This modifier allows plugins to alter the outcome of
`should_secure_uploads?` on a Post record, for cases when
plugins need post-attached uploads to always be secure (or
not secure) in specific scenarios.
Chrome's default is already Lax, so this change is a no-op there.
Firefox will soon be follow them, and has started warning about cookies with no samesite attribute. That's the motivation for this commit.
When choosing the "Custom..." option in the new bookmark
menu and then choosing a date + time in the modal for the
reminder, the bookmark icon on the post was not updating to
show the one with the clock to indicate the reminder.
This was just a data syncing issue between BookmarkFormData
and what the modal sets. Ideally all this would be refactored
because the data flow is messy...but hard to find time for
that right now.
Followup 67a8080e33
This commit changes enum typed theme objects property to be optional.
Previously, an enum typed property is always required but we have found
that this might not be ideal so we want to change it.
This method name is a bit confusing; with_secure_uploads implies
it may return a block or something with the uploads of the post,
and has_secure_uploads implies that it's checking whether the post
is linked to any secure uploads.
should_secure_uploads? communicates the true intent of this method --
which is to say whether uploads attached to this post should be
secure or not.
Display additional confirmation when:
- The public section is going to be updated;
- The public section is going to be deleted;
- The public section is going to be marked as private.
The complexity of the situation is that we don't want to load faker into production by default but fabricators and styleguide are available on production.
This is made possible through app/assets/javascripts/discourse/app/lib/load-faker.js which contains a function to ensure faker is loaded asynchronously (loadFaker) and another function to access the loaded faker (getLoadedFaker).
Note 1: this commit also refactors fabricators to have access to context and use faker where possible
Note 2: this commit moves automation to admin bundle
---------
Co-authored-by: David Taylor <david@taylorhq.com>
It was originally named bootstrap-json because it contacted a 'bootstrap' API in rails to generate the ember-cli html response. However, it has since been overhauled to remove that 'bootstrap' system. Now it is a much simpler proxy server which transforms the HTML sent by Rails.
The bug was due to the fact that the `<DModal />` is displayed inside a if block, when the condition was false to close the menu, the modal was just hidden without calling callbacks. The fix ensures we are correctly calling `modal.close()` before in this case.
This commit adds a new option `@modalForMobile` for `<DMenu />` which allows to display a `<DModal />` when expanding a menu on mobile.
This commit also adds a `@views` options to toasts which is an array accepting `['mobile', 'desktop']` and will control if the toast is show on desktop and/or mobile.
Finally this commit allows to hide the progressBar even if the toast is set to `@autoClose=true`. This is controlled through the `@showProgressBar` option.
This commmit removes the unused `/u/:username/preferences/categories`
route which was merged into the `/u/:username/preferences/tracking`
route in 2fc2d7d828.
Available as a normal synchronous module in tests
Available as an async import in core, or via the `loadFaker` helper in themes/plugins (which cannot use async import directly)
* DEV: Add `topic_embed_import_create_args` plugin modifier
This modifier allows a plugin to change the arguments used when creating
a new topic for an imported article.
For example: let's say you want to prepend "Imported: " to the title of
every imported topic. You could use this modifier like so:
```ruby
# In your plugin's code
plugin.register_modifier(:topic_embed_import_create_args) do |args|
args[:title] = "Imported: #{args[:title]}"
args
end
```
In this example, the modifier is prepending "Imported: " to the `title` in the `create_args` hash. This modified title would then be used when the new topic is created.
This change adds a progress bar to toast notifications when autoClose is enabled (true by default).
The progress bar allows users to visually see how long is left before the notification disappears.
When hovered on desktop, the progress and autoclose timer will be paused, it will resume again once the mouse is moved away from the toast notification.
Why this change?
For a `typed: objects` theme setting with an enum property, we are
adding a `default` key for `type: enum` fields which will be used
as the default value on the client side.
```
some_objects_setting:
type: objects
schema:
name: field
properties:
enum_field:
type: enum
default: awesome
choices:
- nice
- cool
- awesome
```
Adds the new quick menu for bookmarking. When you bookmark
a post (chat message behaviour will come later) we show this new quick
menu and bookmark the item straight away.
You can then choose a reminder quick option, or choose Custom... to open
the old modal. If you click on an existing bookmark, we show the same quick menu
but with Edit and Delete options.
A later PR will introduce a new bookmark modal, but for now we
are using the old modal for Edit and Custom... options.
Using around_action means `add_early_hint_header` is in the stack for every request, and gets included in the backtrace of any errors.
We can manage with an after_action instead, which avoids adding to the stack depth (and avoids people blaming me for unrelated application errors 😉)
When opening the user menu, we display old cached data, and then replace it with fresh data immediately afterwards. The vast majority of the time the data is unchanged, and so there is no visible change. When rendering HTML elements directly, Ember realizes that there is no change, and does not make any changes to the DOM. Great!
However, our `avatar` helper returns a blob of HTML. With raw HTML, Ember does not make any attempt to 'diff' the existing DOM. Instead, it replaces the old string with the new string. That can be a little wasteful, but normally it's not a big deal. But, when it comes to `<img lazy="lazy"`, re-rendering the `img` element causes a visible flicker in Safari.
To work around that, this commit replaces the `{{avatar}}` helper with an ember-rendered `<img` element. Now that Ember is responsible for rendering, it can detect there is no real change to the attributes and skip it, thereby avoiding the flicker.
If we find ourselves doing this more frequently, we may want to consider creating an `<Avatar` component. But for now, I think it's simple enough to justify building the `<img` manually in this case.