There is a big difference between regular watched words and regular
expressions and this has been confusing in the past. This notice adds
an explanation.
This commit also reorganizes the code of the test modal.
We are a few versions behind on this gem. We need to update it
for S3 multipart uploads. In the current version we are using, we
cannot do this:
```ruby
Discourse.store.s3_helper.object(key).presigned_url(:upload_part, part_number: 1, upload_id: multipart_upload_id)
```
The S3 client raises an error, saying the operation is undefined. Once
I updated the gem this operation works as expected and returns a
presigned URL for the upload_part operation.
Also remove use of Aws::S3::FileUploader::FIFTEEN_MEGABYTES.
This was part of a private API and should not have been used.
* FEATURE: Staff can receive pending user reminders more frequently.
We now express the "pending_users_reminder_delay" in minutes instead of hours so staff can have finer control over the delay.
We need to keep in mind that the reminders could still take up to 20 minutes, even when using a lower value. We send them from a scheduled job.
* Migrate to a new site setting for the reminders delay
We want to submit the flag modal on pressing CTRL + ENTER and CMD + ENTER.
Here's how our modals work:
Every modal can be dismissed by pressing ESC. This behaviour can be disabled for a specific modal if we need to.
Every modal can be submitted by pressing ENTER if the cursor wasn't on a text area or a form at the moment of pressing.
Now, the flag modal is actually a one big form and pressing ENTER doesn't submit it. I've added submitting by CTRL+ENTER but at first it was interfering with the basic modal submitting by ENTER. It's a pretty tricky thing to fix because we use the keyup event for submitting by ENTER and we need to use the keydown event for submitting with modifiers (because submitting by CMD+ENTER on Macs doesn't work with keyup).
Eventually, I fixed the problem just by adding a possibility to disable default submitting on ENTER (in the same way as we already have the possibility of disabling dismissing on ESC). Then I disabled default submitting for the flag form and implemented submitting by CTRL+ENTER and CMD+ENTER. This way everything is simple and robust. I did it only for the flag modal but it'll be easy and safe to add the same behaviour to another modal.
ATM it only implements server side of it, as my need is for automation purposes. However it should probably be added in the UI too as it's unexpected to have pinned_until and no bannered_until.
Limit was 5 with the assumption that trust level badge
will be the 6th badge. With trust level badges disabled,
it should be possible to increase this to 6, or even more imo.
Post-deploy migrations exist to allow for seamless Discourse upgrades. By design, they cause migrations to run out of numerical order. This has the potential to cause some unexpected edge cases. To reduce the likelihood of these edge cases, we will promote historical post_deploy migrations to regular migrations after a full Discourse stable release cycle.
This script is intended to be run at least during every Discourse release cycle.
This means that truly seamless upgrades will not be possible between non-consecutive Discourse versions. (Upgrades will still work, but may cause some server errors for users during the upgrade)
This PR improves navigation within lightboxes that contain multiple images for both touch and non-touch devices.
Currently, if a gallery contains multiple large images, and you click on the one currently displayed, two things happen.
1. we zoom in
2. we navigate to the next image
a0bbc346cb/app/assets/javascripts/discourse/app/lib/lightbox.js (L43-L49)
So, you get taken to the next image, and it shows zoomed in, even when the intention was to zoom in on the previous image.
Magnific popup has an option to disable image-click navigation in galleries. This PR toggles that on for non-touch devices.
The result is that if you click on an image in a gallery on a non-touch device, we zoom in on that image instead of navigating to the next one.
This has no impact on arrow/keyboard navigation.
Magnific popup also has an API when images change; we reset the zoom class when that happens. So, when you navigate to the next image, it won't be zoomed in.
For touch devices, clicking on the image will navigate to the next one without zooming in. Users can pinch-zoom if they want to see more details on touch devices.
I used jQuery for this because both Magnific popup and our implementation for this are based on jQuery. No point making a few lines use vanilla for this when the rest doesn't.
Add Members could also invite new users via emails, but that was a less
known fact. Splitting the previous modal into two more accessible
modals should make this feature more discoverable.
Badges that are awarded multiple times can be favorite and not favorite
at the same time. This caused few problems when users tried to favorite
them as they were counted multiple times or their state was incorrectly
displayed.
The `themes:isolated_test` rake task will now unset all `DISCOURSE_*` env variables if `UNSET_DISCOURSE_ENV_VARS` env var is set and will also spin up a temporary redis server so the unicorn web server that's spun up for the tests doesn't leak into the "main" redis server.
Previously, we were storing custom svg sprite paths in the cache. This is a problem because sprites in themes get stored as uploads, and the returned paths were files in the temporary download cache which could sometimes be cleaned up, resulting in a broken cache.
I previously tried to fix this by skipping the missing files and clearing the cache, but that didn't work out well with CDNs. This PR stores the contents of the files in the custom_svg_sprites cache to avoid the problem of missing temp files.
Also, plugin custom icons are only included if the plugin is enabled.
Effectively reverts 3ddc33b07c
Makes the failure states testable; see the uncommented test.
I don't think we're re-catching these errors anyway?
_update:_
We did in a single instance in discourse-code-review but it wasn't really intentional and I fixed it in https://github.com/discourse/discourse-code-review/pull/73
In #12841, we started setting the ReviewableQueuedPost's target and topic after approving it instead of storing them in the payload. As a result, the reviewable_counts query started to include queued posts.
When a category is set to require approval, every post has an associated reviewable. Pointing that each post has an associated queued post is not necessary in this case, so I added a WHERE clause to skip them.