String.prototype.substr() is deprecated so we replace it with String.prototype.slice() which works similarily but isn't deprecated.
Signed-off-by: Tobias Speicher <rootcommander@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Jarek Radosz <jradosz@gmail.com>
The links returned by post.url and topic.url are relative, but contain
the subdirectory. When getAbsoluteURL is called to construct the
complete share URL, it adds the host and the subdirectory again. As a
result the created URLs contained the subdirectory twice.
This makes a small improvement to 'cold cache' ember-cli build times, and a large improvement to 'warm cache' build times
The ember-auto-import update means that vendor is now split into multiple files for efficiency. These are named `chunk.*`, and should be included immediately after the `vendor.js` file. This commit also updates the rails app to render script tags for these chunks.
This change was previously merged, and caused memory-related errors on RAM-constrained machines. This was because Webpack 5 switches from multiple worker processes to a single multi-threaded process. This meant that it was hitting node's default heap size limit (~500mb on a 1GB RAM server). Discourse's standard install procedure recommends adding 2GB swap to 1GB-RAM machines, so we can afford to override's Node's default via the `--max-old-space-size` flag.
This reverts commit f4c6a61855 and a8325c9016
This update of ember-auto-import and webpack causes significantly higher memory use during rebuilds. This made ember-cli totally unusable on 1GB RAM / 2GB swap environments. We don't have a specific need for this upgrade right now, so reverting for now.
This makes a small improvement to 'cold cache' ember-cli build times, and a large improvement to 'warm cache' build times
The ember-auto-import update means that vendor is now split into multiple files for efficiency. These are named `chunk.*`, and should be included immediately after the `vendor.js` file. This commit also updates the rails app to render script tags for these chunks
This reverts commit 2c7906999a.
The changes break some things in local development (putting JS files
into minified files, not allowing debugger, and others)
Previously only `<div>one top element</div>` was allowed because we use `firstChild` instead of `children`.
We also want `<div>one</div><div>two</div>` to work with this method.
This reverts commit ea84a82f77.
This is causing problems with `/theme-qunit` on legacy, non-ember-cli production sites. Reverting while we work on a fix
This is quite complex as it means that in production we have to build
Ember CLI test files and allow them to be used by our Rails application.
There is a fair bit of glue we can remove in the future once we move to
Ember CLI completely.
da6edc1 introduced the `lookupView` method, which initialized a fresh resolver, and used it to directly look up raw-views (with no caching). This worked well, but was not a clean solution. It required initializing an entirely new resolver, and did not have any caching.
This commit updates the `helperContext` to include access to the registry, and uses it to perform raw-view lookups. As well as re-using the registry, this also means we're making use of the resolver's built-in cache.
I haven't been able to measure any noticeable performance impact from this change, but there is certainly less work being done, so it may be beneficial on older devices.
Co-authored-by: Ayke Halder <rr-it@users.noreply.github.com>
We cannot use any of the uppy mixins or core code, because
the code there is not shared with the wizard, and to move
it all to discourse-common would be a task almost equal
difficulty to taking the ring to Mordor.
Therefore, we can just use the uppy vendor libraries in the
wizard, and do a quick-n-dirty version of the uppy upload
code for the wizard-field-image uploader.
Currently when a user creates posts that are moderated (for whatever
reason), a popup is displayed saying the post needs approval and the
total number of the user’s pending posts. But then this piece of
information is kind of lost and there is nowhere for the user to know
what are their pending posts or how many there are.
This patch solves this issue by adding a new “Pending” section to the
user’s activity page when there are some pending posts to display. When
there are none, then the “Pending” section isn’t displayed at all.
Time spent in the 'find module with suffix' portion of our `customResolve` function were adding up to around 100ms-150ms when booting the app. This time is spread over 150+ calls, so it's not immediately obvious in flamegraphs.
This commit implements a (reversed) [Trie](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trie) which enables fast suffix-based lookups on a list of strings.
In my tests, this requires < 5ms to initialize, and brings the cumulative 'find module with suffix' time down to `< 5ms`. This corresponds to a ~100ms improvement in LCP metrics in my browser.
The only behavior change is to remove support for module filenames which are **not** dasherized. I haven't found any core/theme/plugin modules which are not dasherized in their filenames.
We rely on yarn workspaces so we don't want people using npm in the repo by accident.
Also updated the required node version to 12+.
~~Not sure about the min yarn version – the latest one could be missing in various CI-like envs, so I might change it yet.~~
Downgraded yarn to ">= 1.21.1" (the oldest of "current" versions, tagged "legacy")
Before this fix if your forum was set up with a subfolder and you
clicked on a link to a different subfolder it would not work. For
example:
subfolder: /cool
link is: /about-us
Previously it would try to resolve /about-us as /cool/about-us. With
this fix it redirects to /about-us correctly.