Tag edit notifications are either created by PostActionNotifier or
PostRevisor. PostActionNotifier already checks if the site setting is
enabled. but PostRevisor scheduled a NotifyTagChange job without
checking disable_tags_edit_notifications.
This commit introduces a new plugin API to register
a group of stats that will be included in about.json
and also conditionally in the site about UI at /about.
The usage is like this:
```ruby
register_about_stat_group("chat_messages", show_in_ui: true) do
{
last_day: 1,
"7_days" => 10,
"30_days" => 100,
count: 1000,
previous_30_days: 120
}
end
```
In reality the stats will be generated any way the implementer
chooses within the plugin. The `last_day`, `7_days`, `30_days,` and `count`
keys must be present but apart from that additional stats may be added.
Only those core 4 stat keys will be shown in the UI, but everything will be shown
in about.json.
The stat group name is used to prefix the stats in about.json like so:
```json
"chat_messages_last_day": 2322,
"chat_messages_7_days": 2322,
"chat_messages_30_days": 2322,
"chat_messages_count": 2322,
```
The `show_in_ui` option (default false) is used to determine whether the
group of stats is shown on the site About page in the Site Statistics
table. Some stats may be needed purely for reporting purposes and thus
do not need to be shown in the UI to admins/users. An extension to the Site
serializer, `displayed_about_plugin_stat_groups`, has been added so this
can be inspected on the client-side.
* FIX: properly validate multiselect user fields on user creation
* Add test cases
* FIX: don't check multiselect user fields for watched words
* Clarifiy/simplify tests
* Roll back apply_watched_words changes
Since this method no longer needs to deal with arrays for now. If/when
we add new user fields which uses them, we can deal with it then.
All `DistributedCache` instances in Discourse are automatically keyed on the `Discourse.git_version`. Normally the theme compiler version is updated via a commit, and everything is fine. However, in some situations, it's possible for the BASE_COMPILER_VERSION to change without a change to the git_version (e.g. when applying patches directly to the codebase).
This commit adds the `BASE_COMPILER_VERSION` to the DistributedCache key to ensure that content from different compiler versions does not leak into other processes.
This logic should no longer be triggered. The EMBER_GLIMMER_SET_COMPONENT_TEMPLATE gets removed in recent versions of Ember, which can cause it to accidently trigger and cause layout issues with some plugins/themes.
The `unread_not_too_old` attribute is a little odd because there should never be a case where
the user's first_unread_at column is less than the `Topic#updated_at`
column of an unread topic. The `unread_not_too_old` attribute is causing
a bug where topic states synced into `TopicTrackingState` do not appear
as unread because the attribute does not exsist on a normal `Topic`
object and hence never set.
It makes more sense to use user_ids for the UserCommScreener
introduced in fa5f3e228c since
in most cases the ID will be available, not the username. This
was discovered while starting work on a plugin that will
use this. In the cases where only usernames are available
the extra query is negligble.
`--production` is already passed through via the `NODE_ENV` environment variable. We can parse `$npm_config_argv` to check whether `--frozen-lockfile` was passed.
Context: https://meta.discourse.org/t/pixel-jump-whenever-page-refreshes-mobile-desktop/231053
We currently add 1 extra pixel when we try to restore the last scroll position on a few routes.
This is causing a bit of jumpiness, as described in the linked topic above.
<img height="300" src="ae9e69f7fd.gif">
Notice how the content shifts by 1px while stuff loads.
I believe this 1px that we add is an artifact from the days when we used to set the header to `fixed` but I'm not sure. Either way, the header now uses `position: sticky;` so we shouldn't need that 1px adjustment.
This PR introduced no visual changes except that it fixes the jitter mentioned above.
The idea behind this refactor is to centralise all of the user ignoring / muting / disallow PM checks in a single place, so they can be used consistently in core as well as for plugins like chat, while improving the main bulk of the checks to run in a single fast non-AR query.
Also fixed up the invite error when someone is muting/ignoring the user that is trying to invite them to the topic.