This commit makes the
[color-scheme-toggle](https://github.com/discourse/discourse-color-scheme-toggle)
theme component a core feature with improvements and bug fixes. The
theme component will be updated to become a no-op if the core feature is
enabled.
Noteworthy changes:
* the color mode selector has a new "Auto" option that makes the site
render in the same color mode as the user's system preference
* the splash screen respects the color mode selected by the user
* dark/light variants of category logos and background images are now
picked correctly based on the selected color mode
* a new `interface_color_selector` site setting to disable the selector
or choose its location between the sidebar footer or header
Internal topic: t/139465.
---------
Co-authored-by: Ella <ella.estigoy@gmail.com>
There have been too many flaky tests as a result of leaking state in
Redis so it is easier to resolve them by ensuring we flush Redis'
database.
Locally on my machine, calling `Discourse.redis.flushdb` takes around
0.1ms which means this change will have very little impact on test
runtimes.
This method is a huge footgun in production, since it calls
the Redis KEYS command. From the Redis documentation at
https://redis.io/commands/keys/:
> Warning: consider KEYS as a command that should only be used in
production environments with extreme care. It may ruin performance when
it is executed against large databases. This command is intended for
debugging and special operations, such as changing your keyspace layout.
Don't use KEYS in your regular application code.
Since we were only using `delete_prefixed` in specs (now that we
removed the usage in production in 24ec06ff85c7acbad9621092b5e50eec2ede7b83)
we can remove this and instead rely on `use_redis_snapshotting` on the
particular tests that need this kind of clearing functionality.
Under some situations, we would inadvertently return a public (unauthenticated) result to an authenticated API request. This commit adds the `Api-Key` header to our anonymous cache bypass logic.
It's very easy to forget to add `require 'rails_helper'` at the top of every core/plugin spec file, and omissions can cause some very confusing/sporadic errors.
By setting this flag in `.rspec`, we can remove the need for `require 'rails_helper'` entirely.