Meta topic: https://meta.discourse.org/t/meta-theme-color-is-not-respecting-current-color-scheme/239815/7?u=osama.
This commit renders an additional `theme-color` `<meta>` tag for the dark scheme if the current user/request has a scheme selected for dark mode. We currently only render one `theme-color` tag which is always based on the user's selected scheme for light mode, but if the user also selects a scheme for dark mode and uses a device that's configured to use/prefer dark mode, the Discourse UI will be in dark mode, but any parts of the browser/OS UI that's colored based on the `theme-color` tag, would use a color from the user's selected light scheme and look inconsistent with the Discourse UI because the `theme-color` tag is based on the user's selected light scheme.
The additional `theme-color` tag has `media="(prefers-color-scheme: dark)"` and is based on the user's selected dark scheme which means any browser UI that's colored based on `theme-color` tags should be able to pick the right tag based on the user's preference for light/dark mode.
The `active` param on the create user endpoint requires that an api key
is used in the request header otherwise it is ignored, so adding this
distinction to the api docs.
We are already caching any DB_HOST and REDIS_HOST (and their
accompanying replicas), we should also cache the resolved addresses for
the MessageBus specific Redis. This is a noop if no MB redis is defined
in config. A side effect is that the MB will also support SRV lookup and
priorities, following the same convention as the other cached services.
The port argument was added to redis_healthcheck so that the script
supports a setup where Redis is running on a non-default port.
Did some minor refactoring to improve readability when filtering out the
CRITICAL_HOST_ENV_VARS. The `select` block was a bit confusing, so the
sequence was made easier to follow.
We were coercing an environment variable to an int in a few places, so
the `env_as_int` method was introduced to do that coercion in one place and
for convenience purposes default to a value if provided.
See /t/68301/30.
There are situations where a container running Discourse may want to
cache the critical DNS services without running the cache_critical_dns
service, for example running migrations prior to running a full bore
application container.
Add a `--once` argument for the cache_critical_dns script that will
only execute the main loop once, and return the status code for the
script to use when exiting. 0 indicates no errors occured during SRV
resolution, and 1 indicates a failure during the SRV lookup.
Nothing is reported to prometheus in run_once mode. Generally this
mode of operation would be a part of a unix pipeline, in which the exit
status is a more meaningful and immediate signal than a prometheus metric.
The reporting has been moved into it's own method that can be called
only when the script is running as a service.
See /t/69597.
Describes the behaviour and configuration of the cache_critical_dns
script, mainly cribbed from commit messages. Tries to make this program
a bit less of an enigma.
The `PG::Connection#ping` method is only reliable for checking if the
given host is accepting connections, and not if the authentication
details are valid.
This extends the healthcheck to confirm that the auth details are
able to both create a connection and execute queries against the
database.
We expect the empty query to return an empty result set, so we can
assert on that. If a failure occurs for any reason, the healthcheck will
return false.
An SRV RR contains a priority value for each of the SRV targets that
are present, ranging from 0 - 65535. When caching SRV records we may want to
filter out any targets above or below a particular threshold.
This change adds support for specifying a lower and/or upper bound on
target priorities for any SRV RRs. Any targets returned when resolving
the SRV RR whose priority does not fall between the lower and upper
thresholds are ignored.
For example: Let's say we are running two Redis servers, a primary and
cold server as a backup (but not a replica). Both servers would pass health
checks, but clearly the primary should be preferred over the backup
server. In this case, we could configure our SRV RR with the primary
target as priority 1 and backup target as priority 10. The
`DISCOURSE_REDIS_HOST_SRV_LE` could then be set to 1 and the target with
priority 10 would be ignored.
See /t/66045.
This removes the option to override the sleep time between caching of
DNS records. The override was invalid because `''.to_i` is 0 in Ruby,
causing a tight loop calling the `run` method.
For Redis connections that operate over TLS, we need to ensure that we
are setting the correct arguments for the Redis client. We can utilise
the existing environment variable `DISCOURSE_REDIS_USE_SSL` to toggle
this behaviour.
No SSL verification is performed for two reasons:
- the Discourse application will perform a verification against any FQDN
as specified for the Redis host
- the healthcheck is run against the _resolved_ IP address for the Redis
hostname, and any SSL verification will always fail against a direct
IP address
If no SSL arguments are provided, the IP address is never cached against
the hostname as no healthy address is ever found in the HealthyCache.
Modify the cache_critical_dns script for SRV RR awareness. The new
behaviour is only enabled when one or more of the following environment
variables are present (and only for a host where the `DISCOURSE_*_HOST_SRV`
variable is present):
- `DISCOURSE_DB_HOST_SRV`
- `DISCOURSE_DB_REPLICA_HOST_SRV`
- `DISCOURSE_REDIS_HOST_SRV`
- `DISCOURSE_REDIS_REPLICA_HOST_SRV`
Some minor changes in refactor to original script behaviour:
- add Name and SRVName classes for storing resolved addresses for a hostname
- pass DNS client into main run loop instead of creating inside the loop
- ensure all times are UTC
- add environment override for system hosts file path and time between DNS
checks mainly for testing purposes
The environment variable for `BUNDLE_GEMFILE` is set to enables Ruby to
load gems that are installed and vendored via the project's Gemfile.
This script is usually not run from the project directory as it is
configured as a system service (see
71ba9fb7b5/templates/cache-dns.template.yml (L19))
and therefore cannot load gems like `pg` or `redis` from the default
load paths. Setting this environment variable configures bundler to look
in the correct project directory during it's setup phase.
When a `DISCOURSE_*_HOST_SRV` environment variable is present, the
decision for which target to cache is as follows:
- resolve the SRV targets for the provided hostname
- lookup the addresses for all of the resolved SRV targets via the
A and AAAA RRs for the target's hostname
- perform a protocol-aware healthcheck (PostgreSQL or Redis pings)
- pick the newest target that passes the healthcheck
From there, the resolved address for the SRV target is cached against
the hostname as specified by the original form of the environment
variable.
For example: The hostname specified by the `DISCOURSE_DB_HOST` record
is `database.example.com`, and the `DISCOURSE_DB_HOST_SRV` record is
`database._postgresql._tcp.sd.example.com`. An SRV RR lookup will return
zero or more targets. Each of the targets will be queried for A and AAAA
RRs. For each of the addresses returned, the newest address that passes
a protocol-aware healthcheck will be cached. This address is cached so
that if any newer address for the SRV target appears we can perform a
health check and prefer the newer address if the check passes.
All resolved SRV targets are cached for a minimum of 30 minutes in memory
so that we can prefer newer hosts over older hosts when more than one target
is returned. Any host in the cache that hasn't been seen for more than 30
minutes is purged.
See /t/61485.
If there's an error loading a topic, and later you load it successfully - the the stale error message would still briefly show up every time you navigate to that topic
Related to aeee7ed.
Before the change in aeee7ed, notifications for direct replies to your posts and notifications for replies in watched topics looked the same in the notifications menu -- they both used the arrow icon.
We decided in aeee7ed to distinguish them by changing "watched topics" notifications to use the bell icon because it was confusing for users who watch topics to see the same icon for direct replies and "watched topics". However, that change also means that non-power/new users who receive replies to topics _they create_ will get notifications with the bell icon because technically they're watching the topic, but the arrow icon is more appropriate for this case because we use it throughout the app to indicate "replies".
This commit adds a special-case so that if a user is watching a topic AND the topic is created by them, they receive notifications with the arrow icon (type `replied`) instead of the bell icon (type `posted`) for new posts in the topic.
Internal topic: t/79051.
Discourse Connect can be used to manage group memberships of users by including a `add_groups`, `remove_groups` or `groups` attribute in the Discourse Connect payload. However, additions/deletions of users from groups aren't logged to the groups logs (available at `/g/<group>/manage/logs`) which can cause confusions to admins they try to figure out when/how users were added or removed from a group. This commit makes Discourse Connect add entries to the groups logs when it makes changes to users' group memberships.
This test flakes occassionally, possibly because
of the arg ordering which we do not guarantee.
In future if this keeps occurring we may want to
try make expect_enqueued_with not care about argument
orders or the order of arrays etc within those arguments.
Adds sorting for the HashtagAutocompleteService to
sort the results by case-insensitive text _within_
the type sort order specified by the params. This
should fix some flaky specs as well.
Linking a commit from a GitHub pull request included the complete commit
message, instead of just the first line. The rest of the commit message
will be added to the body of the Onebox.
This reverts commit 28be5d3037 and fcb4675415
This caused qunit timeouts in our internal CI environments. Not sure of the exact cause yet, but we're reverting for now while we investigate.
In test mode we reinitialize the Application for every test. We only want to apply the class reopens once to avoid performance regressions and memory leaks in the test suite.
Classic Ember components (i.e. "@ember/component") rely upon "event
delegation" to listen for events at the application root and then dispatch
those events to any event handlers defined on individual Classic components.
This coordination is handled by Ember's EventDispatcher.
In contrast, Glimmer components (i.e. "@glimmer/component") expect event
listeners to be added to elements using modifiers (such as `{{on "click"}}`).
These event listeners are added directly to DOM elements using
`addEventListener`. There is no need for an event dispatcher.
Issues may arise when using Classic and Glimmer components together, since it
requires reconciling the two event handling approaches. For instance, event
propagation may not work as expected when a Classic component is nested
inside a Glimmer component.
`normalizeEmberEventHandling` helps an application standardize upon the
Glimmer event handling approach by eliminating usage of event delegation and
instead rewiring Classic components to directly use `addEventListener`.
Specifically, it performs the following:
- Invokes `eliminateClassicEventDelegation()` to remove all events associated
with Ember's EventDispatcher to reduce its runtime overhead and ensure that
it is effectively not in use.
- Invokes `rewireClassicComponentEvents(app)` to rewire each Classic
component to add its own event listeners for standard event handlers (e.g.
`click`, `mouseDown`, `submit`, etc.).
- Configures an instance initializer that invokes
`rewireActionModifier(appInstance)` to redefine the `action` modifier with
a substitute that uses `addEventListener`.
Additional changes include:
* d-button: only preventDefault / stopPropagation for handled actions
This allows unhandled events to propagate as expected.
* d-editor: avoid adding duplicate event listener for tests
This extra event listener causes duplicate paste events in tests.
* group-manage-email-settings: Monitor `input` instead of `change` event for checkboxes