Previously, avatars would be 'sticky' when:
1. The post was longer than the viewport
OR
2. You were scrolling up
The difference in behavior based on scroll direction doesn't 'feel' quite right. This commit makes the behavior consistent, so sticky avatar logic is applied to all posts regardless of scroll direction.
For some reason, despite iframe also indicating a
```
<meta name="robots" content="noindex">
```
.. Google is still indexing the embed/comment URLs. This causes links like http://\<site>/embed/comments\?topic_id\=6366 to be indexed instead of the topic.
This commit adds it explicitly in the header.
In 958437e7dd we ensured that the email summaries are properly sent based on 'digest_attempted_at' for people who barely/never visit the forum.
This fixed the "frequency" of the email summaries but introduced a bug where the digest would be sent even though there wasn't anything new since for some users.
The logic we use to compute the threshold date for the content to be included in the digest was
```ruby
@since = opts[:since] || user.last_seen_at || user.user_stat&.digest_attempted_at || 1.month.ago
```
It was working as expected for users who haven never been seen but for users who have connected at least once, we would use their "last_seen_at" date as the "threshold date" for the content to be sent in a summary 😬
This fix changes the logic to be the most recent date amongst the `last_seen_at`, `digest_attempted_at` and `1.month.ago` so it's correctly handling cases where
- user has never been seen nor emailed a summary
- user has been seen in a while but has recently been sent a summary
- user has been sent a summary recently but hasn't been seen in a while.
This commit moves the logic for crawler rate limits out of the application controller and into the request tracker middleware. The reason for this move is to apply rate limits to all crawler requests instead of just the requests that make it to the application controller. Some requests are served early from the middleware stack without reaching the Rails app for performance reasons (e.g. `AnonymousCache`) which results in crawlers getting 200 responses even though they've reached their limits and should be getting 429 responses.
Internal topic: t/128810.
This commit splits out the updating of `TopicUser#last_read_post_number` in
`TopicUser.ensure_consistency!` to a new
`TopicUser.update_last_read_post_number` method` which
`PostTiming.pretend_read` will now call instead. Previously,
`PostTiming.pretend_read` calls `TopicUser.ensure_consistency!` which in
turn calls `TopicUser.update_post_action_cache` but that is
unnecessary for `PostTiming.pretend_read` since `PostTiming.pretend_read` does not
affect the `TopicUser#liked` or `TopicUser.bookmarked` columns which
`TopicUser.update_post_action_cache` updates. As the query in
`TopicUser.update_post_action_cache` can be expensive, we should avoid
calling it when it isn't necessary.
One such scenario where it is unnecessary is when we are closing a
topic.
This gives us daily fidelity of topic view stats
New table stores a row per topic viewed per day tracking
anonymous and logged on views
We also have a new endpoint `/t/ID/views-stats.json` to get the statistics for the topic.
Prior to this fix we had too logic to detect if a user is active or not:
- idle codepath on the frontend
- online user ids on the backend
The frontend solution is not very reliable, and both solution are just trying to be too smart. Making a lot of people questioning why they receive a notification sometimes and sometimes not. This commit removes all this logic and replaces it with a much more simpler logic:
- you can't receive notifications for channel you are actually watching
- we won't play a sound more than once every 3seconds
When selected some text inside a post, we offer the ability to "fast edit" the selected text without opening the composer.
However, there are certain cases where this isn't working quite a expected, due to the fact that we have some text in the "cooked" version of the post that isn't literally in the "raw" version of the post.
This ensures that whenever someone selects the within
- a quote
- a onebox
- an encrypted message
- a "cooked" date
we directly show the composer instead of showing the fast edit modal and then leaving the user with an invisible error.
Internal ref. t/128400
* FIX: When creating new message via URL do not redirect
If a user clicks on `/new-message` route from inside the instance we're
redirecting the user to `/latest` page which is only intended if the
user is coming from an external site. This commit checks for this
condition and only redirects when user is coming from external source.
This also makes the behavior consistent with `new-topic` route.
Internal topic reference: `/t/-/129523/`
We consider that you should always receive a notification sound when someone speaks directly with you in chat.
This commit also refactors the way we play audio in chat to make it simpler and throttle it to 3 seconds.
We also added a safeguard to ensure we won't play sounds for old messages, this case can happen when message bus is catching up the backlog (eg: in an inactive tab for example).
This commit updates `S3Inventory#files` to ignore S3 inventory files
which have a `last_modified` timestamp which are not at least 2 days
older than `BackupMetadata.last_restore_date` timestamp.
This check was previously only in `Jobs::EnsureS3UploadsExistence` but
`S3Inventory` can also be used via Rake tasks so this protection needs
to be in `S3Inventory` and not in the scheduled job.
After flags were moved to the database, with each save they are changing available PostActionTypes. Therefore, flag specs should clear the state before and after each example not just before.
In addition, we need to clear `nil` counts for dynamically created flags from serializer.
* FEATURE: add agree and edit
adds agree and edit - an alias for agree and keep -- but with a client action to
edit the post in the composer before the flag is agreed with
---------
Co-authored-by: Juan David Martinez <juan@discourse.org>
We're planning to implement a feature that allows adding required fields for existing users. This PR does some preparatory refactoring to make that possible. There should be no changes to existing behaviour. Just a small update to the admin UI.
Before this fix when generating a pm path leading to a group messages inbox we would blindly take the first group of the pm, however, it's possible our current user doesn't have access to this group.
This commit will now try to find the first group the user has access to, and generate a path to this group’s inbox.
This commit updates `Post#each_upload_url` to reject URLs that do not
have a host which matches `Discourse.current_hostname` but follows the
`/uploads/short-url` uploads URL format. This situation most commonly
happen when users copy upload URL link between different Discourse
sites.
For plugins with only an "enabled" site setting, it doesn't
make sense to take them to the site settings page, since the
toggle switch in the list can be used to change enabled/disabled.
This will not be the case for plugins that have their own custom
config page (like Automation), but we will deal with this when
we actually overhaul this plugin to use the new show page.
Also adds another rspec fixture of a test plugin.
This PR introduces a basic AdminNotice model to store these notices. Admin notices are categorized by their source/type (currently only notices from problem check.) They also have a priority.
This PR aims to add bulk actions to the user's bookmarks.
After this feature, all users should be able to select multiple bookmarks and perform the actions of "deleting" or "clear reminders"
Instead of creating two separate Topics when a user (1) requests to join a group and (2) gets accepted in, this makes the acceptance message into a Post under the origin group request Topic.
e.g. `unexpectedly found "! no whitespace ~" when slicing source, but expected " no whitespace "`
See: https://github.com/emberjs/ember.js/issues/19392
Co-authored-by: David Taylor <david@taylorhq.com>
- FIX: properly scope category changes to what the current user can see
- UX: previous category is now highlighted in "red", new category is highlighted in "green"
- PERF: no need to serialize the categories
- FIX: properly track wiki
- FIX: properly track post_type (aka. Staff Color)
- FIX: properly track making a topic a PM
- FIX: never show the category changes when a topic is made a PM
- PERF: post_revision serializer is now more leaner (never includes title changes when post_number > 1, never includes user changes if there aren't any)
- UX: always sort the tags by name