This goal may vary for different types of communities, but 20% is a more reasonable target as a default for the ratio of daily active users / monthly active users (DAU/MAU).
Add a modifier that will allow us to tune the results returned by suggested.
At the moment the modifier allows us to toggle including random results.
This was created for the discourse-ai module. It needs to switch off random
results when it returns related topics.
Longer term we can use it to toggle unread/new and other aspects.
This also demonstrates how to test the contract when adding modifiers.
topic.url is a dangerous method to use, it is incompatible with our `sign_in`
helper.
This removes a bunch of places this was erroneously used and helps to avoid
future cargo culting.
This was added in d3f02a1270
for hashtags but later removed usage in
b2acc416e7. It was removed because
serializing the user does not include things like their
secure_categories.
It is not used by any other plugins or themes, and can cause
issues where it will error when operating on a null user. Better
to just pass in the user_id and use it to look up a user
directly in a PrettyText::Helper
Similar to the _map added for group_list SiteSettings in
e62e93f83a, this commit adds
the same extension for simple and compact `list` type SiteSettings,
so developers do not have to do the `.to_s.split("|")` dance
themselves all the time.
For example:
```
SiteSetting.markdown_linkify_tlds
=> "com|net|org|io|onion|co|tv|ru|cn|us|uk|me|de|fr|fi|gov|ddd"
SiteSetting.markdown_linkify_tlds_map
=> ["com", "net", "org", "io", "onion", "co", "tv", "ru", "cn", "us", "uk", "me", "de", "fr", "fi", "gov"]
```
There is no need to validate the user's emails when
promoting/demoting their trust level, this can cause
issues in things like Jobs::Tl3Promotions, we don't
need to fail in that case when all we are doing is changing
trust level.
Introduces a new API for plugin data modification without class-based extension overhead.
This commit introduces a new API that allows plugins to modify data in cases where they return different data rather than additional data, as is common with filtered_registers in DiscoursePluginRegistry. This API removes the need for defining class-based extension points.
When a plugin registers a modifier, it will automatically be called if the plugin is enabled. The core will then modify the parameter sent to it using the block registered by the plugin:
```ruby
DiscoursePluginRegistry.register_modifier(plugin_instance, :magic_sum_modifier) { |a, b| a + b }
sum = DiscoursePluginRegistry.apply_modifier(:magic_sum_filter, 1, 2)
expect(sum).to eq(3)
```
Key features of these modifiers:
- Operate in a stack (first registered, first called)
- Automatically disabled when the plugin is disabled
- Pass the cumulative result of all block invocations to the caller
This adds specs to the mentioned serializers to catch regressions
with MessageBus last_ids and to ensure the correct ones are being
returned and passed down to the ChannelSerializer.
Followup to d8ad5c3
The following are the changes being introduced in this commit:
1. Instead of mapping the query language to various query params on the
client side, we've decided that the benefits of having a more robust
query language far outweighs the benefits of having a more human readable query params in the URL.
As such, the `/filter` route will just accept a single `q` query param
and the query string will be parsed on the server side.
1. On the `/filter` route, the tags filtering query language is now
supported in the input per the example provided below:
```
tags:bug+feature tagged both bug and feature
tags:bug,feature tagged either bug or feature
-tags:bug+feature excluding topics tagged bug and feature
-tags:bug,feature excluding topics tagged bug or feature
```
The `tags` filter can also be specified multiple
times in the query string like so `tags:bug tags:feature` which will
filter topics that contain both the `bug` tag and `feature` tag. More
complex query like `tags:bug+feature -tags:experimental` will also work.
Previously, reorder on touch screens was disabled https://github.com/discourse/discourse/pull/20769.
This PR enables it again. However, link has to be hold for 300 ms to enable drag&drop. Otherwise, normal scroll is performed.
When user.last_seen was less than push_notification_time_window_mins we
where delaying the notification for the whole
push_notification_time_window_mins PLUS the time the user was away from.
Originally reported in https://meta.discourse.org/t/-/259688
`default_categories_*` site settings will update the category preferences on user creation. But it shouldn't update the user's category preference if a group's setting already updated it for that user.
This corrects two issues:
1. We were double serializing topic tracking state (as_json calls were not cached)
2. We were inefficiently serializing items by instantiating extra objects
Followup to 3ea8df4b06,
I forgot to wrap the call to Chat::Publisher.root_message_bus_channel(object.chat_channel.id)
in MessageBus.last_id, so the channel_message_bus_last_id key was
ending up as e.g. "/chat/58" instead of the last ID value.
We noticed via profiling that chat was doing N redis calls
per channel. Part of this was from the kick_message_bus_last_id
from 520d4f504b being incorrectly
passed down for DM channels rather that public channels, and the
other part was from the root MessageBus channel last_id
being fetched in ChannelSerializer for every single channel.
This commit fixes both issues, for me going from 134 redis calls
on page load to 20 locally.
Also deletes an old file missed in 12a18d4d55
We perform lookups on sidebar section links based on sidebar_section_id
totally ignoring user. This ensures we have an index to work with.
This removes the previous index `links_user_id_section_id_position` which
partially doubled up `idx_unique_sidebar_section_links`
Followup cab4b2cfba,
this was causing client JS errors because the old version
of the client was expecting the old keys, but the new
ruby version of the app was sending different keys via
the MessageBus payload. We can remove this in a couple
of weeks.
This commit introduces a Chat::Publisher and MessageBus endpoint
that allows for updating a user's channel tracking state in bulk for
multiple channels, rather than having to do it for one channel
at a time.
This also required an improvement to ChannelUnreadsQuery -- now
multiple channel IDs can be passed to this to get the unread counts
and mention counts for those channels for a user, also increasing
efficiency rather than having to do a query for every individual
channel.
Followup to #20802