In production `title` was set to undefined causing a
discrepancy between originalTitle and title
This attempts to work around the issue in the production bundle
In moment.js the .day() function can accept a day string but this is locale based, so e.g. in Finnish locale the string "Monday" means nothing and will parse incorrectly to Sunday. To resolve this we always use the moment.js number for the day of the week we want.
Google insists on indexing pages so it can figure out if they
can be removed from the index.
see: https://support.google.com/webmasters/answer/6332384?hl=en
This change ensures the we have special behavior for Googlebot
where we allow indexing, but block the actual indexing via
X-Robots-Tag
Expand SiteSetting.allow_index_in_robots_txt so it also adds a
noindex header if set to false.
This makes sure that nothing is indexed even if it somehow reaches
Google.
* This is to prevent user's timezones being changed accidentally
e.g. by admin looking at a user
* This problem only occurred via the user card, however the user card
was still calling userTimezone even if the setting to display user
time in card was disabled
Previously originalTitle was set to undefined leading to
titleDirty being unconditionally undefined for new topics
That mean you could not dismiss the composer via ESC
Adds a new rake task to auto generate a constants.js file with the
constants present. This makes migrating to Ember CLI easier, but also
slightly speeds up asset compilation by having to do less work.
If the constants change you need to run:
`rake javascripts:update_constants`
1. Total 6 attempts per day per user
2. Total of 5 per unique email/login that is not found per hour
3. If an admin blocks an IP that IP can not request a reset
There were two constants here, `INLINE_ONEBOX_LOADING_CSS_CLASS` and
`INLINE_ONEBOX_CSS_CLASS` that were both longer than the strings they
were DRYing up: `inline-onebox-loading` and `inline-onebox`
I normally appreciate constants, but in this case it meant that we had
a lot of JS imports resulting in many more lines of code (and CPU cycles
spent figuring them out.)
It also meant we had an `.erb` file and had to invoke Ruby to create the
JS file, which meant the app was harder to port to Ember CLI.
I removed the constants. It's less DRY but faster and simpler, and
arguably the loss of DRYness is not significant as you can still search
for the `inline-onebox-loading` and `inline-onebox` strings easily if
you are refactoring.