- Switch to `@tracked` and native getters
- Remove queryParam defaults which are awkward to work with. Instead, add `resolvedBlah` getters
- Add 'no results found' text
- Use standard 'model' key instead of a custom `setupController` method
- Remove use of `route-action`
- Remove `{{action` helper
Default queryParams in ember controllers are tricky to work with, especially when combined with the new router service. Instead, we can handle defaults ourselves
* DEV: upgrade grant badge modal to glimmer
* DEV: add unit tests for grant badge utils
* DEV: replace grant-badge-controller mixin with grant-badge-utils in admin-user-badges controller
* DEV: remove GrantBadgeController mixin
This will allow initializing the glimmer search menu without having to pass args directly from header.js widget, to help themes and plugins with search customizations
---------
Co-authored-by: Mark VanLandingham <markvanlan@gmail.com>
Why this change?
We have been bitten by bugs where tests are not catching missing
interpolate argument in our client side code because the JavaScript
tests are also using `I18n.translate` to assert that the right message
is shown. Before this change, `I18n.interpolate` will just replace the
missing interpolation argument in the final translation with some
placeholder. As a result, we ended up comparing a broken translation
with another broken translation in the test environment.
Why does this change do?
This change introduces the `I18n.testing` property which when set to
`true` will cause `I18n.translate` to throw an error when an interpolate
argument is missing. With this commit, we also set `I18n.testing = true`
when running qunit acceptance test.
On `mousedown` if the click is outside a cooked element cancel the `mousedown`/`mouseup` sequence and only rely on the `selectionchange` event.
This change ensures a click on avatar for example will work, even if user is doing a rather slow click (meaning: the mousedown has been hold for more than 100ms).
Due to server upload limits backups may receive a 413 error so we need
to display a different error message than the default one we have set
for attachments.
Previously, calling `decorateCookedElement` would re-open a number of components and introduce new event listeners. This kind of thing cannot be undone, and so we were forced to introduce the unique 'id' parameter. If a given decorator id had already been applied, we would skip re-applying it. This helped, but it was still problematic because all tests would be using the callback which was registered in the first test. If its closure had any references to the ApplicationInstance, then those references would be destroyed and useless in future tests.
This commit switches strategy to use `appEvents` instead of `klass.reopen`. This is a much more obvious system and, since appEvent registrations are reset for every ApplicationInstance, we can drop the requirement for unique ids on `decorateCookedElement` calls. The callback used will always be the one registered against the current ApplicationInstance.
This commit also updates our `wrapWithErrorHandler` implementation so that it throws errors in tests. This ensures that errors are not silently swallowed in CI.
Second iteration of https://github.com/discourse/discourse/pull/23312 with a fix for embroider not resolving an export file using .gjs extension.
---
This PR introduces three new concepts to Discourse codebase through an addon called "FloatKit":
- menu
- tooltip
- toast
## Tooltips
### Component
Simple cases can be express with an API similar to DButton:
```hbs
<DTooltip
@label={{i18n "foo.bar"}}
@icon="check"
@content="Something"
/>
```
More complex cases can use blocks:
```hbs
<DTooltip>
<:trigger>
{{d-icon "check"}}
<span>{{i18n "foo.bar"}}</span>
</:trigger>
<:content>
Something
</:content>
</DTooltip>
```
### Service
You can manually show a tooltip using the `tooltip` service:
```javascript
const tooltipInstance = await this.tooltip.show(
document.querySelector(".my-span"),
options
)
// and later manual close or destroy it
tooltipInstance.close();
tooltipInstance.destroy();
// you can also just close any open tooltip through the service
this.tooltip.close();
```
The service also allows you to register event listeners on a trigger, it removes the need for you to manage open/close of a tooltip started through the service:
```javascript
const tooltipInstance = this.tooltip.register(
document.querySelector(".my-span"),
options
)
// when done you can destroy the instance to remove the listeners
tooltipInstance.destroy();
```
Note that the service also allows you to use a custom component as content which will receive `@data` and `@close` as args:
```javascript
const tooltipInstance = await this.tooltip.show(
document.querySelector(".my-span"),
{
component: MyComponent,
data: { foo: 1 }
}
)
```
## Menus
Menus are very similar to tooltips and provide the same kind of APIs:
### Component
```hbs
<DMenu @icon="plus" @label={{i18n "foo.bar"}}>
<ul>
<li>Foo</li>
<li>Bat</li>
<li>Baz</li>
</ul>
</DMenu>
```
They also support blocks:
```hbs
<DMenu>
<:trigger>
{{d-icon "plus"}}
<span>{{i18n "foo.bar"}}</span>
</:trigger>
<:content>
<ul>
<li>Foo</li>
<li>Bat</li>
<li>Baz</li>
</ul>
</:content>
</DMenu>
```
### Service
You can manually show a menu using the `menu` service:
```javascript
const menuInstance = await this.menu.show(
document.querySelector(".my-span"),
options
)
// and later manual close or destroy it
menuInstance.close();
menuInstance.destroy();
// you can also just close any open tooltip through the service
this.menu.close();
```
The service also allows you to register event listeners on a trigger, it removes the need for you to manage open/close of a tooltip started through the service:
```javascript
const menuInstance = this.menu.register(
document.querySelector(".my-span"),
options
)
// when done you can destroy the instance to remove the listeners
menuInstance.destroy();
```
Note that the service also allows you to use a custom component as content which will receive `@data` and `@close` as args:
```javascript
const menuInstance = await this.menu.show(
document.querySelector(".my-span"),
{
component: MyComponent,
data: { foo: 1 }
}
)
```
## Toasts
Interacting with toasts is made only through the `toasts` service.
A default component is provided (DDefaultToast) and can be used through dedicated service methods:
- this.toasts.success({ ... });
- this.toasts.warning({ ... });
- this.toasts.info({ ... });
- this.toasts.error({ ... });
- this.toasts.default({ ... });
```javascript
this.toasts.success({
data: {
title: "Foo",
message: "Bar",
actions: [
{
label: "Ok",
class: "btn-primary",
action: (componentArgs) => {
// eslint-disable-next-line no-alert
alert("Closing toast:" + componentArgs.data.title);
componentArgs.close();
},
}
]
},
});
```
You can also provide your own component:
```javascript
this.toasts.show(MyComponent, {
autoClose: false,
class: "foo",
data: { baz: 1 },
})
```
Co-authored-by: Martin Brennan <mjrbrennan@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Isaac Janzen <50783505+janzenisaac@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: David Taylor <david@taylorhq.com>
Co-authored-by: Jarek Radosz <jradosz@gmail.com>
This PR introduces three new UI elements to Discourse codebase through an addon called "FloatKit":
- menu
- tooltip
- toast
Simple cases can be express with an API similar to DButton:
```hbs
<DTooltip
@label={{i18n "foo.bar"}}
@icon="check"
@content="Something"
/>
```
More complex cases can use blocks:
```hbs
<DTooltip>
<:trigger>
{{d-icon "check"}}
<span>{{i18n "foo.bar"}}</span>
</:trigger>
<:content>
Something
</:content>
</DTooltip>
```
You can manually show a tooltip using the `tooltip` service:
```javascript
const tooltipInstance = await this.tooltip.show(
document.querySelector(".my-span"),
options
)
// and later manually close or destroy it
tooltipInstance.close();
tooltipInstance.destroy();
// you can also just close any open tooltip through the service
this.tooltip.close();
```
The service also allows you to register event listeners on a trigger, it removes the need for you to manage open/close of a tooltip started through the service:
```javascript
const tooltipInstance = this.tooltip.register(
document.querySelector(".my-span"),
options
)
// when done you can destroy the instance to remove the listeners
tooltipInstance.destroy();
```
Note that the service also allows you to use a custom component as content which will receive `@data` and `@close` as args:
```javascript
const tooltipInstance = await this.tooltip.show(
document.querySelector(".my-span"),
{
component: MyComponent,
data: { foo: 1 }
}
)
```
Menus are very similar to tooltips and provide the same kind of APIs:
```hbs
<DMenu @icon="plus" @label={{i18n "foo.bar"}}>
<ul>
<li>Foo</li>
<li>Bat</li>
<li>Baz</li>
</ul>
</DMenu>
```
They also support blocks:
```hbs
<DMenu>
<:trigger>
{{d-icon "plus"}}
<span>{{i18n "foo.bar"}}</span>
</:trigger>
<:content>
<ul>
<li>Foo</li>
<li>Bat</li>
<li>Baz</li>
</ul>
</:content>
</DMenu>
```
You can manually show a menu using the `menu` service:
```javascript
const menuInstance = await this.menu.show(
document.querySelector(".my-span"),
options
)
// and later manually close or destroy it
menuInstance.close();
menuInstance.destroy();
// you can also just close any open tooltip through the service
this.menu.close();
```
The service also allows you to register event listeners on a trigger, it removes the need for you to manage open/close of a tooltip started through the service:
```javascript
const menuInstance = this.menu.register(
document.querySelector(".my-span"),
options
)
// when done you can destroy the instance to remove the listeners
menuInstance.destroy();
```
Note that the service also allows you to use a custom component as content which will receive `@data` and `@close` as args:
```javascript
const menuInstance = await this.menu.show(
document.querySelector(".my-span"),
{
component: MyComponent,
data: { foo: 1 }
}
)
```
Interacting with toasts is made only through the `toasts` service.
A default component is provided (DDefaultToast) and can be used through dedicated service methods:
- this.toasts.success({ ... });
- this.toasts.warning({ ... });
- this.toasts.info({ ... });
- this.toasts.error({ ... });
- this.toasts.default({ ... });
```javascript
this.toasts.success({
data: {
title: "Foo",
message: "Bar",
actions: [
{
label: "Ok",
class: "btn-primary",
action: (componentArgs) => {
// eslint-disable-next-line no-alert
alert("Closing toast:" + componentArgs.data.title);
componentArgs.close();
},
}
]
},
});
```
You can also provide your own component:
```javascript
this.toasts.show(MyComponent, {
autoClose: false,
class: "foo",
data: { baz: 1 },
})
```
Co-authored-by: Martin Brennan <mjrbrennan@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Isaac Janzen <50783505+janzenisaac@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: David Taylor <david@taylorhq.com>
Co-authored-by: Jarek Radosz <jradosz@gmail.com>
In #20135 we prevented invalid inputs from being accepted in category setting form fields on the front-end. We didn't do anything on the back-end at that time, because we were still discussing which path we wanted to take. Eventually we decided we want to move this to a new CategorySetting model.
This PR moves the require_topic_approval and require_reply_approval from custom fields to the new CategorySetting model.
This PR is nearly identical to #20580, which migrated num_auto_bump_daily, but since these are slightly more sensitive, they are moved after the previous one is verified.
When using ember-template-tag (.gjs), templates are much more interlinked with the JS file they're defined in. Therefore, attempting to override their template with a 'non-strict-mode' template doesn't make sense, and will likely lead to problems.
This commit skips any such overrides, and introduces a clear console warning. In theme/plugin tests, an error will be thrown during app boot.
Going forward, we aim to provide alternative APIs to achieve the customizations people currently implement with template overrides. (e.g. https://github.com/discourse/discourse/pull/23110)
While it's generally not recommended from a UX perspective, the DModal system is intended to allow multiple modals to be rendered simultaneously when using the declarative API. This wasn't working because `{{#in-element` was configured to replace the content of the container rather than append a new modal.
This commit fixes that and adds a test for the functionality.
By default this is linked to the `tests` boolean, which we disabled for Embroider builds in 96674859. We want deprecation-workflow features to be available in production builds, so let's enable it unconditionally.
Until now, we have allowed testing themes in production environments via `/theme-qunit`. This was made possible by hacking the ember-cli build so that it would create the `tests.js` bundle in production. However, this is fundamentally problematic because a number of test-specific things are still optimized out of the Ember build in production mode. It also makes asset compilation significantly slower, and makes it more difficult for us to update our build pipeline (e.g. to introduce Embroider).
This commit removes the ability to run qunit tests in production builds of the JS app when the Embdroider flag is enabled. If a production instance of Discourse exists exclusively for the development of themes (e.g. discourse.theme-creator.io) then they can add `EMBER_ENV: development` to their `app.yml` file. This will build the entire app in development mode, and has a significant performance impact. This must not be used for real production sites.
This commit also refactors many of the request specs into system specs. This means that the tests are guaranteed to have Ember assets built, and is also a better end-to-end test than simply checking for the presence of certain `<script>` tags in the HTML.
Mixins are considered deprecated by Ember, and cannot be applied to modern framework objects. Also, the coupling they introduce can make things very difficult to refactor.
This commit takes the state/logic from BulkTopicSelection and turns it into a helper object. This avoids it polluting any controllers/components its included in.
In future, the entire helper object can be passed down to child components so that they don't need to lookup controllers using the resolver. Those kinds of changes would involve changing some very heavily-overridden templates, so they are not included in this PR. It will likely be done as part of the larger refactor in https://github.com/discourse/discourse/pull/22622.
- Add data-embroider-ignore to all script tags which are not currently being compiled by embroider
- Ensure all remaining script tags are wrapped in `<discourse-chunked-script>` so that Rails will follow any renames which Embroider makes (e.g. when it adds fingerprints to filenames)
Discourse core now builds and runs with Embroider! This commit adds
the Embroider-based build pipeline (`USE_EMBROIDER=1`) and start
testing it on CI.
The new pipeline uses Embroider's compat mode + webpack bundler to
build discourse code, and leave everything else (admin, wizard,
markdown-it, plugins, etc) exactly the same using the existing
Broccoli-based build as external bundles (<script> tags), passed
to the build as `extraPublicTress` (which just means they get
placed in the `/public` folder).
At runtime, these "external" bundles are glued back together with
`loader.js`. Specifically, the external bundles are compiled as
AMD modules (just as they were before) and registered with the
global `loader.js` instance. They expect their `import`s (outside
of whatever is included in the bundle) to be already available in
the `loader.js` runtime registry.
In the classic build, _every_ module gets compiled into AMD and
gets added to the `loader.js` runtime registry. In Embroider,
the goal is to do this as little as possible, to give the bundler
more flexibility to optimize modules, or omit them entirely if it
is confident that the module is unused (i.e. tree-shaking).
Even in the most compatible mode, there are cases where Embroider
is confident enough to omit modules in the runtime `loader.js`
registry (notably, "auto-imported" non-addon NPM packages). So we
have to be mindful of that an manage those dependencies ourselves,
as seen in #22703.
In the longer term, we will look into using modern features (such
as `import()`) to express these inter-dependencies.
This will only be behind a flag for a short period of time while we
perform some final testing. Within the next few weeks, we intend
to enable by default and remove the flag.
---------
Co-authored-by: David Taylor <david@taylorhq.com>
We have the max_mentions_per_chat_message site settings; when a user tries
to mention more users than allowed, no one gets mentioned.
Chat messages may contain code-blocks with strings that look like mentions:
def foo
@bar + @baz
end
The problem is that the parsing code considers these as real mentions and counts
them when checking the limit. This commit fixes the problem.
`badge.save(["name", "description", "badge_type_id"])` api it was testing isn't a thing anymore.
Also: replaces `assert.expect(0)` with more useful assertions
We have a workaround so that currentUser/siteSettings/appEvents work properly on RestModel instances which are created without an owner. This is not ideal, but fixing this properly is not trivial. This commit improves the workaround to be more robust and support all service injections.
Currently, if the review queue has both a flagged post and a flagged chat message, one of the two will have some of the labels of their actions replaced by those of the other. In other words, the labels are getting mixed up. For example, a flagged chat message might show up with an action labelled "Delete post".
This is happening because when using bundles, we are sending along the actions in a separate part of the response, so they can be shared by many reviewables. The bundles then index into this bag of actions by their ID, which is something generic describing the server action, e.g. "agree_and_delete".
The problem here is the same action can have different labels depending on the type of reviewable. Now that the bag of actions contains multiple actions with the same ID, which one is chosen is arbitrary. I.e. it doesn't distinguish based on the type of the reviewable.
This change adds an additional field to the actions, server_action, which now contains what used to be the ID. Meanwhile, the ID has been turned into a concatenation of the reviewable type and the server action, e.g. post-agree_and_delete.
This still provides the upside of denormalizing the actions while allowing for different reviewable types to have different labels and descriptions.
At first I thought I would prepend the reviewable type to the ID, but this doesn't work well because the ID is used on the server-side to determine which actions are possible, and these need to be shared between different reviewables. Hence the introduction of server_action, which now serves that purpose.
I also thought about changing the way that the bundle indexes into the bag of actions, but this is happening through some EmberJS mechanism, so we don't own that code.
This patch adds a new shortcut to allow archiving private messages. When
on a private message page, just type `a` to archive it. Typing `a` on an
already archived message will move it back to inbox.
Chat review queue flags were missing the context message above the actions.
This is probably because the (reasonably complex) logic was somewhat hard-coded to posts. After some investigation I concluded we can reuse this logic with some small amendments.
Previously we were patching ember-cli so that it would split the test bundle into two halves: the helpers, and the tests themselves. This was done so that we could use the helpers for `/theme-qunit` without needing to load all the core tests. This patch has proven problematic to maintain, and will become even harder under Embroider.
This commit removes the patch, so that ember-cli goes back to generating a single `tests.js` bundle. This means that core test definitions will now be included in the bundle when using `/theme-qunit`, and so this commit also updates our test module filter to exclude them from the run. This is the same way that we handle plugin tests on the regular `/tests` route, and is fully supported by qunit.
For now, this keeps `/theme-qunit` working in both development and production environments. However, we are very likely to drop support in production as part of the move to Embroider.
The changes in e1d27400f5 slightly changed the sourcemap paths of our workbox assets. The sourcemaps now have the extension `.prod.map` instead of `prod.js.map`. However, since the version number of workbox didn't change, the directory digest remained the same, and so cached versions of the JS were pointing to the now-nonexistant map files.
This commit introduces a cachebusting constant which we can bump for these kinds of changes in future.
Our Ember build compiles assets into multiple chunks. In the past, we used the output from ember-auto-import-chunks-json-generator to give Rails a map of those chunks. However, that addon is specific to ember-auto-import, and is not compatible with Embroider.
Instead, we can switch to parsing the html files which are output by ember-cli. These are guaranteed to have the correct JS files in the correct place. A <discourse-chunked-script> will allow us to easily identify which chunks belong to which entrypoint.
In future, as we update more entrypoints to be compiled by Embroider/Webpack, we can easily introduce new wrappers.
Previously applied in 2c58d45 and reverted in 24d46fd. This version has been updated for subfolder support.
This will allow us to extend the deprecation period for this-property-fallback beyond Ember 4.x, to give more time for plugin developers to update their templates.
1. Use `this.` instead of `{{action}}` where applicable
2. Use `{{fn}}` instead of `@actionParam` where applicable
3. Use non-`@` versions of class/type/tabindex/aria-controls/aria-expanded
4. Remove `btn` class (it's added automatically to all DButtons)
5. Remove `type="button"` (it's the default)
6. Use `concat-class` helper
When an upload fails and we don't have a specific error, we
show a generic one. But it's a little too generic -- it doesn't
even include the file name.
This commit shows the file name so you at least know which of your
uploads failed.
This tab doesn't really provide anything useful, and can be quite
confusing in some cases. Each plugin is already listed below, and
you can navigate to their settings from there. We want to move away
from the catch-all Plugins category for site settings. Core plugins are
not shown in this list as at 97a812f022.
Our Ember build compiles assets into multiple chunks. In the past, we used the output from `ember-auto-import-chunks-json-generator` to give Rails a map of those chunks. However, that addon is specific to ember-auto-import, and is not compatible with Embroider.
Instead, we can switch to parsing the html files which are output by ember-cli. These are guaranteed to have the correct JS files in the correct place. A `<discourse-chunked-script>` will allow us to easily identify which chunks belong to which entrypoint.
In future, as we update more entrypoints to be compiled by Embroider/Webpack, we can easily introduce new wrappers.
This commit fixes an issue from 2ecc8291e8
where the user sees an ugly plain #hashtag when sending a chat
message. Now, we add a basic placeholder that looks like the
cooked hashtag with a grey square, which is then filled in
once the "sent" message bus event for the message comes back,
and we do decorateCooked on the message to fill in the proper
hashtag details.
When flagging a chat message, and options included both notifying user and notifying staff, the modal was missing the separating text. This was happening because the #staffFlagsAvailable method was based on post flags, and the model for chat flags is slightly different. This fixes that by delegating to the relevant flag target object.
Streaming doesn't work for anonymous users because we scope updates to the current user. Since they can only see cached summaries, we can skip the streaming parameter and update it directly with the ajax response.
Previously, when dragging the timeline scroller, we would position it purely based on the current cursor position. That means that if you started dragging it from anywhere other than the centre, the scroller will 'jump' suddenly to centre itself on the cursor.
This commit measures the offset of your cursor when the drag starts, and maintains it throughout the drag. So for example, if you start dragging at the bottom of the scroller and drag one pixel up, the scroller will only move by 1px.
This should make the UX much smoother, especially on large topics.
When the 'loading slider' navigation indicator is enabled, and a connection is very slow, we `display: none` most of the page and display a spinner. The `still-loading` body class for this was being added in the `afterRender` step in the Ember runloop. This meant that, depending on the order they were scheduled, other `afterRender` jobs may run before it. This caused an issue with topic scroll locations because we would attempt to scroll to an element which was `display: none` at the point its position was calculated.
This commit moves the `still-loading` class manipulations to the `render` step of the runloop, which is technically more correct, and means that anything scheduled in the `afterRender` step is guaranteed to run without the `display: none` CSS.
https://meta.discourse.org/t/276305/29
This commit contains a few improvements:
* Use LinkTo instead of a button with a weird action referencing the
controller to navigate to the filtered settings for a plugin
* Add an AdminPlugin model with tracked properties and use that when
toggling the setting on/off and in the templates
* Make it so the Settings button for a plugin navigates to the correct
site setting category instead of always just going to the generic
"plugins" one if possible
Follow-up to #23199 in which we moved the "delete user" options under the relevant action menu for flagged post. This change does the same, but to queued posts.
This provides a `refresh()` function on Ember's public router service. The feature was added to Ember in v4.1.0, but this polyfill will allow us to start using it straight away under 3.28
DEV: Display fuzzy site setting search results below direct matches
When searching for site settings, in the results under the ALL category
all the fuzzy search results were showing first followed by any direct
matches. This change adjusts that so that fuzzy searches show below
direct matches.
Fuzzy results are now also sorted based on their gap calculation in
ascending order.
It is hard to catch and debug potential bugs related to live updates of
user status (though, we haven't seen many such bugs so far). We have
this `console.warn` statement that should help us to catch one class of
such bugs:
70f1cc5552/app/assets/javascripts/discourse/app/models/user.js (L1384-L1389)
But in tests, we quite often operate with stubs of users that don't have ID,
and this warning create unnecessary noise. This PR disable the warning in
the testing environment.
This could happen after you had already change the separation mode and would cause unexpected bugs.
This PR also adds more tests around using switch buttons with chat.
Reverts e2705df and re-lands #23187 and #23219.
The issue was incorrect order of execution of Rails' `assets:precompile` task in our own precompilation stack.
Co-authored-by: David Taylor <david@taylorhq.com>
Short answer -- the problem is the video thumbnail generator & uploader
code added a couple of months back in f144c64e13.
It was implemented as another Mixin which overrides `this._uppyInstance`
when uploading the video thumbnail after the initial upload is complete,
which means the composer's `this._uppyInstance` value is overridden,
and it loses all of its preprocessors & upload code.
This is generally a problem with the Mixin based architecture that I
used for the Uppy code, which we need to remove at some point and
refacotr.
The most ideal thing to do here would be to convert this video thumbnail
code into an Uppy
[postprocessor](https://uppy.io/docs/uppy/#addpostprocessorfn) plugin,
which runs on each upload after they are complete. I started looking
into this, and the main hurdle here is adding support to tracking the
progress of postprocessors to
[ExtendableUploader](cf42466dea/app/assets/javascripts/discourse/app/mixins/extendable-uploader.js)
so that is out of scope at this time.
The fix here makes it so the ComposerVideoThumbnailUppy code is no
longer a Mixin, but acts more like a normal class, a pattern which
we have used in chat. I also clean up a lot of the thumbnail uploader
code and remove some unnecessary things.
Attempted to add a system spec, but video streaming does not work
in Chrome for Testing at this time, and it is needed for the
onloadedmetadata event.
`Window`'s `resize` event was unreliable. You could shrink down the browser window so that the timeline would disappear but the progress element would not render to replace it.
This commit makes it rely on a media query listener instead so it 1. matches the css 2. fires only when that query result changes (perf win)
By default, the workbox-expiration plugin will not expire cache entries which include a `Vary` header in the response. This means that cached entries can build up until the browser storage quota is hit.
This commit introduces the `ignoreVary: true` option, so that deletion is performed correctly. This will only apply going forward, so this commit also bumps the cache version and deletes the old caches.
Ref https://github.com/GoogleChrome/workbox/issues/2206
This fixes the problem reported in
https://meta.discourse.org/t/custom-status-message-in-front-of-by-header-on-scroll/273320.
This problem can be reproduced with any tooltip created using the DTooltip
component or the createDTooltip function.
The problem happens because the trigger for tooltip on mobile is click, and for tooltip
to disappear the user has to click outside the tooltip. This is the default behavior
of tippy.js – the library we use under the hood.
Note that this PR fixes the problem in topics, but not in chat. I'm going to investigate and
address it in chat in a following PR.
To fix it for tooltips created with the createDTooltip function, I had to make a refactoring.
We had a somewhat not ideal solution there, we were leaking an implementation detail
by passing tippy instances to calling sides, so they could then destroy them. With this fix,
I would have to make it more complex, because now we need to also remove onScrool
handlers, and I would need to leak this implementation detail too. So, I firstly refactored
the current solution in 5a4af05 and then added onScroll handlers in fb4aabe.
When refactoring this, I was running locally some temporarily skipped flaky tests. Turned out
they got a bit outdated, so I fixed them. Note that I'm not unskipping them in this commit,
we'll address them separately later.
This commit adds some system specs to test uploads with
direct to S3 single and multipart uploads via uppy. This
is done with minio as a local S3 replacement. We are doing
this to catch regressions when uppy dependencies need to
be upgraded or we change uppy upload code, since before
this there was no way to know outside manual testing whether
these changes would cause regressions.
Minio's server lifecycle and the installed binaries are managed
by the https://github.com/discourse/minio_runner gem, though the
binaries are already installed on the discourse_test image we run
GitHub CI from.
These tests will only run in CI unless you specifically use the
CI=1 or RUN_S3_SYSTEM_SPECS=1 env vars.
For a history of experimentation here see https://github.com/discourse/discourse/pull/22381
Related PRs:
* https://github.com/discourse/minio_runner/pull/1
* https://github.com/discourse/minio_runner/pull/2
* https://github.com/discourse/minio_runner/pull/3
This PR changes how we track which lists are available for a topic and how we decide which is the active one. The new approach centralizes everything in the service, and exposes functions for adding/removing a list, which each calls via `did-insert/will-destroy` modifiers.
It makes it much easier to track and update state when navigated to another topic or PM, ensuring things get updated correctly.
Separate mobile templates are a pattern we're moving away from. They are not supported by Ember, and make things more difficult to develop/test. The differences between the mobile and desktop templates for `discovery/topics` are very minimal, so they can be easily integrated.
The only feature missing from the main template was the new 'list header controls' UI. This commit introduces that to the main template inside an `mobileView` conditional.
Key changes in behavior, many of which could be considered bug fixes, are:
- Mobile will now include 'redirected reason'
- Mobile will now include shared drafts
- Mobile will now include before-topic-list and after-topic-list Plugin Outlets
- Mobile will now have a `<div class="show-more">` wrapper around the 'new or updated' UI, to match desktop. This does not seem to cause any visual change.
Mobile-specific template overrides of `discovery/topics` will continue to function as before - this should not be a breaking change for any themes/plugins.
Mobile-specific templates for the topic list and topic-list-item remain in place.
Sometimes the fuzzy search would return too many site setting results
making it hard to find what you are searching for. This change still
allows for fuzzy searching but tightens up the criteria for being a
fuzzy match.
One example is searching for 'cheer', a term associated with a plugin,
previously returned ~55 search results. With this change it will return
~13 (Actual numbers depend on how many plugins your instance has).
Another example is searching for 'digest'. Previously returned ~37
results and now will return ~14.
Follow up to: e63e193a0a
See also: https://meta.discourse.org/t/276013
Transpiling to `/raw-templates` is important so that they are detected by the `eager-load-raw-templates` initializer. Prior to 16c6ab86 this wasn't a problem because all connector modules were being eager-loaded. Now that connectors are lazily loaded, it's critical that `eager-load-raw-templates` does the eager loading. This problem doesn't affect themes because they compile raw templates into an iife instead of a `define()` module.
Unfortunately we don't have any way to introduce automated testing for this part of our compilation pipeline. However, discourse-calendar will begin depending on this functionality imminently, so its tests will warn us of future regressions.
This commit introduces a 'shortcut' when rendering PluginOutlets which have no registered connectors. On my machine, this improves rendering performance of empty PluginOutlets by around 30-40% (tested by running tachometer on a `/latest` route with 600 plugin outlets).
* Minor style adjustments
* Removes "all" count because it's redundant to the count on New
* Updates generic class names with -- modifier to follow BEM and help avoid class name collisions
* Hides the toggle when bulk select is enabled (the UI ends up being too busy)
Previously we were discovering plugin outlets by checking first for dedicated template files, and then looking for classes to match them. This doesn't work for components which are entirely defined in JS (e.g. those authored with gjs, or those which are re-exports of a colocated component).
This commit refactors our detection logic to look for both class and template modules in a single pass. It also refactors things so that the modules themselves are required lazily when needd, rather than all being loaded during app boot.
This PR adds a new toggle to switch the (new) /new list between showing topics with new replies (a.k.a unread topics), new topics, or everything mixed together.
Prior to this fix we would always re-set `this.attrs` with `this.attrs` when defined, which is both wasteful but also dangerous as `this.attrs` can possibly error when mutated.
Previously, we had a `showFooter` boolean on the application controller which would be set true/false in various routes by different routes/controllers. A global `routeWillChange` hook would set it `false` before every route transition, and the destination route/controller would have to set it `true` for the footer to show correctly.
This commit replaces that with a new 'declarative' system. Instead of having to set the value true/false manually, UIs which need the footer to be hidden can simply include the `{{hide-application-footer}}` helper in their template when needed. The helper/service will automatically keep track of all the current invocations of that helper, and only show the footer when there are 0 invocations.
This significantly simplifies things, and removes the need for many observers and controller injections, both of which are considered 'code smells' in modern Ember applications.
What is the problem here?
When transiting between `/filter` routes with different `q` query
params, the input field is not updating to include the values in the `q`
query param. This was because we were setting the value of the input
field in the constructor of the controller but controllers are actually
singletons in Ember so setting the value of the input field is only done
once when the controller is initialised.
What is the fix here?
Instead of setting the value of the input field in the controller, we
set the value in the `setupController` hook in the route file.
* scrub non-a html tags from tag descriptions on create, strips all tags from tag description when displayed in tag hover
* test for tag description links
* UX: basic render-tag test
* UX: fix linting
* UX: fix linting
* fix broken tests
* Update spec/models/tag_spec.rb
Co-authored-by: Penar Musaraj <pmusaraj@gmail.com>
* UX: use has_sanitizable_fields instead of has_scrubbable_fields to ensafen tag.description
---------
Co-authored-by: Penar Musaraj <pmusaraj@gmail.com>
104baab5 fixed double-counted pageviews for the initial page load. Under the default 'loading slider' implementation, that resolved all the known problems.
However, under the 'loading spinner', there is an additional problem. In 'spinner' mode, each navigation within the JS app involves transitioning to an intermediate 'loading' route. Previously, this intermediate state was being treated as a separate page by the app, and so any ajax requests fired during it would be counted as a distinct pageview. One known case of this is the `/presence/get` request which is made when logged-in users visit a topic.
This commit updates the logic to ignore 'intermediate' transitions, and introduces regression tests for both the 'spinner' and 'slider' modes.
In this commit 2.5 years ago, variables for showOnUserCard and showOnProfile were removed, but we still used them in the component. e29605b
This corrects the variable names and adds a test to confirm the text is now shown.
* DEV: allow `formTemplateIds` to be explicitly set via the composer service
* DEV: allow to skip the configured form template via the composer service
This resolves the issue in #23064.
This issue arises because we need to produce the trees for the
auxilary bundles in `ember-cli-build.js` to pass these trees as
argument to `app.toTree()`. In order to produce these trees, the
code internally need to set up babel, which deep-clones the addons'
babel configs.
When using `@embroider/macros`, the addon's babel config includes a
`MacrosConfig` object which is not supposed to be touched until the
configs are "finalized". In a classic build, the finalization step
happens when `app.toTree()` is called. In Embroider, this happens
somewhere deeper inside `CompatApp`.
We need to produce these auxilary bundle trees before we call
`app.toTree()` or before constructing `CompatApp` because they
need to be passed as arguments to these functions. So this poses a
tricky chicken-and-egg timing issue. It was difficult to find a
workaround for this that works for both the classic and Embroider
build pipeline.
Of all the internal addons that uses the auxilary bundle pattern,
this only affets `pretty-text` as it is (for now, at least) the
only addon that uses `@embroider/macros`.
Taking a step back, the only reason (for now, at least) it was
introduced was for the loader shim for the `xss` package. This
package is actually used inside the lazily loaded markdown-it
bundle. However, we didn't have a better way to include the dep
into the lazy bundle directly, so it ends up going into the main
addon tree, and, inturns, the discourse core bundle.
In core's main loader shim manifest, we already have an entry for
`xss`. This was perhaps a mistake at the time, but it doesn't make
a difference – as mentioned above, `xss` needs to be included into
the main bundle anyway.
So, for now, the simpliest solution is to avoid `@embroider/macros`
in these internal addons for the time being. Ideally we would soon
absorb these back into core as lazily loaded (`import()`-ed) code
managed by Webpack when we fully switch over to Embroider.
The new modal API removed the `#discourse-modal` id from the wrapper element, which meant that select-kit couldn't properly detect when it was inside a modal. This commit updates the detection to use `.fixed-modal` which will match both legacy and modern modals.
When we receive the stream parameter, we'll queue a job that periodically publishes partial updates, and after the summarization finishes, a final one with the completed version, plus metadata.
`summary-box` listens to these updates via MessageBus, and updates state accordingly.
The OpenComposer mixin comes from a time before we had a composer service. As well as being a general cleanup/refactor, this commit aims to removes interlinking between composer APIs and the discovery-related controllers which are being removed as part of #22622.
In summary, this commit:
- Removes OpenComposer mixin
- Adds and updates composer service APIs to support everything that `openComposer` did
- Updates consumers to call the composer service directly, instead of relying on the mixin (either directly, or via a route-action which bubbled up to some parent)
- Deprecates composer-related methods on `DiscourseRoute` and on the application route
Prior to this fix the user tip was rendered with panels and interfering with widget code. I suspect it was causing the widget node (revamped-hamburger-menu-wrapper) to not be removed, as a result clickOutside would be called two times, negating the effect of the click.
This fix is just rendering the tip in a different node, preventing the interference, it shouldn't impact behavior as the positioning is absolute.
This commit moves the calendar date and time picker shown in
the local dates modal into a core component that can be reused
in other places. Also add system specs to make sure there isn't
any breakages with this feature, and a section to the styleguide.
The original motivation for this change was to avoid mutating imported modules (by stubbing imported functions in tests)
Other than that it's a good practice to place code like this in services, especially (although not the case here) if it requires access to other services or controller.
The previous version of ember-on-resize-modifier depended on
ember-modifier@^3.2.7 while discourse had ember-modifier@^4.1.0.
As far as Yarn is concerned, it can accomplish this with:
node_modules
...
ember-modifier 4.1.0
...
ember-on-resize-modifier 1.1.0
...
ember-modifier 3.2.7
...
...
This does NOT work!
In a classic build everything is compiled down to AMD modules and
at runtime there can only be one uniquely named "ember-modifier"
module. When we have duplicates, depending on activation ordering,
one of them will randomly win.
In practice, it seems like ember-modifier 3.2.7 had "won" in the
current build, and we are shipping it to production, you can find
these modules in vendor.js like:
```js
;define("ember-modifier/-private/class/modifier", /* ... */, function(/* ... */) {
/* the 3.2.7 version with deprecations, etc */
})
/* ... */
;define("ember-modifier/index", /* ... */)
```
However, ember-auto-import also "found" the 4.1.0 version and in
one of the chunk.app.js:
```js
d('ember-modifier', /* ... */, function() { return __webpack_require__(/*! ember-modifier */ 227); });
```
...and in one of the chunk.vendors.js...
```js
/* 227 */
/*!****************************************************!*\
!*** ../node_modules/ember-modifier/dist/index.js ***!
\****************************************************/
/***/ ((__unused_webpack_module, __webpack_exports__, __webpack_require__) => {
"use strict";
/* ...the 4.1.0 version... */
}),
```
So, in practice:
* We are brining both copies into the production build
* The 3.2.7 modules are available in the AMD loader as "ember-modifier/..."
* But 4.1.0 modules are available in the AMD loader as "ember-modifier"
* Because mostly it's consumed as `import ... from "ember-modifier";`, the
latter end up actually winning
* Because the newer code is compatible enough, and the deprecated features
are unused, it seems to work ok..?
But in the Embroider build, ember-auto-import doesn't emit those shims
anymore. It does process most of the core modules through Webpack so the
imports get correctly wired up to the 4.1.0 as expected, as they no longer
go through/need the runtime AMD loader.js.
The older 3.2.7 copy is _still_ shipped in the vendor bundle and registered
the same, but not "stomped over" by the EAI shims anymore. Our manual shims
(#22703, merged yesterday) are more "polite" and check `require.has(...)`
before defining the module, and since `require.has(...)` check for the
`/index` alias and returns `true`, our shim does not stomp the 3.2.7 modules
either.
So then, when our "auxilary bundles" (admin, plugins, etc) tries to import
`"ember-modifier", they get the 3.2.7 version.
There is a case when developer would like to go to separated mode but not show switch panel buttons. We need additional functions to show/add buttons to support this case.
* REFACTOR: Glimerify topic summarization widgets.
Simplifies all the logic for generating/regenerating summaries and expanding/collapsing the summary box. It makes streaming easier to implement since now we can subscribe to message bus directly from the component.
* Update app/assets/javascripts/discourse/app/components/summary-box.hbs
Co-authored-by: David Taylor <david@taylorhq.com>
* Update app/assets/javascripts/discourse/app/components/summary-box.hbs
Co-authored-by: David Taylor <david@taylorhq.com>
* Update app/assets/javascripts/discourse/app/components/summary-box.hbs
Co-authored-by: David Taylor <david@taylorhq.com>
---------
Co-authored-by: David Taylor <david@taylorhq.com>
This adds a new `loaderShim()` function to ensure certain modules
are present in the `loader.js` registry and therefore runtime
`require()`-able.
Currently, the classic build pipeline puts a lot of things in the
runtime `loader.js` registry automatically. For example, all of
the ember-auto-import packages are in there.
Going forward, and especially as we switch to the Embroider build
pipeline, this will not be guarenteed. We need to keep an eye on
what modules (packages) our "external" bundles (admin, wizard,
markdown-it, plugins, etc) are expecting to be present and put
them into the registry proactively.
There is no decorateCooked equivalent for small action posts,
so we need to manually call decorateHashtags when there is a custom
message for small action posts in order for the hashtags to get
their coloured icon/square.
Bug when you click fast on the switch panel button. It is happening because we are not waiting for the transition to finish before update state.
In addition, unused currentPanel property was removed.
This commit removes any logic in the app and in specs around
enable_experimental_hashtag_autocomplete and deletes some
old category hashtag code that is no longer necessary.
It also adds a `slug_ref` category instance method, which
will generate a reference like `parent:child` for a category,
with an optional depth, which hashtags use. Also refactors
PostRevisor which was using CategoryHashtagDataSource directly
which is a no-no.
Deletes the old hashtag markdown rule as well.
This fixes:
- a regression from 30c152c, where navigating to a topic's last reply
via keyboard would lose track of the topic when returning to the topic
list
- an issue where if a topic's last post is a small post, navigating to it
via keyboard would not focus the post
Co-authored-by: David Taylor <david@taylorhq.com>
Adds a padding-bottom to the wrapper to avoid cutting the message on the mobile app and sets a max-width to align with the timeline on the desktop.
Fixes a bug on mobile where we updated the preference, but the user had a single list.
When Ember rendering fails for some reason, `this.header` will be undefined. This causes site-header to raise an error, which often gets printed to the console more obviously than the actual root cause.
This commit makes site-header fail more gracefully in this situation, to avoid it being a red-herring during development/debugging.
This function was previously expecting multiple services to be injected on any class that uses it. This kind of hidden requirement leads to some very difficult-to-debug situations, so this commit updates the function to lookup all its required services inline.
The filter-mode mixin was previously serving two distinct purposes via a complex arrangement of getters/setters:
1. To calculate a filterMode, given values for category, filterType and noSubcategories
2. To calculate a filterType, given a filterMode
This commit splits the mixin into two functions, and updates all call sites to use them instead of the mixin.
This makes more sense (and is likely faster) than redefining the entire route for every call to `buildTopicRoute`. Also moves the top-specific logic into the route rather than injecting it via an initializer.
Similar to d5107d1aba
This brings the theme development experience (via the discourse_theme cli) closer to the experience of making javascript changes in Discourse core/plugins via Ember CLI. Whenever a change is made to a non-css theme field, all clients will be instructed to immediately refresh via message-bus.
In #20135 we prevented invalid inputs from being accepted in category setting form fields on the front-end. We didn't do anything on the back-end at that time, because we were still discussing which path we wanted to take. Eventually we decided we want to move this to a new CategorySetting model.
This PR moves the num_auto_bump_daily from custom fields to the new CategorySetting model.
In addition it sets the default value to 0, which exhibits the same behaviour as when the value is NULL.
This commit makes some visual tweaks to the admin panel plugin list, and introduces functional 'toggle switches' for admins to enable/disable plugins more easily.
Co-authored-by: Jordan Vidrine <jordan@jordanvidrine.com>
We need these Ember framework class overrides to be applied before anything attempts to extend them. An initializer is too late, because initializer files may `import` a module which defines classes which extend the framework classes.
In the past this rarely mattered because Ember's legacy `SomeObject.extend` is quite forgiving - it will respect changes made to `SomeObject` right up until the first `.create()` call. However, the native class syntax (`class extends SomeObject`) will 'freeze' `SomeObject` as soon as the class is defined.
Edit community section button is hidden in secondary/more section. However, when there are no secondary links, then more section is not shown. In that case, we should still display an edit button for admins, so they can edit the section.
Should fix an iOS regression in f5e8e73. iOS does not pull up the keyboard if the `.focus()` call is delayed by a rendering timeout or an asynchronous ajax call. This PR adds earlier `.focus()` calls if the input element is present.
This was forgotten during the work in 22991bba44
This revealed two differences we were depending on: the merged `actions` hash (re-implemented on the service), and a couple of calls to `composer.send` (now removed)
1. recent css regression related to modal upgrade
2. autofocus and on-enter regressions
3. array related linting issue (reliance on Ember's firstObject/lastObject)
This change prevents event bubbling for the Escape key on all modals. Currently when we close the modal using the Escape key, all other event listeners attached will also be triggered (such as closing the chat drawer if it's open).
When we use the escape key to exit lightbox for images within a chat channel, it also closes the chat drawer due to event bubbling (since both lightbox and chat use an event listener on the escape key).
This change prevents event bubbling when using the escape key within lightbox, which means that it will close the lightbox but won't close the chat drawer.
The escape key is used as a shortcut to escape the Discourse Lightbox. However, some browsers also use the escape key to exit fullscreen mode.
This change is to allow escaping the lightbox when browser is in fullscreen mode, while preventing any behavior associated with the Escape key (such as exiting fullscreen). This has to be done on the keydown event, as this means we can handle our logic and then preventDefault before the browser tries to exit fullscreen.
We only want to scroll to the top for successful transitions. If a transition is aborted (e.g. when clicking a chat link when chat is in drawer mode) then we should maintain the existing scroll location.
We were proxying all `/assets/*` requests through to the origin. In local development that was fine, because Rails was able to serve files from the `dist/` directory. But when proxying to a remote origin, we want the local ember-cli to serve its own JS assets
We never propagated the preference change because of the early return, meaning lists listening to it never got to decide if they had to remain hidden.
Also, we don't want to track the preference when there's a single list, as the user didn't choose to see it.
This PR updates how we display related and suggested topics on mobile and desktop. It adds a new `PluginOutlet` specifically designed for adding new topic lists, which automatically work if following the same conventions as the ones inside `<MoreTopics />`.
While we display lists side by side on desktop, we only display one in mobile. You can switch to another one by clicking on the nav pills, and we'll automatically save your preference for next time.
FEATURE: Only approved flags for post counters
* Why was this change necessary?
The counters for flagged posts in the user's profile and user index from
the admin view include flags that were rejected, ignored or pending
review. This introduces unnecessary noise. Also the flagged posts
counter in the user's profile includes custom flags which add further
noise to this signal.
* How does it address the problem?
* Modifying User#flags_received_count to return posts with only approved
standard flags
* Refactoring User#number_of_flagged_posts to alias to
User#flags_received_count
* Updating the flagged post staff counter hyperlink to navigate to a
filtered view of that user's approved flagged posts to maintain
consistency with the counter
* Adding system tests for the profile page to cover the flagged posts
staff counter
We already handled 429 rate limit errors correctly. This commit adds backoff logic to other types of error to avoid requests being retried every second.
The store expects values for property names ending with `_id` to be a resource id
and `_ids` to be an array of resource ids.
This change ensures the store gracefully handles situations where an
embedded field with incompliant data structure sneaks its way to production.
By default, only 10 members are highlighted on group cards. However,
joining/leaving a big group via the buttons on the group card results in
up to 50 members being highlighted. For large groups, this causes the card
to move off-screen.
This happens because, while the initial render explicitly fetches only 10
members, we don't seem to apply the same limit as part of the member
reload performed when a user leaves/joins via the buttons on the card.
This PR fixes that by only making the first 10 users available for
highlight regardless of the number of members loaded in the store.
Using pinch-zoom on mobile devices with lightbox images can lead to scrolling of background content.
This change handles this by capturing the window.scrollY value when opening the lightbox, then when exiting we check if the scroll position has changed and reset it.
provide the ability to edit theme settings in the json editor, and also copy them as a text file so they can be pasted into another instance.
Reference: /t/65023
## Problem
History modal is flashing when changing revision versions
## Context
This was introduced in https://github.com/discourse/discourse/pull/22666
We need to have a conditional loading spinner for the initial paint of the history modal as we don't have the revision yet loaded, so this can cause some odd rendering issues. At the same time we don't want to display the loading spinner each time we toggle between the revision versions, because the loading spinner replaces the revision body causing the modal sizes to be drastically different resulting in _jumping_ or _flashing_.
## Fix
Render the loading spinner only on the first paint of the modal.
https://github.com/discourse/discourse/assets/50783505/8d19275e-86a5-4132-8a1f-af4b4f5301a6
Followup to f5e8e73.
This switches the placeholder label to the existing string "optional
tags" and only shows it if there are no items picked.
Co-authored-by: Jarek Radosz <jradosz@gmail.com>
Change to drag move event handling. When position of mouse changed, we can assume it is not drag and drop, and we should keep default behaviour.
Otherwise, we stop propagation of the event to handle drag and drop correctly. s
New API to change sidebar mode. We defined two:
Separated - only sections belonging to specific panel are displayed, and buttons to switch the panel are available as well.
Combined - all sections are displayed together and switch panel buttons are not visible.
In addition, as a part of refactoring, a new service called SidebarState was introduced.
The `/u` route was broken when there were no directory columns because
its order parameter relied on the first column's name. This commit adds
a `likes_received` as the default order when there are no columns, which
results in a list of users being output without any additional columns.
For this very edge case, that's better than a JS error.
Why this change?
We were verifying that a url for a section link in a custom sidebar
section is valid by passing the url string to `Router#recognize`.
If a `rootURL` has been set on the router, the url string that is passed
to `Router#recognize` has to start with the `rootURL`.
This commit fixes the problem by ensuring that `RouteInfoHelper` adds
the application subfolder path before calling `Router#recognize` on the
url string.
Why this change?
When setting up the `IntersectionObserver`, we did not account for the
top margin and padding causing no intersection event to fire when the
last tag is load into view. This commits fixes the problem by setting a
bottom margin using the `rootMargin` option when setting up the
`IntersectionObserver`.
This commit also improves the test coverage surrounding the loading of
more tags.
We recently replaced another ignore user modal with a Glimmer and DModal based component. This change makes use of that same component in the user card ignore modal by adding an enableSelection flag.
Interestingly, this missing parenthesis was silently repaired under Chrome/Firefox, but seems to have caused some issues on other browsers.
https://meta.discourse.org/t/272496
Why this change?
We're already displaying a category's description as the title attribute
on the category section link. We should do the same for tags as well.
* Why was this change necessary?
The current logic in the user.hbs template file does not render the
trust level element for the user's info panel when the user is TL0,
because 0 is treated as falsey in the `if` conditional block.
Ref: https://meta.discourse.org/t/tl0-not-displayed-on-users-profile-pages/271779/10
* How does it address the problem?
This PR adds a predicate helper method local to the user controller that
includes an additional check which returns true if the trust_level of
the user is 0 on top of the existing logic. This allows TL0 users to
have their trust level rendered correctly in their profile's info panel.
In Safari, clicking any image in a lightbox gallery results in the first image loading (instead of the clicked image).
Previously we relied on document.activeElement to determine which lightbox image was clicked. However in Chrome the active element is the lightbox selector (a.lightbox), whereas in Safari the active element defaults to the body tag.
Currently the startingIndex that is calculated within processHTML() is used by lightbox to determine which image to load first. The starting index is currently achieved by checking each lightbox element within the gallery against the active element.
To fix this issue we can use the event.target to get the clicked image, then use the closest selector and pass that into the function to do the matching and return the correct startingIndex.
1. in the test, hiding is now done with css so if element gets rerendered it won't lose the styling
2. the skipping now allows for the `<article>` element itself being hidden
This has been proposed as the new default, and is currently in-use on many large ember apps without issue. It is already the default under Embroider. Testing locally, this seems to make incremental builds in development at least 2x faster.
https://github.com/ember-cli/ember-cli/issues/8681
- Convert `admin-incoming-email` modal to component-based API
- Testing that the modal was working in local development was extremely challenging due to the need for `rejected` and `bounced` emails. Something that is not easy to stub in a local dev environment. To make this process more smooth for future developers I have added a new rake task:
```
desc "Creates sample email logs"
task "email_logs:populate" => ["db:load_config"] do |_, args|
DiscourseDev::EmailLog.populate!
end
```
That will generate fully functional email logs in development to be toyed with.
<img width="787" alt="Screenshot 2023-07-20 at 3 27 04 PM" src="https://github.com/discourse/discourse/assets/50783505/47b3fe34-cd7e-49a5-8fe6-768c0fbd1aa2">
The gjs/gts formats are a new pattern for authoring Ember components. This commit introduces support for these patterns to our build pipeline for core/plugins, and converts a handful of components to use the new format. It also introduces relevant updates to our linting config, and to our sample vscode configuration.
Co-authored-by: Godfrey Chan <godfreykfc@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Krystan HuffMenne <kmenne+github@gmail.com>
Since 0fa92529ed, helpers can now be implemented as plain JS functions. This makes them much easier to write/read, and also makes them usable in `<template>` gjs files.
* FEATURE: allow sidebar section api to create external links
Right now, sidebar API allows creating sections with internal links. It should be extended to allow creating links to external URLs as well.
* FIX: after rebase
pass the extra public trees to `app.toTree()` to match:
0e00f2bf15/packages/test-setup/src/index.ts (L24-L27)
The ember-cli-terser addon now takes care of minifying all additional trees, so we can remove our custom terser-related logic
This brings them more in line with an idiomatic ember app looks
like, in particular, embroider really expects the CSS file to be
there.
As far as I can tell this is fairly harmless, since in production
the actual HTML is generated and served by Rails anyway.
Down the road, this may also be a good alternative to hacking the
build pipeline to bring in styles for tests.
Recently we started giving admins a notice in the advice panel when their translations have become outdated due to changes in core. However, we didn't include any additional information.
This PR adds more information about the outdated translation inside the site text edit page, together with an option to dismiss the warning.
* UX: Disclose AI model used and add animation to placeholder
* Move text into hbs template
DTooltip (weirdly) attaches to a sibling element, so we need something else to be rendered inside the RenderGlimmer wrapper div
---------
Co-authored-by: David Taylor <david@taylorhq.com>
e.g. the modernised share-topic modal will attempt to open the `create-invite` modal. Prior to this commit, this mixing of modern/legacy would fail silently, and the create-invite modal was never shown.
Initializing an EmberObject with a null object leads to an exception. This commit stops that from happening, and introduces an acceptance test for adding/removing banner topics via message-bus.
Co-authored-by: David Taylor <david@taylorhq.com>
011ba5b9 slightly changed the way the staff-action-log route is activated. It's now possible for `deserializeQueryParam` to be called with a null value, so we need to deal with that case.
This route is currently untested - we'll follow-up with another commit to add some.
This PR migrates the publish page modal to a Glimmer component and DModal.
Most of the code is lift-and-shift. However, the component state getters were implemented using meta-programming in the original controller. They have all been inlined here for clarity, searchability, etc.
Define new concept of panels in sidebar. Panels are wrappers around sidebar sections. In the future, it allows creating full focus mode by switching between panels.
A new API method called addSidebarPanel was added. Default main panel is already registered and by default all API sections are mounted to main.
This babel plugin is intended to supress the deprecation warnings
from building plugins, however, discourse-plugins does not actually
consume this plugin at all. Currently this happens to work due to
how the babel worker processes are shared and the timing/ordering
of the build, but it will stop working with the embroider build.
This commit extracts the plugin the a shared package so that it
can be properly consumed by discourse-plugins as well as core.
Performing a `Delete User`/`Delete and Block User` reviewable actions for a
queued post reviewable from the `review.show` route results in an error
popup even if the action completes successfully.
This happens because unlike other reviewable types, a user delete action
on a queued post reviewable results in the deletion of the reviewable
itself. A subsequent attempt to reload the reviewable record results in
404. The deletion happens as part of the call to `UserDestroyer` which
includes a step for destroying reviewables created by the user being
destroyed. At the root of this is the creator of the queued post
being set as the creator of the reviewable as instead of the system
user.
This change assigns the creator of the reviewable to the system user and
uses the more approapriate `target_created_by` column for the creator of the
post being queued.
- explicitly enables the jquery-integration. This was previously enabled by default, so no change in behavior for us
- enable template-only-glimmer-components. In core, we don't have any component templates under `templates/components`, so this flag has no effect. A shim, with associated tests, is introduced to preserve the old template-only 'classic component' behavior for themes and plugins.
We'd like to get this deprecation unsilenced before the 3.1 release so that theme/plugin developers see the messages and can make the necessary changes during the 3.2 release cycle. To avoid the remaining legacy core modals from creating overwhelming noise in the logs, deprecation messages for them are skipped.
When the app boots, Ember fires a `routeWillChange` event. This was causing us to set the `_trackView` flag in our ajax library, which would cause the next request to have the `Discourse-Track-View` header, despite not being relevant to the page view. Depending on the plugins/themes installed, this could lead to 'double counting' of pageviews. (because the initial HTML request is also counted as a page view)
This commit updates the the logic to ignore the first transition (by checking `transition.from`), and also introduces an acceptance test for the behaviour.
Co-authored-by: Régis Hanol <regis@hanol.fr>
Currently the dominant color attribute is only set for post images (not chat).
As a result, clicking lightbox images in chat will load the image within lightbox but also shows a JS error.
This change ensures that the dominant color is set before attempting to update the site theme color.
What does this change do?
This commit removes the experimental label for a bunch of APIs that have
been used in production for quite some time at Discourse so that the
APIs can be released as part of Discourse 3.1
To decide to use flip behavior select-kit will check if it's located inside a modal as a modal will scroll if overflown, however, when locating the select-kit element in the footer or header this is not the case. This commit will deactivate `flip` modifier only when used inside modal body.
Fixes an issue where this.selector value was not binded at the time of adding the event listener. Therefore when someone opens a chat channel that has images, the value of selector would change. I also moved the callback to a named function (rather than the default handleEvent).
The Problem
Clicking on a large image opens lightbox, however the new lightbox currently waits for the first image to finish loading before it finishes loading the lightbox UI correctly (ie. background color). This makes the visual experience feel broken.
Because open() is waiting for the image to load, it doesn't trigger the onOpen callback, which appends a .has-lightbox class to the html tag. The lightbox background color requires that css class to be set for the styles to be applied correctly.
The Solution
This PR prevents blocking when loading loading the first image (image that was clicked) within the lightbox, and therefore allows the css class to be appended to the html tag correctly and as a result fixing the styling issues.
The #setCurrentItem function is async and awaits the loading of preloadItemImages already, so the image will load correctly when complete despite the rest of the UI loading in advance.
The primary motivation is to simplify `eagerLoadRawTemplateModules` which curently introspects the module dependencies (the `imports` at runtime). This is no longer supported in Embroider as the AMD shims do not have any dependencies (since it's managed internally with webpack).
Prior to this commit the `setSiteThemeColor` could mistakenly receive a color with a leading `#` which would cause an invalid color to be send to `postRNWebviewMessage` and would eventually cause a crash if we try to interpolate between this color and another.
Using the lastViewedTopicId indiscriminately can cause strange scrolling behavior when navigating to a **different** topic list after viewing a topic. We only want to refocus the topic when going 'back' to the same topic list which originally triggered the navigation.
Previously we had three query parameters to control which tests would be run. The default was to run all core/plugin tests together, which would almost always lead to errors and does not match the way we run tests in CI.
This commit removes the three old parameters (skip_core, skip_plugins and single_plugin), and introduces a new 'target' parameter. This can have a value of 'core', 'plugins', 'all', or a specific plugin name. The default is 'core'. Attempting to use the old parameters will raise an error.
Previously we were implementing scroll reset/memorization on a per-page basis. Many of these approaches relied on the `didInsertElement` hook, which is no longer appropriate since Discourse changed to use the 'loading slider' strategy for page transitions.
This commit rips out all of our custom scroll resetting/memorizing, and implements those things in a generic service. There are two features:
1. After every route transition, scroll to the top of the page
2. When using browser back/forward buttons, restore the last known scroll position for those routes
To opt-out of the behaviour, individual routes can add a scrollOnTransition boolean to their RouteInfo metadata using Ember's `buildRouteInfoMetadata` hook.
The new lightbox was missing the tracked property for items when it was launched earlier as experimental feature flag.
This PR should fix issues experienced when the user clicks between multiple galleries causing the carousel images not to be updated as they were previously not tracked.
Why this change?
Prior to this change, dismissing unreads posts did not publish the
changes across clients for the same user. As a result, users can end up
seeing an unread count being present but saw no topics being loaded when
visiting the `/unread` route.
Why this change?
Group mention notifications are currently placed in the "Others" tab
of the user menu which is odd considering that mentioned notifications
are in the reply tab. This commit changes it such that group mention
notifications are displayed in the reply tab as well.
* FEATURE: Inline topic summary. Cached version accessible to everyone.
Anons and non-members of the `custom_summarization_allowed_groups_map` groups can see cached summaries for any accessible topic. After the first 12 hours and if the posts to summarize have changed, allowed users clicking on the button will automatically re-generate it.
* Ensure chat summaries work and prevent model hallucinations when there are no messages.
In the past, widget implementors would have to subclass the MountWidget component and wire up `didUpdateAttrs` or an observer to trigger a re-render. If that wasn't done, then it could lead to weird behaviors, especially now that page transitions in Discourse do not de-render/re-render components by default.
This commit updates MountWidget so that it re-renders whenever any input arguments change.
Browser capabilities are inherently unconnected to the lifecycle of our app. Making them formally available outside of the service means that they can safely be used in non-app-linked functions without needing risky hacks like `helperContext()` or `discourse-common/lib/get-owner`.
One example of where the old hacks were problematic is the `translateModKey()` utility function. This is called in the root of the `discourse/components/modal/keyboard-shortcuts-help` es6 module. If anything (e.g. a theme/plugin) caused that es6 module to be `require()`d before the application was booted, a fatal error would occur.
Following this commit, `translateModKey()` can safely import and access `capabilities` without needing to worry about the app lifecycle.
The only potential downside to this approach is that the capabilities data now persists across tests. If any tests need to 'stub' capabilities, they will need to revert their changes at the end of the test (e.g. by using Sinon to stub a property).
This commit also updates some legacy references from `capabilities:main` to `service:capabilities`.
These avatar-related helper functions are used in pretty-text, which currently means we load the entire `discourse/lib/utilities` module into the mini-racer when running pretty-text on the server side. This stops us adding any logic or imports to discourse/lib/utilities which may depend on other `discourse/` namespace features.
This commit moves the avatar-related utils into a dedicated module in the `discourse-common` namespace, adds backwards-compatibility shims, and updates the pretty-text config accordingly.
- Unify the silencing methods, use a WeakMap to remember the seen objects
- Export a proper plugin and use the absolute path in the config, instead
of the proprietary config from `broccoli-babel-transpiler`
The latter causes problems in Embroider which doesn't use the broccoli
based babel pipeline.
Some themes were doing `require("i18n").t()`, which was never recommended, but did work prior to f8483295. This commit restores that functionality with a deprecation notice.
What does this commit do??
This commit introduces two changes:
1. As a follow up review comment to
cc463c3e9b, we remove the top level
recipientNames cache in composer message to be a property of the
`ComposerMessage` component instead. Across components, we're more
likely to get a cache miss than a hit since we're caching the entire
recipient array so we can just drop it. If we really need this
optimisation, we should probably use a map and cache the information for
each user instead. However, the request is fairly cheap so we avoid that
optimisation for now.
2. This commit adds a debounce to `_typeReply` as well since we were not
debouncing and the method was being called each time we received the
event.
Why is this change being made?
We've decided that the previous "community" section should look more
like a primary section that holds the most important navigation links
for the site and the word "community" doesn't quite fit that
description. Therefore, we've made the decision to drop the
section heading for the community section.
As part of removing the section heading, the following changes are made
as well:
1. Button to customize the section has been moved to the "footer" of the
"More..." section when `navigation_menu` site setting is set to `sidebar`.
When `navigation_menu` is set to `header dropdown`, a button to customize
the section is shown inline.
2. The section will no longer be collapsable.
3. The title of the section is no longer customisable as it is no longer
displayed. As a technical note, we have not dropped any previous
customisations of the section's title previously in case we have to
bring back the header in the future.
4. The new topic button that was previously present in the header has
been removed alongside the header. Admins can add a custom section
link to the `/new-topic` route if there would like to make it easier for
users to create a new topic in the sidebar.
Generally follows the same pattern as #22520
There are some changes here, notably it uses the addon's babel
settings rather than the app's, and it goes through the same
treatment as the rest of the addon code (which may include more
than just babel).
However, this probably brings us closer to the normal expectations
you have around developing addon code, and in any case, does not
seem to have any effect on the final output:
```
$ diff dist/assets/markdown-it-bundle.js /tmp/dist-before/assets/markdown-it-bundle.js
```
* FIX: Default parameter recipients to create new message via params must be a string
The default parameter recipients was defined as an empty array in:
- route:application#createNewMessageViaParams
- mixin:open-composer#openComposerWithMessageParams
However, in model:composer, targetRecipient is handled as a string as can be
verified due to the existence of the #targetRecipientsArray computed property.
Using the default parameter defined as an array was causing issues with
the `discourse-bcc` plugin when opening the composer using the route
/new-message.
* DEV: Added tests for the composer messages for private messages
* Fix test naming
Co-authored-by: Mark VanLandingham <markvanlan@gmail.com>
---------
Co-authored-by: Mark VanLandingham <markvanlan@gmail.com>
Currently, the admin/wizard build relies on the addon build getting
triggered first, so that its `treeForAddon()` hook will be called,
and then it can stash the result on the app's options, which is
super fragile. In Embroider the timing works differently so the
trees end up being `undefined`.
This inverts the logic so that it will be discourse core's build
calling these hooks at a specific timing and return the result
rather than coordinating through the options bag.
```
$ diff dist/assets/admin.js dist-after/assets/admin.js
$ diff dist/assets/wizard.js dist-after/assets/wizard.js
```
Currently the I18n module shim return an object. Per AMD/loader.js,
the properties on the object becomes named exports of the module,
i.e. `import { t } from 'I18n';`.
However, this is not how we actually consume this module. We always
do `import I18n from 'I18n';`.
The returned object from the shim (`window.I18n`) does NOT have a
`default` property on it. This is only working because loader.js
has a `makeDefaultExport` feature that defaults to true, which we
are relying on to synthesize the default export for us.
That feature has been noted as undesirable and may some day be
deprecated. In Embroider, it specifically disables the feature in
loader.js.
https://github.com/embroider-build/embroider/issues/539
This commit also standardize the naming pattern of modals: `<Chat::Modal::FooBar />` and changes css class accordingly.
Co-authored-by: David Taylor <david@taylorhq.com>
When the loading slider is enabled, the rendering of `application.hbs` is slightly delayed compared to the old 'spinner' strategy. This means that if a route tried to render a dialog during its `model()` hook, the dialog wrapper element would not be present and an error would occur.
This commit detects that situation and delays rendering the error until the next runloop iteration. If the element is still not found, we print a useful error to the console.
In the long term, we should ideally convert the dialog service to use a pure-ember rendering strategy instead of leaning on a11y-dialog. But for now, this workaround should resolve the problems identified by the chat system specs.
This PR adds a feature to help admins stay up-to-date with their translations. We already have protections preventing admins from problems when they update their overrides. This change adds some protection in the other direction (where translations change in core due to an upgrade) by creating a notice for admins when defaults have changed.
Terms:
- In the case where Discourse core changes the default translation, the translation override is considered "outdated".
- In the case above where interpolation keys were changed from the ones the override is using, it is considered "invalid".
- If none of the above applies, the override is considered "up to date".
How does it work?
There are a few pieces that makes this work:
- When an admin creates or updates a translation override, we store the original translation at the time of write. (This is used to detect changes later on.)
- There is a background job that runs once every day and checks for outdated and invalid overrides, and marks them as such.
- When there are any outdated or invalid overrides, a notice is shown in admin dashboard with a link to the text customization page.
Known limitations
The link from the dashboard links to the default locale text customization page. Given there might be invalid overrides in multiple languages, I'm not sure what we could do here. Consideration for future improvement.
Follow-up to b27e12445d
This commit adds 2 new site settings `default_sidebar_link_to_filtered_list` and `default_sidebar_show_count_of_new_items` to control the default values for the navigation menu preferences that were added in the linked commit (`sidebar_link_to_filtered_list` and `sidebar_show_count_of_new_items` respectively).
Chat drawer was using the `DiscourseURL` hook `afterRouteComplete`. This hook suffer from a very poor implementation which makes it very unreliable:
```javascript
if (typeof opts.afterRouteComplete === "function") {
schedule("afterRender", opts.afterRouteComplete);
}
```
This commit attempts to return the promise from `handleURL` to directly use it and have a very reliable after transition hook.
This PR converts the following modals:
- `dismiss-new`
- `dismiss-read`
- `dismiss-notification-confirmation`
to make use of the new component-based API
# Additional Changes
## Before
By default we display a warning modal when dismissing a notification however we bypass the warning modal for specific notification types when they are a 'low priority' type of notification (eg. likes). To do this we were overwriting `dismissWarningModal` on a given notification type component
```javascript
dismissWarningModal() {
return null
}
```
but in the case we wanted to change the text within the modal we were calling `showModal` and then passing in the respective options all over again, putting the logic of rendering the modal in multiple places.
```javascript
dismissWarningModal() {
const modalController = showModal("dismiss-notification-confirmation");
modalController.set(
"confirmationMessage",
I18n.t("notifications.dismiss_confirmation.body.assigns", {
count: this._unreadAssignedNotificationsCount,
})
);
return modalController;
}
```
## After
I simplified this by adding an extensible `dismissConfirmationText` function that can be updated on a per component basis as that was the only option being overridden.
eg
```javascript
get dismissConfirmationText() {
return I18n.t("notifications.dismiss_confirmation.body.bookmarks", {
count: this.#unreadBookmarkRemindersCount,
});
```
This saves us from importing the entire modal again and keeps the core logic in one place.
Instead of overwriting the `dismissWarningModal` function and returning `null` to bypass the confirmation modal, I added another extension point of `renderDismissConfirmation` (defaults to true) to _toggle_ whether we should display a confirmation when dismissing notifications.
eg
```javascript
get renderDismissConfirmation() {
return false;
}
```
we utilize this in core for specific _low priority_ notification types. When you need the confirmation modal to be displayed no matter the case you can set `alwaysRenderDismissConfirmation` to `true`
```
get alwaysRenderDismissConfirmation(){
return true
}
```
This can be useful when you want to render the confirmation modal on a custom notification type that is not deemed as _high priority_, leading to the confirmation modal never being rendered.
You can see this in use in [Discourse Assign](https://github.com/discourse/discourse-assign/pull/481)
Followup to d51baa3bb3
Also includes: Force full rerender of post-stream widget when switching topics. This ensures that plugin/theme decorators are re-run when we switch between topics with the loading slider enabled.
Previously we were using the `didInsertElement` hook and querying the DOM to check whether the other button was visible. This is problematic from a performance point of view because it forces the browser to render the layout prematurely. It can also lead to subtle bugs based on the current scroll position.
In addition, having this logic on a `didInsertElement` hook makes it totally incompatible with the new 'loading slider' feature (because the component is not re-rendered between different topic lists).
This commit updates the logic to be based simply on the count of topics in the list. If there are fewer than 5 topics, the top button is hidden.
Under certain conditions, this `afterRender` hook can be triggered after the topic-list-item has been removed from the DOM. This is more likely when the 'loading slider' strategy is used on a site.
This introduces a PLATFORM_KEY_MODIFIER const that
can be used both client and server side, to determine
whether we should be using the Meta or Ctrl key based
on whether the user is on Windows/Linux or Mac.
Why this change?
A new component based API for modals was introduced in
b3a23bd9d6. This commit moves the edit
sidebar section modal to the new API.
Reviewer notes
No functionality or visual change is introduced in this PR.
In previous PR https://github.com/discourse/discourse/pull/22340 bug was introduced. Notifications were blocked when, even if topic was watched directly. New query is taking TopicUser into consideration.
In addition, in user interface, when `watched_precedence_over_muted` is not set, then value from SiteSetting should be displayed.
This brings the functionality from https://github.com/discourse/discourse-loading-slider into Discourse core. Default behaviour remains the same - the new slider mode can be enabled using the new 'page_loading_indicator' site setting.
A follow-up to 585a2e4e. A couple of tests with the new rich tooltip were flaky.
We suppose the reason is some problem related to widgets lifecycle. This PR
doesn't fix the issue, but isolates testing of the tooltip related logic related
inside its own test, which should make it not flaky.
This is a temporal solution, we're going to move all these code to using
glimmer components.
Previously, the `@model` argument would be unset before the component's `willDestroy` hook was called. Wrapping up the component and the opts in a single tracked `activeModal` field, and then using the `#each` helper with an array of 1 element means that Glimmer will keep the `@model` argument available until the end of the component's lifecycle.
Recently, site setting watched_precedence_over_muted was introduced - https://github.com/discourse/discourse/pull/22252
In this PR, we are allowing users to override it. The option is only displayed when the user has watched categories and muted tags, or vice versa.
What is the problem?
Before this change, we were relying on the `/tags` endpoint which
returned all the tags that are visible to a give user on the site leading to potential performance problems.
The attribute keys of the response also changes based on the `tags_listed_by_group` site setting.
What is the fix?
This commit fixes the problems listed above by creating a dedicate `#list` action in the
`TagsController` to handle the listing of the tags in the edit
navigation menu tags modal. This is because the `TagsController#index`
action was created specifically for the `/tags` route and the response
body does not really map well to what we need. The `TagsController#list`
action added here is also much safer since the response is paginated and
we avoid loading a whole bunch of tags upfront.
What is the problem?
This regressed in fe294ab1a7 and we did
not have any tests on mobile to catch the regression. The problem was
that we were conditionally rendering the edit nav menu modals component
in the sidebar. However, the sidebar is collapsed on mobile when a
button is clicked. When the sidebar collapses, the edit nav menu modals
ended up being destroyed with it.
Why this change?
A new component based API for modals was introduced in
b3a23bd9d6. This commit moves the edit
navigation menu tags and categories modal to the new API.
This allows us to use `getOwner(this)` on widgets (without needing to resort to our custom `discourse-common/lib/get-owner` implementation which has a hacky fallback)
`_self` is the default, so we should treat it the same as having no value specified. This fixes navigation to links like `/my/...` in custom sidebar links.
- Inline mentions on posts
- Inline mentions on chat messages
- The user autocomplete for the composer
- The user autocomplete for chat
- The chat section of the sidebar
Ember 4.x will be removing the 'named outlet' feature, which were previously relying on to render modal 'controllers' and their associated templates. This commit updates the modal.show API to accept a component class, and also introduces a declarative API which can be used by including the <DModal component directly in your template.
For more information on the API design, and conversion instructions from the current API, see these Meta topics:
DModal API: https://meta.discourse.org/t/268304
Conversion: https://meta.discourse.org/t/268057
What is the problem?
Before this change, the edit navigation menu tags modal was not
displaying tags that belonged to a tag_group when the tags_listed_by_group
site setting was set to true. This is because we are relying on the
/tags endpoint which returned tags in various keys depending on the
tags_listed_by_group site setting. When the site setting is set to
true, tags under belonging to tag groups were returned in the
extra.tag_groups attribute.
What is the fix?
This commit fixes it by pushing all tags in returned under the
`tag_groups` attribute into the list of tags to displayed. In a
following commit, we will move away from the `/tags` endpoint to a
dedicated route to handle the listing of tags in the modal.
]When changing fonts in the `/wizard/steps/styling` step of
the wizard, users would not see the font loaded straight away,
having to switch to another one then back to the original to
see the result. This is because we are using canvas to render
the style preview and this fails with a Chrome-based intervention
when font loading is taking too long:
> [Intervention] Slow network is detected. See
https://www.chromestatus.com/feature/5636954674692096 for more details.
Fallback font will be used while loading:
https://sea2.discourse-cdn.com/business7/fonts/Roboto-Bold.ttf?v=0.0.9
We can get around this by manually loading the fonts selected using
the FontFace JS API when the user selects them and before rerendering
the canvas. This just requires preloading more information about the
fonts if the user is admin so the wizard can query this data.
Motivation: aligning us with JS/Ember practices (runtime deps in `dependencies`, build/dev-time deps in `devDependencies`)
1. Move deps to devDeps where applicable (rule of thumb: it's a devDep unless it's required at runtime by the rails app or it's imported in the addon's code)
2. Remove unused dependencies and add missing ones (in addons)
3. Remove empty `repository` fields
4. Move `engines` and `ember` fields to the bottom
This reverts commit d8f0f17b50.
This causes errors when uploading to S3 because we are missing
a getFilesByIds function in core which we have not updated
yet c.f. https://github.com/discourse/discourse/pull/22195
Tests don't catch this because tests only try uploads.json
uploading.
Before this change, links which required full reload because they are not in ember routes like `/my/preferences` or links to docs like `/pub/*` were treated as real external links. Therefore, they were opening in self window or new tab based on user `external_links_in_new_tab` setting.
To be consistent with behavior when full reload links are in the post, they are treated as internal and always open in the same window.
Achieved by running `yarn upgrade --latest` both yarn.lock directories, then reverting changes to package.json files and running `yarn` again.
I also de-duped yarn.lock files with `npx yarn-deduplicate && yarn`
This is the first of a number of PRs aimed at helping admins manage their translation overrides. It simply adds a list of available interpolation keys below the input field when editing an override.
It also includes custom interpolation key.
Why this change?
We are currently not fully satisfied with the current way to edit the
categories and tags that appears in the sidebar where the user is
redirected to the tracking preferences tab in the user's profile causing
the user to lose context of the current page. In addition, the dropdown
to select categories or tags limits the amount of information we can
display.
Since editing or adding a custom categories section is already using a
modal, we have decided to switch editing the categories and tags that
appear in the sidebar to use a modal as well.
This commit removes the `new_edit_sidebar_categories_tags_interface_groups` site setting and
make the modals the default for all users.
Updates the interface for implementing summarization strategies and adds a cache layer to summarize topics once.
The cache stores the final summary and each chunk used to build it, which will be useful when we have to extend or rebuild it.
When the composer is open with a draft for a topic and the user clicks the edit button of a post on the same topic, we shouldn't display the "Save Draft" button. Because the edited post's draft will override the existing draft of the same topic even if we saved it.
Why this change?
We want the position of the filters to remain fixed when scrolling
through the list of categories or tags. Otherwise, the user has to
scroll all the way back to othe top in order to access the filters when
the list of categories or tags is large.
Why does this change do?
If the `fixed_category_positions` is `false`, we want to order the
categories in the edit navigation menu categories modal by name. This
makes it easier to filter through a large list of categories.
This commit also fixes a bug where we were unintentionally mutating the
`this.site.categories` array.
Why is this change required?
The `/new-topic` route is a special route which we use to open the
composer by loading a URL. By default, the `new-topic` route is replaced with the
`discovery.latest` route. On a fresh page load, this makes sense since
there is no template for the `new-topic` route to render. However, this
behavior does not make sense if we're transition from another route.
There is no need to replace the current route with the `discovery.latest` when all we want
is to open the composer.
What does this commit do?
This commit fixes the undesirable behaviour described above by aborting
the existing transition to the `new-topic` route if `transition.from` is
present. This indicates that we're navigating from an existing route and
we can just open the composer.
While still in ember-cli new app blueprint, I don't think this package does much for us. It has support for older things like bower and npm-shrinkwrap, but doesn't support checking yarn.lock and doesn't necessarily work well with our project structure.
This commit adds data attributes to identify the controls in the user settings UI.
Plugins and TCs can use this information to target each setting to highlight or hide
them.
Although most of the settings also have specific classes identifying them, using data
attributes is more future proof as it is less likely to change them classes, specially
as we increase the adoption of the BEM methodology in CSS.
Using data attributes also are semantically correct as the setting name is data not really related to the classes used.
The user card is always present in the DOM. Therefore we only need to
add the `aria-labelledby` attribute when there is a user (and a title)
to point to.
What does this change do?
This change adds a dropdown filter that allows a user to filter by
selected or unselected categories/tags in the edit navigation menu
modal.
For the categories modal, parent categories that do not match the
dropdown filter will be displayed as disabled since those parent
categories need to be displayed to maintain the hieracy of the child
child categories.
Why this change?
There was alot of duplication between the edit navigation menu tags/categories modal which
was making it hard to introduce new changes as the work had to be
duplicated into multiple places.
This commit mainly extracts the duplicated code into common components
such that it is easier to make styling changes across both modals.
This PR splits up the preference that controls the count vs dot and destination of sidebar links, which is really hard to understand, into 2 simpler checkboxes:
The new preferences/checkboxes are off by default, but there are database migrations to switch the old preference to the new ones so that existing users don't have to update their preferences to keep their preferred behavior of sidebar links when this changed is rolled out.
Internal topic: t/103529.
Introduces a new above-latest-topic-list-item-post-count outlet, providing a clean way to add other useful elements to the topic-stats section of the latest-topic-list-item template.
What this change?
When a user opens the modal to edit tags or categories for the
navigation menu, we want to input filter to have focus. This commit
fixes that by doing the following:
1. Changes <DModal> component such that it prioritises elements with the
autofocus attribute first.
2. Adds `autofocus` to the input elements on the edit tags/categories
modal form.
When a site does not have `default_navigation_menu_tags`
site setting set, anonymous users should be shown the site's top tags as
a default in the tags section. However, this regressed in 9fad71809c
and we ended up showing anonymous users a tags section with only the
`All Tags` section link.
As part of this commit, I have also refactored the QUnit acceptance
tests to system tests which are much easier to work with.
What does this change do?
This change adds the deselect all and reset to defaults buttons to the
edit navigation menu tags modal. The deselect all button when
clicked deselects all the selected tags in the modal. If the user
saves with no tags selected, the user's tags section in the
navigation menu will be set to the site's top tags.
The reset to defaults button is only shown when the
`default_navigation_menu_tags` site setting has been configured.
When clicked, the user's tags section in the navigation menu is
automatically set to the tags defined by the
`default_navigation_menu_tags` site setting.
What does this change do?
This change adds a loading spinner to the edit navigation menu tags
modal when the request to fetch all the tags for a site is in progress.
This mainly to improve the user experience such that we indicate that
something is being loaded instead of just displaying a large empty
space.
What are there no tests for this change?
This change is kind of hard to test and since it is mostly a UX change,
we can live with such regressions in the future. It is still bad to
regress UX wise but impact of such a regression is likely to be low.
There is a problem that unread and new count is not updated to reflecting topicTrackingState.
It is because discourseComputed on Category is not working properly with topicTrackingState. Moving it to component level is making counter reliable.
What does this change do?
This commit adds an input filter to filter through the tag checkboxes in the
modal to edit tags that are shown in the user's navigation menu. The
filtering is a simple matching of the given filter term against the
names of the tags.
What does this change do?
This change is a first pass for adding a modal used to edit tags that appears in
the navigation menu. As the feature is being worked on in phases, it is
currently hidden behind the `new_edit_sidebar_categories_tags_interface_groups` site setting.
The following features will be worked on in future commits:
1. Input filter to filter through the tgas
2. Button to reset tag selection to default navigation menu tags site
settings
3. Button to deselect all current selection
When searching in the context of a topic the <kbd>in all topics</kbd> link would not search globally for the given term and instead it would always search within the current topic. This PR fixes the link to properly update the search context and search globally for the given term.
This fix reveals some _secretly_ broken tests. Update these as well.
This commit adds an aria-label attribute to cooked hashtags using
the post/chat message decorateCooked functionality. I have just used
the inner content of the hashtag (the tag/category/channel name) for
the label -- we can reexamine at some point if we want something
different like "Link to dev category" or something, but from what I
can tell things like Twitter don't even have aria-labels for hashtags
so the text would be read out directly.
This commit also refactors any ruby specs checking the HTML of hashtags
to use rspec-html-matchers which is far clearer than having to maintain
the HTML structure in a HEREDOC for comparison, and gives better spec
failures.
c.f. https://meta.discourse.org/t/hashtags-are-getting-a-makeover/248866/23?u=martin
* Revert "Build(deps): Bump message-bus-client from 4.3.2 to 4.3.3 in /app/assets/javascripts (#22194)"
This reverts commit cdcf6cf0dd.
* Revert "Build(deps): Bump message_bus from 4.3.2 to 4.3.3 (#22188)"
This reverts commit c7a9da1f10.
What does this change do?
This change adds the deselect all and reset to defaults buttons to the
edit navigation menu categories modal. The deselect all button when
click deselects all the selected categories in the modal. If the user
saves with no categories selected, the user's categories section in the
navigation menu will be set to the site's top categories.
The reset to defaults button is only shown when the
`default_navigation_menu_categories` site setting has been configured.
When clicked, the user's categories section in the navigation menu is
automatically set to the categories defined by the
`default_navigation_menu_categories` site setting.
Fixes an issue where saving a theme translation would reset unsaved
changes made to other theme translations.
Also cleans up unused `saveSettings` and `saveTranslations` actions.
Co-authored-by: Jarek Radosz <jradosz@gmail.com>
1. `everything` was changed to `topics`
2. Path for my posts translation is `sidebar.sections.community.links.my_posts.content` not `sidebar.sections.community.links.my/posts.content`
The work in fa509224f0 updated our initializer patterns to match modern Ember. This caused the initializer from the (deprecated) ember-export-application-global addon to change its behavior from exporting the ApplicationInstance to exporting the Application. This affects customizations which were using some long-deprecated APIs we had attached to the ApplicationInstance.
This commit removes the deprecated addon, restores the previous ApplicationInstance behavior which we've come to depend on, and adds a test for the expected behavior. It also bumps the `dropFrom` version to make it clear that we do not intend to remove these APIs during this release cycle.