rack-mini-profiler was setting a cookie path of / which was clobbering
the session cookie path of Discourse.base_path.
Fixes some issues when local dev is unable to read or write from/to
the user session, such as during omniauth CSRF checks.
This will allow consumers (e.g. the discourse-prometheus plugin) to separate topic-timings and message-bus requests. It also fixes the is_background boolean for subfolder sites.
Example error:
```
/__w/discourse/discourse/lib/tasks/assets.rake:3: warning: already initialized constant EMBER_CLI
/__w/discourse/discourse/lib/tasks/assets.rake:3: warning: previous definition of EMBER_CLI was here
```
This commit handles the edge case where a draft is lost with no warnings if the user edits the title (or category/tags) of a topic while they're replying.to the same topic. Repro steps are as follows:
1. Start replying to a topic and type enough to get a draft saved.
2. Scroll up to the topic title and click the pencil icon next to the topic title, change the title, category and/or tags, and then save the changes.
3. Reload the page and you'll see that the draft is gone.
This happens because we only allow 1 draft per topic per user and when you edit the title of a topic that you're replying to, from the server perspective it'll look like as if you've submitted your reply so it will advance the draft sequence for the topic and delete the draft.
The fix in this commit makes `PostRevisor` skip advancing the draft sequence when a topic's title is edited using the pencil button next to the title.
Internal ticket: t60854.
Co-authored-by: Robin Ward <robin.ward@gmail.com>
Meta topic: https://meta.discourse.org/t/rtl-direction-is-broken-in-quotes/217639?u=osama.
Posts in Discourse are by default always rendered in the same direction as the rest of site, for example if the site is RTL, a post in that site is always rendered RTL even if it's made of an LTR language entirely. However, this behavior can be changed by enabling the `support mixed text direction` site setting which makes our posts rendering engine consider each "paragraph" in the post and apply an appropriate direction (using the `dir` attribute) on it based on its content/language.
I put paragraph in quotes because technically we only loop through the immediate children of the HTML element that contains the post cooked HTML and do this direction check on them. Most of the time the immediate children are actually paragraphs, but not always. The direction of an element is determined by checking its `textContent` property against a regular expression that checks all characters are RTL characters and based on the regular expression result the `dir` attribute is set on the element.
This technique doesn't work so well on quotes because they may contain multiple paragraphs which may be in different languages/directions. For example: if a site's language is Arabic (RTL language) and the `support mixed text direction` setting is enabled, regular paragraphs outside quotes are rendered as expected with the right direction depending on the paragraph's language. However, paragraphs within a quote are all (incorrectly) rendered in a single direction, LTR or RTL, regardless of whether they're of different languages/directions or not.
The reason for this is that when we're determining the direction for the quote, it's considered as one element and the direction is set on the whole quote. But for complex quotes that contain mixed paragraphs, we need to be more surgical and apply direction on individual paragraphs/elements within the quote.
This commit adds special handling for quotes to ensure that:
* the quote top bar (the avatar plus the chevron and arrow) always match the site direction
* each immediate paragraph (`<p>` elements) under `<blockquote>` in the quote gets a direction based on its content.
For before/after screenshots, see PR #16004.
This option will make it so the [quote] bbcode will always
include the HTML link to the quoted post, even if a topic_id
is not provided in the PrettyText#cook options. This is so
[quote] bbcode can be used in other places, like chat messages,
that always need the link and do not have an "off-topic" ID
to use.
The 'new' tab doesn't exist for anonymous users. Every 'new' topic also publishes a message on the `/latest` channel, so the blue banner at the top of the topic-list will still be functional
* DEV: remove duplicate code in button component template
* DEV: refactor is-loading state of d-button component
Before this change on initialisation `forceDisabled` is set `false` and then might change to `undefined` - depending on the use of the button component. This change ensures a boolean value for `forceDisabled`.
The added test works with and without the new change. The test is added as it represents the default use case for most buttons.
Previously cached counting made redis calls in main thread and performed
the flush in main thread.
This could lead to pathological states in extreme heavy load.
This refactor reduces load and cleans up the interface
Previously we were publishing one messagebus message per user which was 'tracking' a topic. On large sites, this can easily be 1000+ messages. The important information in the message is common between all users, so we can manage with a single message on a shared channel, which will be much more efficient.
For user-specific values (notification_level and last_read_post_number), the JS app can infer values which are 'good enough'. Correct values will be loaded as soon as a topic-list containing the topic is visited.
aa1442fdc3 split theme stylesheets so that every component gets its own stylesheet. Therefore, there is now no need for parent themes to collate the settings/variables of its children during scss compilation.
Technically this is a breaking change for any themes which depend on the settings/variables of their child components. That was never a supported/recommended arrangement, so we don't expect this to cause issues.
If a theme is updated to introduce a new setting AND immediately make use of it in a stylesheet, then an error was being shown. This is because the stylesheet compilation was using the theme's cached settings, and the cache is only cleared **after** the theme has finished compiling.
This commit updates the SCSS compilation to use uncached values for settings. A similar fix was applied to other parts of theme compilation back in 2020: (a51b8d9c66)
The previous Discourse.cache usage was different to how other theme-related caching is handled, and also requires reaching out to redis every time. The common theme cache is held in memory (as a DistributedCache)
This will only work under Ember CLI, and a small hack is required to make the Resolver work in development mode. In future, when we move to a more recent version of the Ember Resolver, this hack will not be required.
The use of a `/g` regex was causing some surprising, seemingly random, behavior. (https://stackoverflow.com/a/1520853/5913559)
There was also a known issue which would cause inconsistent class behavior when running the 'loading slider' theme component.
This commit takes the opportunity to refactor the component to remove the use of observers and remove the regex-based class parsing.
This commit makes sure that the email log's bounce_error_code
conforms to the SMTP error code RFC on save, so that
it is always in the format X.X.X or XXX without any
additional string details. Also included is a migration
to fix this issue for past records.
Revert "BUGFIX: use a more widely compatible version of sadd"
This reverts commit aa577f11fd.
I think the compatibility might not be a problem anymore, after 8 years? 😃
The default of 1Mb was preventing some valid Onebox requests from successfully completing.
Increasing this to 5Mb should reduce the number of unexpected failures.
Similar site settings exist for likes and edits and the new ones work
in a similar way.
By default, users below TL2 have a limit of 20, the limit is increased
by 1.5 for TL2 users up to 30, by 2 for TL3 users up to 40 and by 3 for
TL4 users up to 60.
The 5s difference was causing anon clients to have ~5s gaps between their long-polling requests. On busy sites, this could be enough time for them to build up a backlog, which then becomes much more expensive for us on the server-side.
Since we already have perfectly sensible logic for validating email addresses,
let's leverage that and simplify the logic while we're at it.
Emails with spaces are no longer permitted (why were they?)
We validate the *format* of email addresses in many places with a match against
a regex, often with very slightly different syntax.
Adding a separate EmailAddressValidator simplifies the code in a few spots and
feels cleaner.
Deprecated the old location in case someone is using it in a plugin.
No functionality change is in this commit.
Note: the regex used at the moment does not support using address literals, e.g.:
* localpart@[192.168.0.1]
* localpart@[2001:db8::1]