This switches us to use the modern ember resolver package, and re-implements a number of our custom resolution rules within it. The legacy resolver remains for now, and is used as a fallback if the modern resolver is unable to resolve a package. When this happens, a warning will be printed to the console.
Co-authored-by: Peter Wagenet <peter.wagenet@gmail.com>
Some plugins/themes are still awaiting updates for some deprecations, and they started raising errors in development. It's not clear that the errors are development-only, so it can be quite confusing for developers.
Disabling this flag for now until we can make the messages clearer and fix up existing deprecation issues in themes/plugins.
7caaee2 introduced a duplicate definition of the component JS. This likely happened because we had the template defined under `javascripts/discourse`, and the component JS defined under `javascript/admin`. This commit removes the duplicate definition, and moves the template to the admin addon
This commit adds preload links for core/plugin/theme CSS stylesheets in the head.
Preload links are non-blocking and run in parallel. This means that they should have already been downloaded by the time we use the actual stylesheets (in the <body> tag).
Google is currently complaining about this here and this PR will address that warning.
This commit will also fix an issue in the splash screen where it sometimes doesn't respect the theme colors - causing a slightly jarring experience on dark themes.
Note that I opted not to add new specs because the underlying work required already has a lot of coverage. The new methods only change the output HTML so we can chuck that in the document <head>
This change also means that we can make all the stylesheets non-render blocking, but that will follow in a separate commit.
```sh
npx ember-holy-futuristic-template-namespacing-batman-codemod ensure-template-only-has-backing-class
```
We would like to colocate templates but, when no backing class exists, colocated templates extend `templateOnly` instead of `Ember.Component`. Generating the backing class helps avoid any behavioral changes.
We can also run the `tagless-ember-components-codemod` to put the tags into the templates at which point we could convert these back to template-only components.
We previously used the window load event as a target to remove the splash. The issue with that is that it means we wait for images to download before we remove the splash.
Ember has a better method that we can use ready(). This PR triggers a custom discourse-ready when that happens and uses that as the baseline for removing the splash.
This PR also adds three new performance marks. discourse-ready, discourse-splash-visible, and discourse-splash-removed
These will help us keep track of performance.
Internal topic /t/65378/81
We previously relied on CSS animation-delay for the splash. This means that we can get inconsistent results based on device/network conditions.
This PR moves us to a more consistent timing based on {request time + 2 seconds}
Internal topic: /t/65378/65
Tests have been intentionally left out as it is hard to test interaction that relies on local storage.
It also isn't the end of the world if the feature regresses.
Before, whispers were only available for staff members.
Config has been changed to allow to configure privileged groups with access to whispers. Post migration was added to move from the old setting into the new one.
I considered having a boolean column `whisperer` on user model similar to `admin/moderator` for performance reason. Finally, I decided to keep looking for groups as queries are only done for current user and didn't notice any N+1 queries.
Seems to only be a problem when a markdown.it rule inserts links without a attribute value. There's no test, because it's not reproducible with the markdown rules in core.