Followup 0bbca318f2,
rather than making developers provide the plugin path
name (which may not always be the same depending on
dir names and git cloning etc) we can infer the plugin
dir from the caller in plugin_file_from_fixtures
Why this change?
This is a follow-up to 86b2e3aa3e.
Basically, we want to allow people to select more than 1 category as well.
What does this change do?
1. Change `type: category` to `type: categories` and support `min` and `max`
validations for `type: categories`.
2. Fix the `<SchemaThemeSetting::Types::Categories>` component to support the
`min` and `max` validations and switch it to use the `<CategorySelector>` component
instead of the `<CategoryChooser>` component which only supports selecting one category.
Why this change?
We run on different runners depending on the scenario. We should use the
right number of parallel jobs for bundle install based on the number of
CPU cores the runner has.
This was originally introduced in #26071, but that PR was closed, because the requirements changed. This PR lifts only the relevant parts, since they are a prerequisite for the new admin notice system.
This enables the following in Discourse AI
```
plugin.register_modifier(:chat_allowed_bot_user_ids) do |user_ids, guardian|
if guardian.user
mentionables = AiPersona.mentionables(user: guardian.user)
allowed_bot_ids = mentionables.map { |mentionable| mentionable[:user_id] }
user_ids.concat(allowed_bot_ids)
end
user_ids
end
```
some bots that are id < 0 need to be discoverable in search otherwise people can not talk to them.
---------
Co-authored-by: Joffrey JAFFEUX <j.jaffeux@gmail.com>
This user-agent is sent when URLs are inspected via the UI of Google's search console. It makes sense for us to serve it the same content as other bots, including GoogleBot.
At the moment, all topic `?page=` views are served with exactly identical page titles. If you search for something which is mentioned many times in the same Discourse topic, this makes for some very hard-to-understand search results! All the result titles are exactly the same, with no indication of why there are multiple results showing.
This commit adds a `- Page #` suffix to the titles in this situation. This lines up with our existing strategy for topic-list pagination.
When crawlers visit a post-specific URL like `/t/-/{topic-id}/{post-number}`, we use the canonical to direct them to the appropriate crawler-optimised paginated view (e.g. `?page=3`).
However, analysis of google results shows that the post-specific URLs are still being included in the index. Google doesn't tell us exactly why this is happening. However, as a general rule, 'A large portion of the duplicate page's content should be present on the canonical version'.
In our previous implementation, this wasn't 100% true all the time. That's because a request for a post-specific URL would include posts 'surrounding' that post, and won't exactly conform to the page boundaries which are used in the canonical version of the page. Essentially: in some cases, the content of the post-specific pages would include many posts which were not present on the canonical paginated version.
This commit aims to resolve that problem by simplifying the implementation. Instead of rendering posts surrounding the target post_number, we will only render the target post, and include a link to 'show post in topic'. With this new implementation, 100% of the post-specific page content will be present on the canonical paginated version, which will hopefully mean google reduces their indexing of the non-canonical post-specific pages.
Prior to this fix the options were not passed down when the user had no default calendar.
No test as it's mostly an interaction between discourse-calendar and core which is hard to test.
To generate letter avatars, we’re currently using the ImageMagick suite
and we’re using the Helvetica font family. However, that font isn’t
shipped anymore in the latest stable version of Debian (Bookworm).
Instead it seems to have been replaced by the Nimbus font. The rendering
is extremely similar (not to say it’s the same thing) so it shouldn’t be
noticeable.
That change is necessary for us to upgrade our docker images to Debian
Bookworm.
This lib will allow us to wait for a keyboard state change. Not waiting for the keyboard to be closed could cause issues when showing a modal at the same time on iOS for example.
Example usage:
- blurSomeInput()
- await waitForClosedKeyboard(this)
- showSomeModal()
Note that this actual behavior has been baked in modals when we call show so you don't have to call the lib yourself.
This is so the CI output on GitHub actions isn't showing
tons and tons of unnecessary log data every time you want
to see the important thing, which is the actual test failure.
This allows plugins to also easily read fixture
files for tests, rather than having to do stuff
like this:
```
File.open(File.join(__dir__, "../../../fixtures/100x100.jpg"))
```
Why this change?
Previously, we were preloading the necessary metadata for
`adminCustomizeThemes.show.schema` route in the
`adminCustomizeThemes.show` route. This is wasteful because we're
loading data upfront when the objects setting editor may not be used.
This change also lays the ground work for a future commit where we need
to be shipping down additional metadata which may further add to the
payload.
Why this change?
The output is too verbose and prevents us from quickly identifying tests
failures. Now that our tests are way more stable and less flaky, we can
drop the documentation format since we do not need it for debugging
purposes that often anymore
I fixed some links in the admin getting started guide, and changed the way internal links to categories are handled so they will work in other language locales besides US english.
We were previously using the `EMBER_ENV=production` environment variable, which appears to produce the same output. But, some parts of ember-cli don't seem to support it, which leads to a confusing 'Environment: development' being printed on the console.
This commit adds `-prod` by default, which is the more common way to invoke ember-cli for production builds.
Works around a webkit bug (?) and makes more sense for elements that are mostly text and displayed _inline_ with text content.
Tested on Chromium and in macOS Safari, with 3 different text sizes in the Interface settings
Why this change?
When a property of `type: tags` is required, we should be displaying the
"at least 1 tag is required" validation error message when there are no
tags selected in the `TagChooser` compoment. However, we were passing
`this.min` as the `count` attribute when generating the translation
string which is incorrect as `this.min` is not always set.