These were set to `passive: true` in ff72522f.
However, two consumers of this mixin (topic-navigation and site-header) do need to call `e.preventDefault()`, so we can't use passive listeners here.
That's ok, because this mixin only applies to a specific component's element, not the entire page. So having these non-passive listeners doesn't affect the vast majority of scrolling
This mixin calls the "scrolled" method of some object with no parameters, so there is no way that consumers would ever call `event.preventDefault()`. Therefore we can make the listeners passive, and improve scrolling performance on mobile.
This commit also updates the mixin to remove JQuery usage. The API is slightly modified to remove the need for an event 'name' for binding/unbinding.
The calls to `.bindScrolling` and `.unbindScrolling` in user-stream.js are removed because they are already called by the LoadMore mixin which is applied to the component.
The `bindScrolling` method claimed to offer debouncing-by-default. However, a bug in the `opts` parsing meant that debouncing was skipped if a 'name' was passed in. Therefore the only consumer actually being debounced was the LoadMore mixin. This commit fixes the opts parsing, so all consumers get the same behavior.
However, when scrolling, debounce is rarely what we want. The documentation of `bindScrolling` says "called every 100ms". In fact, debounce means that the functions were only called 'after the user **stops scrolling** for 100ms'. If you're scrolling very slowly (e.g. when using momentum-based scrolling on mobile), then this can be quite frustrating. This is why "Load more" is only triggered on topics/topic-lists when you completely stop scrolling.
Therefore, this commit also replaces the default 'debounce' with a 'throttle'. The 'throttle' is configured with `immediate = false`, so that it fires on the trailing edge, and therefore the final call will always be **after** we finish scrolling. (the default `immediate: true` would fire on the leading edge, and so the last call could be up to 100ms **before** we finish scrolling).
Registering non-passive listeners for the touchstart event can affect scroll performance on mobile devices, and now shows a warning in Chrome. Our current version of Ember unconditionally registers all event listeners, even if they're unused. It also doesn't support passive event listeners. Once we get to Ember 4.0, it lazily registers event listeners, and supports passive listeners via the `{{on` helper.
We already disable the ember `mousemove` and `touchmove` events for performance, so it makes sense to do the same for `touchstart`. We are not using `touchstart` anywhere in core, and I cannot find any official/unofficial plugins which use it. If a `touchstart` event is required, plugins/themes can always register their own listeners (preferably on a specific element, rather than the whole `document`)
We do call `event.preventDefault()` on these events. They're limited to a single element, so performance impact should be negligable. Adding `passive: false` prevents the chrome dev tools warning.
None of these places call `event.preventDefault()`. Therefore we can register the event listeners as 'passive', and improve scroll performance on mobile devices.
Skipping methods we don't use gives us mem/perf gains (minuscule but still), but more importantly fixes warnings about `Poll#open` (created by `enum :status`) conflicting with some internal AR method. 😃
Calling `setProperty("--header-offset", newValue)` will always cause a 'Recalculate Style' event, even if the value is unchanged. On my browser, these 'Recalculate Style' events take about 6-7ms each time the `dockCheck` function is run.
This commit stores the 'previous' value in an instance variable, and only calls setProperty if the value has changed. This brings the total runtime of `dockCheck` down to about 70µs on my machine.
`pending`, `approved`, `rejected`, `ignored`, and `deleted` scope method were accessible on all model classes… 😂
Fixes `Creating scope :pending. Overwriting existing method DiscoursePostEvent::EventDate.pending.` warnings.
The theme creator endpoints return JSON with a 201 CREATED
status code. With the recent changes to bootstrap-json/index.js
for the Ember CLI proxy, these endpoints were broken because
201 was not an accepted status code. This commit simply
adds 201 to the array, but prettier forced a reformat as well!
* FEATURE: Optionally send a 'noindex' header in non-canonical responses
This will be used in a SEO experiment.
Co-authored-by: David Taylor <david@taylorhq.com>
The error handling of the theme:update Rake task has been improved. If
an error occurs while updating the default site, then the exception will
be propagated and the process will exit with non-zero status.
This is a follow-up to commit 3f97f884fe.
- Remove JQuery
- Remove legacy `document.webkitHidden` support. None of our currently supported browsers need this
- Use `passive` event listeners. These allows the browser to process the events first, before passing control to us
- Add a new `unseenTime` parameter. This allows consumers to request a delay before being notified about the browser going into the background
- Add a method for removing a callback
- Fire the callback when presence changes in either direction. Previously it would only fire when the user becomes present after a period of inactivity.
- Ensure callbacks are only called once for each state change. Previously they would be called every 60s, regardless of the value
- Listen to the `visibilitychanged` and `focus` events, treating them as equivalent to user action. This will make messagebus re-activate more quickly when switching back to a stale tab
- Add test helpers
- Delete the unused `discourse/lib/page-visible` module.
- Call message-bus's onVisibilityChange API directly, rather than dispatching a fake event on the `document`
This commit adds token_hash and scopes columns to email_tokens table.
token_hash is a replacement for the token column to avoid storing email
tokens in plaintext as it can pose a security risk. The new scope column
ensures that email tokens cannot be used to perform a different action
than the one intended.
To sum up, this commit:
* Adds token_hash and scope to email_tokens
* Reuses code that schedules critical_user_email
* Refactors EmailToken.confirm and EmailToken.atomic_confirm methods
* Periodically cleans old, unconfirmed or expired email tokens
This applies only when a single site exists. If a theme update fails
when there are multiple sites, then it will continue updating the
remaining themes.
When this setting is turned on, it will check that normalized emails
are unique. Normalized emails are emails without any dots or plus
aliases.
This setting can be used to block use of aliases of the same email
address.