed using HTTPS
If for any reason you attempt to link to non HTTPS reachable content content may appear broken
When `Theme#all_theme_variables` returns an empty array, we were running
a pointless query in `StyleSheet::Manager#uploads_digest`.
`SELECT "sha1" FROM "theme_fields" INNER JOIN "uploads" ON
"uploads"."id" = "theme_fields"."upload_id" WHERE 1=0`
Previously, the `transformed.blah` shortcut could only be used in top-level hbs statements like {{transformed.blah}}. When attempting to use it in a sub-expression like `{{concat "hello" transformed.world}}`, it would raise a "transformed is not defined" error.
This commit updates the shortcut logic to make `transformed.blah` and `attrs.blah` work consistently in all hbs expressions.
Co-authored-by: Jordan Vidrine <jordan@jordanvidrine.com>