The current manifest validation in Chrome requires at least one
non-maskable icon to make it installable.
This commit adds the maskable entry as another entry, following up
on changes added in 3e590b8
Because:
- Chrome 78 and Firefox Fenix have support for it
- The icons will look better by using all the availiable space
- Admins can control the icon and add appropriate padding since we have a
dedicated asset for the manifest logo. Read more about it on
https://css-tricks.com/maskable-icons-android-adaptive-icons-for-your-pwa/
This commit:
- Adds a new key under the icons array in the webmanifest, named purpose
with maskable value.
Previously, calculating thresholds for reviewables was done based on the
50th and 85th percentile across all reviewables. However, many forum
owners provided feedback that these thresholds were too easy to hit, in
particular when it came to auto hiding content.
The calculation has been adjusted to base the priorities on reviewables
that have a minimum of 2 scores (flags). This should push the amount of
flags required to hide something higher then before.
On forums with very few flags you don't want to calculate averages
because they won't be very useful. Stick with the defaults until we hit
15 reviewables at least.
Forums without previously calculated scores would return the same values
for low/medium/high sensitivity. Now those are scaled based on the
default value.
The default value has also been changed from 10.0 to 12.5 based on
observing data from live discourse forums.
This means that TL0 users can message groups with "Who can message this
group?" set to "Everyone".
It also means that members of a group with "Who can message this
group?" set to "members, moderators and admins" can also message the
group, even when their trust level is below min_trust_to_send_messages.
If dashboard advice has already been acted on, an admin may want to find out what the advice was, who acted on it, and when. Linking to the staff action logs should help in tracking down this information.
Trying to automate the login into a Google account is quite hard. This makes the crawler use the content of a cookies.txt file instead. It also removes a couple of deprecation warnings and adds some color to the output.
In Rails 6 due to internal changes, the following sequence no longer works:
```
RAILS_ENV=test bin/rake db:migrate
RAILS_ENV=test bin/rake db:schema:dump
dropdb discourse_test
createdb discourse_test
RAILS_ENV=test bin/rake db:schema:load
RAILS_ENV=test bin/rake db:migrate
```
What appears to be happening is that our tracking of plugin migrations is
being missed on schema:dump or load.
A more comprehensive fix restoring schema:dump / load support will be
investigated.
We were counting all the oneboxes in the DOM instead of just the ones in the preview.
Also refactored the logic to count up to 'max_oneboxes_per_post` instead of down to 0.
That also ensured we don't load 11 oneboxes when the setting is limiting to 10.
`discourse-setup` will install Docker. Several people lately have had trouble with a `|` getting turned into a `>` when trying to `curl` the site into `sh`.
Also, the recommended `git clone` command will create `/var/discourse`, so don't tell people to make that directory, as that too can be confusing.
The current copy has caused some confusion that admins can only create 5 topics or 30 posts. Update copy to make it clearer this is a recommended minimum, not a limit.
Prior to the new review queue there were a couple special cases where
posts would be auto hidden:
* If a TL3 or above flagged a TL0 post as spam
* If a TL4 or above flagged a non-staff, non-TL4 post as spam, inappropriate or off
topic.
These cases are now removed in favour of the scoring system.
All admins receive the Dashboard Advice PM. If one admin takes action on the advice, future admins who follow the link in the PM will see no advice on the dashboard. This has caused some confusion, so we've updated the text to make this clearer.
This renames the DISCOURSE_ENV_HOST var @eviltrout introduced in 95a9a544
to DISCOURSE_ENV_HOSTS and allows for a comma delimited list of hosts
This is useful for testing plugins and customized host names
The dollar sign (`$`) is a special replace pattern, and `$&` inserts the
matched string. Thus dollars signs need to be escaped with the special
pattern `$$`, which inserts a single `$`.
In development, we track the last requested theme id, and use that to refresh the correct stylesheet targets. The after_action hook runs on every request, but the preview_theme_id parameter is only sent on the initial HTML request. This commit ensures we only fetch the development theme_id on HTML requests
To demonstrate the issue:
- Visit https://meta.discourse.org/#somethingHere while logged in
- Click "log out"
- You will be logged out, but the page will not be reloaded
Setting `window.location.pathname = "/"` will not reload the page if there is a hash present. Using `window.location = "/"` gives us the desired behavior.
This makes sure that all processes that fork off the master have a fully
operation schema cache.
In Rails 6, schema cache is now bolted to the connection pool. This change
ensures the cache on all pools is fully populated prior to forking.
The bolting of cache to connection pool does lead to some strange cases
where a connection can "steal" the cache from another connection, which
can cause stuff to possibly hang or deadlock. This change minimizes the risk
of this happening cause it is already primed.
We make a STRONG assumption that the schema is always the same on all sites
when we spin up a multisite cluster.