`window.deprecationWorkflow` does not exist in the server-side pretty-text environment. This commit fixes the check and adds a general spec for deprecations triggered inside pretty-text
(extracted from #23678)
* Move Wizard back into main app, remove Wizard addon
* Remove Wizard-related resolver or build hacks
* Install and enable `@embroider/router`
* Add "wizard" to `splitAtRoutes`
In a fully optimized Embroider app, route-based code splitting more
or less Just Work™ – install `@embroider/router`, subclass from it,
configure which routes you want to split and that's about it.
However, our app is not "fully optimized", by which I mean we are
not able to turn on all the `static*` flags.
In Embroider, "static" means "statically analyzable". Specifically
it means that all inter-dependencies between modules (files) are
explicitly expressed as `import`s, as opposed to `{{i18n ...}}`
magically means "look for the default export in app/helpers/i18n.js"
or something even more dynamic with the resolver.
Without turning on those flags, Embroider behaves conservatively,
slurps up all `app` files eagerly into the primary bundle/chunks.
So, while you _could_ turn on route-based code splitting, there
won't be much to split.
The commits leading up to this involves a bunch of refactors and
cleanups that 1) works perfectly fine in the classic build, 2) are
good and useful in their own right, but also 3) re-arranged things
such that most dependencies are now explicit.
With those in place, I was able to move all the wizard code into
the "app/static" folder. Embroider does not eagerly pull things from
this folder into any bundle, unless something explicitly "asks" for
them via `imports`. Conversely, things from this folder are not
registered with the resolver and are not added to the `loader.js`
registry.
In conjunction with route-based code splitting, we now have the
ability to split out islands of on-demand functionalities from the
main app bundle.
When you split a route in Embroider, it automatically creates a
bundle/entrypoint with the relevant routes/templates/controllers
matching that route prefix. Anything they import will be added to
the bundle as well, assuming they are not already in the main app
bundle, which is where the "app/static" folder comes into play.
The "app/static" folder name is not special. It is configured in
ember-cli-build.js. Alternatively, we could have left everything
in their normal locations, and add more fine-grained paths to the
`staticAppPaths` array. I just thought it would be easy to manage
and scale, and less error-prone to do it this way.
Note that putting things in `app/static` does not guarantee that
it would not be part of the main app bundle. For example, if we
were to add an `import ... from "app/static/wizard/...";` in a
main bundle file (say, `app.js`), then that chunk of the module
graph would be pulled in. (Consider using `await import(...)`?)
Overtime, we can build better tooling (e.g. lint rules and babel
macros to make things less repetitive) as we expand the use of
this pattern, but this is a start.
Co-authored-by: Godfrey Chan <godfreykfc@gmail.com>
This commit adds an additional toggle to our safe-mode system. When enabled, it will cause all deprecation messages to become exceptions. This gives admins a way to test their themes/plugins against upcoming Discourse changes without needing to use the browser developer tools.
This commit ports the feature by @chapoi that was
previously a theme component in core.
A new post_menu button, copyLink, is added and used
as the default instead of share.
copyLink, on desktop, will copy the link of the post
to the user's clipboard and show a nice 'lil animation.
On mobile the native share menu will be shown.
If site owners want the old behaviour back, they just
need to change the post_menu site setting to use
the share button instead of copyLink.
This discourse-common decorator was dependent on the core app, hence creating a circular reference that was breaking the embroider upgrade. (see: #24391)
- Add prefixes to Ember deprecations (previously was just Discourse deprecations)
- Allow logic to work in tests (where window.Discourse is not defined)
- Detect `{plugin}_tests.js` files
- Optimise dev/test regex logic out of the production build using `if(DEBUG)`
Now that core has a file structure and default imports, Ember's resolver can load helpers lazily. So we can remove the lazy loading, and helpers in ember templates will continue to work. This should provide a slight performance improvement for initial boot.
However, there is a slight complication: some of our helpers are also registered with our Raw Handlebars system as a side-effect of loading the module. Therefore, this commit adds a `helperMissing` helper to our RawHandlebars system. This looks up the helper by name in the ember resolver, which triggers the relevant module to be evaluated, and the raw helper to be registered as a side effect.
For backwards-compatibility, plugin and theme helpers continue to be eagerly evaluated. Once the `discourse.register-unbound` deprecation is resolved, we can safely remove this eager loading.
`registerUnbound` was present for legacy reasons when using helpers in raw-hbs and has been replaced by `registerRawHelper`.
For new helpers used only in classic ember template, exporting a default function from `helpers/*.js` is recommended.
This change also means that all existing helpers will be available to import in `gjs` files.
Co-authored-by: David Taylor <david@taylorhq.com>
As of #23867 this is now a real package, so updating the imports to
use the real package name, rather than relying on the alias. The
name change in the package name is because `I18n` is not a valid
name as NPM packages must be all lowercase.
This commit also introduces an eslint rule to prevent importing from
the old I18n path.
For themes/plugins, the old 'i18n' name remains functional.
`escape` from `pretty-text/sanitizer` is a re-export of the same
function defined in `discourse-common`. Updating the import paths
across the codebase to use the `discourse-common` import path.
`escape` is a rather simple function that can be accomplished with
a regular expression in `discourse-common`.
On the other hand, the remaining parts in `pretty-text/sanitizer`
has a lot of code, PLUS it depend on the rather heavy "xss" NPM
library.
Currently, most of the consumers of `pretty-text/sanitizer` are of
the `{ escape }` varient. This is resolved by this PR.
The remaining usages are either:
1. via/through `PrettyText` which is essentially gated behind
loading the markdown-it bundle, OR
2. via `sanitize` from `discourse/lib/text`
I believe we may ultimately be able to move all the usages to behind
the markdown-it bundle (or, equivilantly, set up another lazy bundle
for `sanitize`) and be able to shed the sanitization code and the
"xss" library from the initial page load.
`discourse/lib/text` also defines a `sanitizeAsync` which is gated
behind loading the markdown-it bundle.
Looking through the usages of `sanitize`, I believe most of these
can be safely switched to use `sanitizeAsync`, in that they are
already in an asynchrnous path that handles a server response. Most
of them are actually rendering a piece of server-generated HTML
message as flash message, so I am not sure there really is value in
sanitizing (we should be able to trust our own server?), but in any
case, code-wise, they should already be able to absorb the async
just fine.
I am not sure if `sanitize` and `sanitizeAsync` are actually API
compatible – they both take `options` but I think those `options` do
pretty different things. This is somethign for another person to
investigate down the road in another PR.
According to `all-the-plugins`, `discourse-graphviz` also import
from this location, so perhaps we should PR to update. That being
said, it doesn't really hurt anything to keep the alias around for
a while.
- Introduces a `deepFreeze` helper to block any mutations to the current-user fixture
- Add `cloneJSON` to any places which were previously causing mutations
Normally, modules defined under `blah/index` can be imported as `blah`. This is also true of Ember resolver lookups - `<MyComponent />` should resolve to the same as `<MyComponent::Index />`. This was working as expected in Discourse core, but we had not implemented the same in our custom resolver logic for themes/plugins.
This commit implements the `/index` fallback, and adds a test for the behaviour.
Our custom implementation of `getOwner` includes a fallback which returns an owner, even if the passed object does not have one set. This is confusing and creates a false sense of security. Generally if the fallback is used, it means there is a problem with the patterns being used.
This commit renames our custom implementation to `getOwnerWithFallback`, while maintaining the old `getOwner` export with a deprecation notice. Core code is updated to use the official `@ember/application` implementation, or the new `getOwnerWithFallback` function.
This commit updates all core uses of `{ getOwner } from discourse-common/lib/get-owner` to use `getOwnerWithFallback`. Future commits will work through and convert many of these to use the official `@ember/application` implementation
A new `rawRenderGlimmer` function is introduced which can be used to render glimmer components inside our legacy 'raw hbs' views. See discourse/lib/raw-render-glimmer for more information. This will help as we work to move away from raw-hbs use.
Previously we were discovering plugin outlets by checking first for dedicated template files, and then looking for classes to match them. This doesn't work for components which are entirely defined in JS (e.g. those authored with gjs, or those which are re-exports of a colocated component).
This commit refactors our detection logic to look for both class and template modules in a single pass. It also refactors things so that the modules themselves are required lazily when needd, rather than all being loaded during app boot.
This adds a new `loaderShim()` function to ensure certain modules
are present in the `loader.js` registry and therefore runtime
`require()`-able.
Currently, the classic build pipeline puts a lot of things in the
runtime `loader.js` registry automatically. For example, all of
the ember-auto-import packages are in there.
Going forward, and especially as we switch to the Embroider build
pipeline, this will not be guarenteed. We need to keep an eye on
what modules (packages) our "external" bundles (admin, wizard,
markdown-it, plugins, etc) are expecting to be present and put
them into the registry proactively.
The gjs/gts formats are a new pattern for authoring Ember components. This commit introduces support for these patterns to our build pipeline for core/plugins, and converts a handful of components to use the new format. It also introduces relevant updates to our linting config, and to our sample vscode configuration.
Co-authored-by: Godfrey Chan <godfreykfc@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Krystan HuffMenne <kmenne+github@gmail.com>
Since 0fa92529ed, helpers can now be implemented as plain JS functions. This makes them much easier to write/read, and also makes them usable in `<template>` gjs files.
The primary motivation is to simplify `eagerLoadRawTemplateModules` which curently introspects the module dependencies (the `imports` at runtime). This is no longer supported in Embroider as the AMD shims do not have any dependencies (since it's managed internally with webpack).
These avatar-related helper functions are used in pretty-text, which currently means we load the entire `discourse/lib/utilities` module into the mini-racer when running pretty-text on the server side. This stops us adding any logic or imports to discourse/lib/utilities which may depend on other `discourse/` namespace features.
This commit moves the avatar-related utils into a dedicated module in the `discourse-common` namespace, adds backwards-compatibility shims, and updates the pretty-text config accordingly.
This allows us to use `getOwner(this)` on widgets (without needing to resort to our custom `discourse-common/lib/get-owner` implementation which has a hacky fallback)
Watched words were converted to regular expressions containing \W, which
handled only ASCII characters. Using [^[:word]] instead ensures that
UTF-8 characters are also handled correctly.
Named outlets are deprecated and will be removed in Ember 4.x.
Backwards-compatibility shims are introduced so that plugin overrides to `controller:composer` are ported to `service:composer`.
It's important to keep our core log output as clean as possible to avoid 'crying wolf', and so that any deprecations triggered by plugin/theme tests are indeed caused by that theme/plugin, and not core.
This commit will make the core test suite fail if any deprecations are triggered. If a new deprecation is introduced (e.g. as part of a dependency update) and we need more time to resolve it it can be silenced via ember-deprecation-workflow.
This does not affect plugin/theme test runs.
The implementation previously generated a descriptor with an `initializer()`, and bound the function to the `this` context of the initializer. In native class syntax, the initializer of a descriptor is only called once, with a `this` context of the constructor, not the instance.
This commit updates the implementation so that it generates the bound function on-demand using a getter. This is the same strategy employed by ember's built-in `@action` decorator.
Unfortunately, this use of a getter means that the `@observes` decorator does not support being directly chained to `@debounce`. It throws the error "`observer must be provided a function or an observer definition`". The workaround is to put the observer on its own function, which then calls the debounced function. Given that we're aiming to reduce our usage of `@observes`, we've accepted the need for this workaround rather than spending the time to patch the implementation of `@observes`.
When user is watching category or tag (watching or watching first post) notifications are moved to other tab.
To achieve that and distinguish between post create to directly watched topics and indirectly watched topics, new notification type called `watching_category_or_tag` was introduced.
In the past, the result of template compilation would be stored directly in `Ember.TEMPLATES`. Following the move to more modern ember-cli-based compilation, templates are now compiled to es6 modules. To handle forward/backwards compatibility during these changes we had logic in `discourse-boot` which would extract templates from the es6 modules and store them into the legacy-style `Ember.TEMPLATES` object.
This commit removes that shim, and updates our resolver to fetch templates directly from es6 modules. This is closer to how 'vanilla' Ember handles template resolution. We still have a lot of discourse-specific logic, but now it is centralised in one location and should be easier to understand and normalize in future.
This commit should not introduce any behaviour change.
Previously we were trying to handle both async and sync use cases in a single function, but it was confusing to read and led to subtle race conditions. This commit separates the async version into a separate function.
- Count deprecations and print them to the console following QUnit runs
- In GitHub actions, write the same information as a job summary
- Add documentation to `discourse-common/lib/deprecated`
- Introduce `id` and `url` options to `deprecated`
- Introduce `withSilencedDeprecations` helper to allow testing deprecated code paths without making noise in the logs
This was previously reverted in 47035693b7.
This reverts commit 8c48285145. This introduced a bug which could cause sites to break when certain deprecations are hit. We'll re-introduce a fixed version of this change in a future commit.