Ember's legacy mixin system does not support native-class syntax, so we have to use the non-decorator syntaxes for `action()` and `computed()`.
Eventually, we will need to refactor things to remove these mixins... but today is not that day.
Followup 4aea12fdcb
In certain config areas (like About) we want to be able
to fetch specific site settings by name. In this case,
sometimes we need to be able to fetch hidden settings,
in cases where a config area is still experimental.
Splitting out a different endpoint for this purpose
allows us to be stricter with what we return for config
areas without affecting the main site settings UI, revealing
hidden settings before they are ready.
Form Kit is our new form library/framework for unifying the way forms look across Discourse. The admin config area for the /about page is a new form that isn't currently used, so it makes sense for it to be one of the first forms to be migrated to Form Kit to test the library.
Co-authored-by: Joffrey JAFFEUX <j.jaffeux@gmail.com>
* `@ember/owner` instead of `@ember/application`
* `discourse-i18n` instead of `I18n`
* `{ service } from "@ember/service"` instead of `inject as service`
Followup dd30463276
We missed the explicit `return` when we changed to
async/await, so the model ends up being null on admin
backups.
This means we also have no tests for the backup UI, that
will be fixed in a subsequent PR.
Allow admin to create custom flag which requires an additional message.
I decided to rename the old `custom_flag` into `require_message` as it is more descriptive.
This PR introduces FormKit, a component-based form library designed to simplify form creation and management. This library provides a single `Form` component, various field components, controls, validation mechanisms, and customization options. Additionally, it includes helpers to facilitate testing and writing specifications for forms.
1. **Form Component**:
- The main component that encapsulates form logic and structure.
- Yields various utilities like `Field`, `Submit`, `Alert`, etc.
**Example Usage**:
```gjs
import Form from "discourse/form";
<template>
<Form as |form|>
<form.Field
@name="username"
@title="Username"
@validation="required"
as |field|
>
<field.Input />
</form.Field>
<form.Field @name="age" @title="Age" as |field|>
<field.Input @type="number" />
</form.Field>
<form.Submit />
</Form>
</template>
```
2. **Validation**:
- Built-in validation rules such as `required`, `number`, `length`, and `url`.
- Custom validation callbacks for more complex validation logic.
**Example Usage**:
```javascript
validateUsername(name, value, data, { addError }) {
if (data.bar / 2 === value) {
addError(name, "That's not how maths work.");
}
}
```
```hbs
<form.Field @name="username" @validate={{this.validateUsername}} />
```
3. **Customization**:
- Plugin outlets for extending form functionality.
- Styling capabilities through propagated attributes.
- Custom controls with properties provided by `form` and `field`.
**Example Usage**:
```hbs
<Form class="my-form" as |form|>
<form.Field class="my-field" as |field|>
<MyCustomControl id={{field.id}} @onChange={{field.set}} />
</form.Field>
</Form>
```
4. **Helpers for Testing**:
- Test assertions for form and field validation.
**Example usage**:
```javascript
assert.form().hasErrors("the form shows errors");
assert.form().field("foo").hasValue("bar", "user has set the value");
```
- Helper for interacting with he form
**Example usage**:
```javascript
await formKit().field("foo").fillIn("bar");
```
5. **Page Object for System Specs**:
- Page objects for interacting with forms in system specs.
- Methods for submitting forms, checking alerts, and interacting with fields.
**Example Usage**:
```ruby
form = PageObjects::Components::FormKit.new(".my-form")
form.submit
expect(form).to have_an_alert("message")
```
**Field Interactions**:
```ruby
field = form.field("foo")
expect(field).to have_value("bar")
field.fill_in("bar")
```
6. **Collections handling**:
- A specific component to handle array of objects
**Example Usage**:
```gjs
<Form @data={{hash foo=(array (hash bar=1) (hash bar=2))}} as |form|>
<form.Collection @name="foo" as |collection|>
<collection.Field @name="bar" @title="Bar" as |field|>
<field.Input />
</collection.Field>
</form.Collection>
</Form>
```
Followup 560e8aff75
GitHub auth tokens cannot be made with permissions to
access multiple organisations. This is quite limiting.
This commit changes the site setting to be a "secret list"
type, which allows for a key/value mapping where the value
is treated like a password in the UI.
Now when a GitHub URL is requested for oneboxing, the
org name from the URL is used to determine which token
to use for the request.
Just in case anyone used the old site setting already,
there is a migration to create a `default` entry
with that token in the new list setting, and for
a period of time we will consider that token valid to
use for all GitHub oneboxes as well.
Allow admin to create custom flag which requires an additional message.
I decided to rename the old `custom_flag` into `require_message` as it is more descriptive.
Followup db993cf8fd
Since in the above commit we converted integer site settings
to actual integers then set that as the new `buffered.value`,
the overridden indicator technically thinks the value has changed,
even if the user sets it back to the default:
```
overridden: propertyNotEqual("setting.default", "buffered.value"),
```
We can fix this by converting the parsed integer back to a string
before setting the buffered setting value.
- set in constructor so they're guaranteed to be present, even if async-import hasn't finished yet
- ensure they're all cleaned up properly
- combine two cleanup methods into one
- Delete vendored copy
- Create a JS entrypoint under `static/` which imports all the modes/themes/extensions we need
- Create an async `load-ace-editor` entrypoint
- Update `<AceEditor` component to use the new entrypoint
- De-jquery-ify `<AceEditor`
- Bump `v1.4.13` -> `v1.35.2`
Background:
In order to redrive failed webhook events, an operator has to go through and click on each. This PR is adding a mechanism to retry all failed events to help resolve issues quickly once the underlying failure has been resolved.
What is the change?:
Previously, we had to redeliver each webhook event. This merge is adding a 'Redeliver Failed' button next to the webhook event filter to redeliver all failed events. If there is no failed webhook events to redeliver, 'Redeliver Failed' gets disabled. If you click it, a window pops up to confirm the operator. Failed webhook events will be added to the queue and webhook event list will show the redelivering progress. Every minute, a job will be ran to go through 20 events to redeliver. Every hour, a job will cleanup the redelivering events which have been stored more than 8 hours.
Example:
```hbs
<DBreadcrumbItem
@path="/admin/plugins/{{@plugin.name}}"
@label={{@plugin.nameTitleized}}
/>
```
Using `@path` instead of `@route`+`@model` combo makes it impossible to pass temporarily unresolvable routes.
This fixes a bug with navigating from a model-based route to a parent route.
The AdminPlugin JS model uses a similar pattern to chat models,
where it is a plain JS class manually converting provided
snake_case attributes from the serializer to JS camelCase.
However this doesn't work when it comes to using `add_to_serializer`
in plugins since core does not know about these new attributes.
Instead, we can use a JS function to convert snake_case to camelCase
and use that when initializing AdminPlugin. This commit also moves
similar functions to a new case-converter.js file in
discourse-common/lib.
Followup to e113eff663
We previously sanitized input for integer site settings
on the server side only, which was a bit confusing when
users would enter e.g. 100.5 and end up with 1005, and
not see this reflected in the UI.
Now that we are using native number inputs for these settings,
we can improve the experience a bit by not allowing `.` or `,`
in the input, because it should be whole numbers only, and
add a step size of 1. All other characters are already prevented
in this native number input.
Before checking if flags were reordered on the topic page, we need to ensure that the reorder action was finished. To achieve it "saving" CSS is added and removed when AJAX call is completed.
This commit continues work laid out by ffec8163b0 for the admin config page for the /about page. The last commit set up the user interface, and this one sets up all the wiring needed to make the input fields and save buttons actually work.
Internal topic: t/128544.
We want to allow admins to make new required fields apply to existing users. In order for this to work we need to have a way to make those users fill up the fields on their next page load. This is very similar to how adding a 2FA requirement post-fact works. Users will be redirected to a page where they can fill up the remaining required fields, and until they do that they won't be able to do anything else.
Adds a checkbox to filter untranslated text strings in the admin UI, behind a hidden and default `false` site setting `admin_allow_filter_untranslated_text`.
* Removed the link from the title, so the settings can only be accessed via the settings button on the right
* Added an icon to the "Learn more" link to indicate that it opens a new window
* Made various styling adjustments
Many site settings can be distructive or have huge side-effects
for a site that the admin may not be aware of when changing it.
This commit introduces a `requires_confirmation` attribute that
can be added to any site setting. When it is true, a confirmation
dialog will open if that setting is changed in the admin UI,
optionally with a custom message that is defined in client.en.yml.
If the admin does not confirm, we reset the setting to its previous
clean value and do not save the new value.
When we turn on settings automatically for customers,
we sometimes use `.set_and_log` which will make a staff
action log for the site setting change. This is fine, but
there is no context for customers.
This change allows setting a message with `.set_and_log`, which
will be stored in the `details` column of the staff action log
created, which will show up on `/admin/logs/staff_action_logs`
---------
Co-authored-by: Kelv <kelv@discourse.org>
decorator-transforms (https://github.com/ef4/decorator-transforms) is a modern replacement for babel's plugin-proposal-decorators. It provides a decorator implementation using modern browser features, without needing to enable babel's full suite of class feature transformations. This improves the developer experience and performance.
In local testing with Google's 'tachometer' tool, this reduces Discourse's 'init-to-render' time by around 3-4% (230ms -> 222ms).
It reduces our initial gzip'd JS payloads by 3.2% (2.43MB -> 2.35MB), or 7.5% (14.5MB -> 13.4MB) uncompressed.
This was previously reverted in 97847f6. This version includes a babel transformation which works around the bug in Safari <= 15.
For Cloudflare compatibility issues, check https://meta.discourse.org/t/311390
Inline the helper functions, avoid creating and then immediately destructuring arrays, use complete strings instead of string interpolation, Map instead of a pojo.