These packages are not published anywhere - they only exist for organizational purposes within this repository. Even so, it makes sense for their metadata to match that of the top-level discourse/discourse repository.
By default, in CI environments, Ember CLI does not output anything between "building..." and "cleaning up". Depending on configuration and hardware, Discourse asset builds can take upwards of 60s, and so this lack of output can make the build feel 'stuck'.
This commit introduces an addon which checks for CI mode, and then outputs status information periodically. The logic is very similar to Ember CLI's non-CI progress output implementation (https://github.com/ember-cli/ember-cli/blob/04a38fda2c/lib/models/builder.js#L183-L185).
Without this filter, a binary file (e.g. `.DS_Store`) in one of these addon directories will be concatenated into the output JS. Note that this filter is applied at the end of the build pipeline, so any hbs files have already been transpiled into `.js`.
This mirrors the filtering performed on the main application bundle by Ember CLI: https://github.com/ember-cli/ember-cli/blob/04a38fda2c/lib/broccoli/default-packager.js#L1255
Twitter removed OpenGraph tags from their pages. We can no longer
extract all the information (for example, the quoted tweet) we need
to render Oneboxes without using their API.
This also adds an optional `ticket` parameter to `Backuper` which allows identifying the backup in `backup_complete` and `backup_failed` events. Both events contain the logs as payload and moving some methods around ensures that all errors are included in the logs.
We can finally rely on template colocation in our app and we'll be
standarizing on that in the near future. However, I want to have sidebar
adopt this convention earlier.
Instead of relying on another help to generate the icons, we want to
rely on the interface for adding prefix icons. This ensures that prefix
icons are consistent across the section links in Sidebar
Previously, for every bookmarked topic, all topic_user records were being preloaded. Only the current user's record is actually required.
This commit introduces a new `perform_custom_preload!` API which bookmarkables can use to add custom preloading logic. We use this in topic_bookmarkable to load just the topic_user data we need (in the same way as `topic_list.rb`).
Co-authored-by: Blake Erickson <o.blakeerickson@gmail.com>
If a widget toggles between displaying two different RenderGlimmer instances, the Widget framework treats them as the same, and so `update()` is called rather than destroy/init. This commit detects this scenario and manually destroys/inits to ensure the correct component is being rendered.
Handles edge-case when a user is an admin and has an associated reviewable. Hitting this exception should be rare since we clear the reviewable when
granting staff to the user.
Before this commit, we carried custom code and styles for the sidebar on
mobile. This meant the look and feel of bringing up the sidebar on
mobile was very different from the user menu resulting in a very
inconsistent experience on mobile. Also, we could not leverage on the
existing swipe to close support on mobile.
In this commit, we made it such that the sidebar dropdown is always
rendered on mobile and made the interaction with the dropdown more
consistent with the user menu. There is also more parity with the old
hamburger dropdown when the experimental sidebar is disabled.
This commit introduces a new `{{on-resize}}` modifier along with its companion `resize-observer` Service. These automatically take care of setting up the observer and handling cleanup.
This commit includes the changes proposed in #17823. I've made these changes so that plugins that need to add tabs/lists with mixed item types - like the bookmarks tab that displays notifications and bookmarks - to the menu, don't have to write 2 templates like we currently do for the bookmarks/messages tabs (see user-menu/bookmark-notification-item.js that has been deleted in this commit).
Adds DISCOURSE_SMTP_OPEN_TIMEOUT and DISCOURSE_SMTP_READ_TIMEOUT GlobalSettings that allow site admins to configure the SMTP connection behavior to match the needs of their SMTP server.
These are in widespread use, and upgrading themes/plugins right now would break their compatibility with the stable branch. These should be unsilenced for the release of 2.9.0 stable.
Previously, this would require manually adding `?safe_mode=...` multiple times during the email-based login flow. `/u/admin-login` is often used when debugging a site, so it makes sense for this to be easier.
This commit introduces a new checkbox on the `/u/admin-login` screen. When checked, it'll set the safe_mode parameter on the `/email-login` link, and then pass it all the way through to the homepage redirect.
- `no_custom` -> `no_themes` (history: before themes existed, we had a similar tool called 'customizations')
- `only_official` -> `no_unofficial_plugins` (matches format of `no_themes` and `no_plugins`, and makes it clear that this doesn't affect themes)
- `?safe_mode=no_themes%2C%no_plugins` -> `?safe_mode=no_themes,no_plugins` (the query portion of a URL does not require commas to be encoded. This is much nicer to read)
- If `no_plugins` is chosen from `/safe-mode` the URL generated will omit the superfluous `no_unofficial_plugins` flag
- Some tweaks to copy on `/safe-mode`