Why this change?
This regressed in dec68d780c where the
commit assumes that plugin gems are always installed when the
`plugin:install_all_gems` Rake task is ran as it would run the our Rails
initializers which activates plugins and install the gems. However, this
assumption only holds true when the `LOAD_PLUGINS` is present and set to
`1`.
What does this change do?
This commit changes the `plugin:install_all_gems` to load the Rails
environment with `LOAD_PLUGINS` set to `1` such that the plugin gems
will be installed as part of our initialization process for the app.
The commit also removes the `plugin:install_gems` Rake task which is
currently a noop and does not seem to be used anywhere..
Why this change?
Similar to d0117ff6e3, `plugins:update_all` spends most of its time waiting
on the network. On my local machine, this takes up to 2 mins when I have
all the official plugins installed. On a 32 cores machine, the total
time is cut down to 4 seconds.
What does this change do?
1. Move the logic in the `plugin:update` Rake task into a method.
2. Updates the `plugin:update` and `plugin:update_all` to rely on the
new method.
3. Wraps the method call to update a plugin in `plugin:update_all` in a
`Concurrent::Promise`
This change also adds the `--quiet` option to the `git pull` option
since the `git pull` output is just noise for 99% of the time.
Followup to e37fb3042d
Some plugins like discourse-ai and discourse-saml do not
nicely change from kebab-case to Title Case (e.g. Ai, Saml),
and anyway this method of getting the plugin name is not
translated either.
Better to use the plugin setting category if it exists,
since that is written by a human and is translated.
* DEV: Convert approve_new_topics_unless_trust_level to groups
This change converts the `approve_new_topics_unless_trust_level` site
setting to `approve_new_topics_unless_allowed_groups`.
See: https://meta.discourse.org/t/283408
- Hides the old setting
- Adds the new site setting
- Add a deprecation warning
- Updates to use the new setting
- Adds a migration to fill in the new setting if the old setting was
changed
- Adds an entry to the site_setting.keywords section
- Updates tests to account for the new change
After a couple of months we will remove the
`approve_new_topics_unless_trust_level` setting entirely.
Internal ref: /t/115696
* add missing translation
* Add keyword entry
* Add migration
This commit extracts the storage part of the route-scroll-manager into a dedicated service. This provides a key/value store which will reset for each navigation, and restore previous values when the user uses the back/forward buttons in their browser.
This gives us a reliable replacement for the old `DiscourseRoute.isPoppedState` function, which would not work under all situations.
Previously reverted in e6370decfd. This version has been significantly refactored, and includes an additional system spec for the issue we identified.
Why this change?
`plugin:install_all_official` is quite slow at the moment taking roughly
1 minute and 51 seconds on my machine. Since most of the time is spent
waiting on the network, we can actually speed up the Rake task
significantly by executing the cloning concurrently. With a 8 cores
machine, cloning all plugins will only take 15 seconds.
What does this change do?
This change wraps the `git clone` operation in the
`plugin:install_all_official` Rake task in a `Concurrent::Promise` which
basically runs the `git clone` operation in a Thread. The `--quiet`
option has also been added to `git clone` since running stuff
concurrently messes up the output. That could be fixed but it has been
determined to be not worth it since the output from `git clone` is
meaningless to us.
Mentions and other post processing (like images) are still done asynchronously in the background. This should ensure reloading a channel while the message has not been processed yet doesn’t renders a blank message.
As a followup, we could probably simplify the staged message logic, given we have the new cooked on send.
This commit implements drafts for threads by adding a new `thread_id` column to `chat_drafts` table. This column is used to create draft keys on the frontend which are a compound key of the channel and the thread. If the draft is only for the channel, the key will be `c-${channelId}`, if for a thread: `c-${channelId}:t-${threadId}`.
This commit also moves the draft holder from the service to the channel or thread model. The current draft can now always be accessed by doing: `channel.draft` or `thread.draft`.
Other notable changes of this commit:
- moves ChatChannel to gjs
- moves ChatThread to gjs
Why this change?
There are instances where we would like to customize what the
`docker:test:setup` Rake task does.
What does this change do?
Adds a bunch of env variables that could be set to customize what the
`docker:test:setup` Rake test does.
We were throwing ArgumentError in UrlHelper.normalised_encode,
but it was incorrect -- we were passing ArgumentError.new
2 arguments which is not supported. Fix this and have a hint
of which URL is causing the issue for debugging.
Why this change?
We support a `USE_TURBO` environment variable which tells the
`docker:test` rake task to run rspec tests in parallel. However, this
currently does not apply to system tests.
What does this change do?
This commit runs system specs for both core and plugins using
`./bin/turbo_rspec` when the `USE_TURBO` environment is present. Note
that when running system specs, we will only spawn X number of test
processes where X is half the number of available CPU cores. This is
done because we have to leave CPU resources for the chrome processes
that will be created.
The priority field in an SRV RR indicates a preferential order at which
the underlying targets should be utilised. We need to prefer healthy
services in order of priority, where 0 is highest.
Prior to this commit, we relied on whatever order the
dnsclient.getresources method returned. As it turns out, this assumption
is incorrect. The order returned is likely whatever order the system
resolver received DNS responses in, which may not be ordered according
to the spec.
This introduces a ResolvedAddress type which holds the priority value
for SRV targets, or a stand-in priority of zero for A/AAAA RRs. This
type is used as a return value from the underlying name resolution
routines in Name and SRVName.
In this manner, all ordering by priority and resolved time can be
performed directly within the ResolverCache class and calling code can
continue to be none-the-wiser.
Before sorting, we still ensure that we only consider targets with a
priority within the given threshold as previously implemented.
See t/115911.
Operate a key at a time, to make it clearer what's going on.
This also fixes a bug where array integer fields would get re-written
even when there wasn't a change.
This change converts the `approve_unless_trust_level` site setting to
`approve_unless_allowed_groups`.
See: https://meta.discourse.org/t/283408
- Adds the new site setting
- Adds a deprecation warning
- Updates core to use the new settings.
- Adds a migration to fill in the new setting of the old setting was
changed
- Adds an entry to the site_setting.keywords section
- Updates many tests to account for the new change
After a couple of months we will remove the `approve_unless_trust_level`
setting entirely.
Internal ref: /t/115696
Array custom fields use separate rows for each value, but whenever we
update an array, we have always destroy the existing rows and create new
ones. Therefore, there's no benefit over using the json type.
In the past, our loading spinner implementation used Ember's loading substate. That meant that, when the site setting was toggled, there would be fundamental changes in the routing behavior.
This commit simplifies things so that the (non-default) loading spinner implementation is purely a styling thing, and behaves exactly the same as the spinner which appears under the 'slider' configuration when loading takes too long.
This does involve a slight UX change. Now, the entire page will be replaced by a loading spinner instead of just the relevant `{{outlet}}`. We strongly recommend sites use the new default 'slider' behavior.
Why this change?
Right now, the job names are `core system 3.2`, `core frontend 3.2` etc.
The problem here is that 3.2 is very vague. I thought about making the
job names something like `core system (Ruby 3.2)` but then wondered if
there is even value in including that when we are only running with one
ruby version in the matrix all the time. Therefore, I decided to drop
`3.2` from the job names.
Why this change?
The test was randomly failing in
https://github.com/discourse/discourse/actions/runs/6936264158/job/18868087113
with the following failure:
```
expect do user.update_ip_address!("127.0.0.1") end.to change {
UserIpAddressHistory.where(user_id: user.id).count
}.by(1)
expected `UserIpAddressHistory.where(user_id: user.id).count` to have changed by 1, but was changed by 0
```
This is due to the fact that ActiveRecord will actually cache the result
of `UserIpAddressHistory.where(user_id: user.id).count`. However,
`User.update_ip_address!` relies on mini_sql and does not go through
ActiveRecord. As a result, the query cache is not cleared and hence the
flakiness.
What does this change do?
This change uses the `uncached` method provided by ActiveRecord when
we are fetching the count.
* Remove checkmark for official plugins
* Add author for plugin, which is By Discourse for all discourse
and discourse-org github plugins
* Link to meta topic instead of github repo
* Add experimental flag for plugin metadata and show this as a
badge on the plugin list if present
---------
Co-authored-by: chapoi <101828855+chapoi@users.noreply.github.com>
This commit makes it so the fullscreen code modal grows
to fit its content, and doesn't show horizontal scrollbars
unless the entire screen is filled by the modal already.
The code syntax highlighting and copy buttons were also
broken in fullscreen because of modal changes over time.