This reverts commit 0b10e335ae.
I realised that some of these actions are overridden in themes/plugins, so this is going to cause problems (especially because modifyClass doesn't currently work well with the `@action` decorator)
This makes it more obvious what's happening, and makes it much less likely that users will send repeated reset emails (and thereby hit the rate limit)
Followup to e97ef7e9af
This commit adds the ability for site administrators to mark users'
passwords as expired. Note that this commit does not add any client side
interface to mark a user's password as expired.
The following changes are introduced in this commit:
1. Adds a `user_passwords` table and `UserPassword` model. While the
`user_passwords` table is currently used to only store expired
passwords, it will be used in the future to store a user's current
password as well.
2. Adds a `UserPasswordExpirer.expire_user_password` method which can
be used from the Rails console to mark a user's password as expired.
3. Updates `SessionsController#create` to check that the user's current
password has not been marked as expired after confirming the
password. If the password is determined to be expired based on the
existence of a `UserPassword` record with the `password_expired_at`
column set, we will not log the user in and will display a password
expired notice. A forgot password email is automatically send out to
the user as well.
Even when the admin sidebar sections are collapsed, they should expand while filtering. When the filter is removed, sections should go back to the previous state.
In addition, trim whitespace from the filter section.
Only remaining ones are `routes/discourse.js` and `routes/application.js`. Those two both contain legacy `actions: {}` hashes which need to be updated before being converted to native class syntax.
This commit removes the `/admin-revamp` routes which were introduced as a part of an experiment to revamp the admin pages. We still want to improve the admin/staff experience, but we're going to do them within the existing `/admin` routes instead of introducing a completely new route.
Our initial efforts to improve the Discourse admin experience is this commit which introduces the foundation for a new subroute `/admin/config` which will house various new pages for configuring Discourse. The first new page (or "config area") will be `/admin/config/about` that will house all the settings and controls for configuring the `/about` page of Discourse.
Internal topic: t/128544
This commit re-introduces the "Move to Inbox" and "Move to Archive"
bulk topic actions, which we had in the old modal but had not yet added
to the new "experimental" dropdown, which isn't really experimental at
this point.
Once this is merged we can remove the old modal and only
rely on the new dropdown.
The issue was simple, we were just not returning the helper in the `user-private-messages` controller which was preventing any action to happen.
Follow up: we should write specs for this toggle.
Prior to this fix we were opening a modal before closing the `DMenu` modal, given `DModal` expects only one modal at a time it was closing the latest modal and instantly closing the one we just opened.
This adds a small indicator of the Ctrl+/ shortcut that
exists for the admin sidebar filter, since it's not very
obvious that you can do that. This should help people
who are struggling with the long list of links -- it's
much faster to use the keyboard and search for what
you are looking for.
Followup 73c6bb2593
The admin sidebar was also disappearing on another
child admin route (in this case the docker_manager
plugin update page). Instead of relying on the route
name which is flaky, we can set a boolean when the
sidebar is forced in the root admin route, then
turn it off when leaving admin.
The UsersController#modify_user_params method is deprecated and replaced with a plugin modifier (users_controller_update_user_params). It is marked for removal in 3.2. This PR removes it.
This commit introduces the following changes which allows a site
administrator to mark `Upload` records with the `s3_file_missing`
verification status which will result in the `Upload` record being ignored when
`Discourse.store.list_missing_uploads` is ran on a site where S3 uploads
are enabled and `SiteSetting.enable_s3_inventory` is set to `true`.
1. Introduce `s3_file_missing` to `Upload.verification_statuses`
2. Introduce `Upload.mark_invalid_s3_uploads_as_missing` which updates
`Upload#verification_status` of all `Upload` records from `invalid_etag` to `s3_file_missing`.
3. Introduce `rake uploads:mark_invalid_s3_uploads_as_missing` Rake task
which allows a site administrator to change `Upload` records with
`invalid_etag` verification status to the `s3_file_missing`
verificaton_status.
4. Update `S3Inventory` to ignore `Upload` records with the
`s3_file_missing` verification status.
When uploading a video, the composer will now show a thumbnail image in
the composer preview instead of just the video placeholder image.
If `enable_diffhtml_preview` is enabled the video will be rendered in
the composer preview and is playable.
Followup 94fe31e5b3,
change the color of the "Known Crawler" bar on the
new "Consolidated Pageviews with Browser Detection (Experimental)"
report to be purple, like it was on the original
"Consolidated Pageviews" report to allow for easier
visual comparison.
Also removes the report colors to named keys in a hash
for easier reference than having to look up the
index of the array all the time.