This commit adds the profile tab to the experimental user menu. We're adding it to the user menu because it contains links/buttons that are not available anywhere else. We may remove the tab again if we find better places for those links/buttons, but for now it'll stay.
For more context on the experimental user menu, see https://github.com/discourse/discourse/pull/17379.
The following changes are made in this commit:
1. Move caret icon in sidebar section header to the right.
1. Each row in sidebar takes the full width which enables us to do a
full width highlight on hover and when sidebar link is active.
1. Ensure each row in Sidebar is of the same height.
Internal refs: /t/70546, /t/72196, /t/71820
Instead of relying on another help to generate the icons, we want to
rely on the interface for adding prefix icons. This ensures that prefix
icons are consistent across the section links in Sidebar
Before this commit, we carried custom code and styles for the sidebar on
mobile. This meant the look and feel of bringing up the sidebar on
mobile was very different from the user menu resulting in a very
inconsistent experience on mobile. Also, we could not leverage on the
existing swipe to close support on mobile.
In this commit, we made it such that the sidebar dropdown is always
rendered on mobile and made the interaction with the dropdown more
consistent with the user menu. There is also more parity with the old
hamburger dropdown when the experimental sidebar is disabled.
A public key must be added to GitHub when installing private themes.
When the process happens asynchronously (for example if the admin does
not have admin permissions to the GitHub repository), installing
private themes becomes very difficult.
In this case, the Discourse admin can partially install the theme by
letting Discourse save the private key, create a placeholder theme and
give the admin a public key to be used as a deploy key. After the key
is installed, the admin can finish theme installation by pressing a
button on the theme page.
Some of the changes in this commit are extracted from https://github.com/discourse/discourse/pull/17379.
The bookmarks tab in the new user menu is different from the other tabs in that it can display a mixture of notifications and bookmarks. When there are unread bookmark reminder notifications, the tab displays all of these notifications at the top and fills the remaining space in the menu with the rest of the bookmarks. The bubble/badge count on the bookmarks tab indicates how many unread bookmark reminder notifications there are.
On the technical aspect, since this commit introduces a new `bookmark-item` component, we've done some refactoring so that all 3 "item" components (`notification-item`, `reviewable-item` and the new `bookmark-item`) inherit from a base component and get identical HTML structure so they all look consistent.
Internal tickets: t70584 and t65045.
Prior to this commit, we had a default Glimmer component that was responsible for handling generic rendering of notifications in the user menu, and many notification types had a custom Glimmer component that inherited from the default component to customize how they were rendered. That implementation was less than ideal because it meant plugins would have to create Glimmer components to customize notification types added by them and that would make the surface area of the API too big.
This commit changes the implementation so there's only one Glimmer component for rendering notifications, and then notification types that need to be customized can create a regular JavaScript class - `renderDirector` in the code - that provides the Glimmer component with the content it should display. We also introduce an API for plugins to register a renderer for a notification type or override an existing one.
Some of the changes are partially extracted from https://github.com/discourse/discourse/pull/17379.
Follow up to 4d3c1ceb44, this commit
shows the SMTP response in the admin email sent list and also moves the
topic/post link into a new column. Reply key is now in its own column.
This commit removes the ability to enable/disable the Sidebar on a per
user basis and introduces a site wide setting. For testing purposes, sidebar can be enabled/disabled via the `enable_sidebar=1` or `enable_sidebar=0` query param.
When the experimental Sidebar is enabled, the hamburger drop down is replaced by a sidebar drop down. A user is given the ability to dock and undock the sidebar depending on their personal preference.
Do also note that the experimental sidebar is well, considered experimental at this point so I do not intend for the features here to be perfect. What I aim to do here is to ship the changes fast so that it can be used internally by the team to provide feedback. Custom links added by plugins and dark mode toggle has not been implemented as part of this commit as I aim to tackle it in another commit.
Co-authored-by: awesomerobot <kris.aubuchon@discourse.org>
This commit improves several parts of the group members bulk operation.
It fixes the bug that did not show the menu button when the Select all
button was clicked. The other changes make the behavior more consistent
with topic list bulk operations.
Category badge changes based on the `category style` site setting so we
do not want to forcing all category names to the same color.
Follow-up to 3266350e80
Tests have been intentionally left out as it is hard to test interaction that relies on local storage.
It also isn't the end of the world if the feature regresses.
- Sets `https://www.mixcloud.com` as a `requires_iframe_origins` to allow the iframe content to be displayed
- Attempts to render something approximating the Mixcloud content in the preview pane of the Composer, rather than just displaying a large version of the artwork associated with the link
This commit introduces a new site setting: `block_hotlinked_media`. When enabled, all attempts to hotlink media (images, videos, and audio) will fail, and be replaced with a linked placeholder. Exceptions to the rule can be added via `block_hotlinked_media_exceptions`.
`download_remote_image_to_local` can be used alongside this feature. In that case, hotlinked images will be blocked immediately when the post is created, but will then be replaced with the downloaded version a few seconds later.
This implementation is purely server-side, and does not impact the composer preview.
Technically, there are two stages to this feature:
1. `PrettyText.sanitize_hotlinked_media` is called during `PrettyText.cook`, and whenever new images are introduced by Onebox. It will iterate over all src/srcset attributes in the post HTML and check if they're allowed. If not, the attributes will be removed and replaced with a `data-blocked-hotlinked-src(set)` attribute
2. In the `CookedPostProcessor`, we iterate over all `data-blocked-hotlinked-src(set)` attributes and check whether we have a downloaded version of the media. If yes, we update the src to use the downloaded version. If not, the entire media element is replaced with a placeholder. The placeholder is labelled 'external media', and is a link to the offsite media.
If the select-kit header is not in the viewport (scrolled out of view), popper adds a data-popper-reference-hidden attribute.
This PR adds the recommended styles to "hide" the select-kit body when that happens. See
https://popper.js.org/docs/v2/modifiers/hide/
The composer is displayed over the bottom part of the page. To make sure
that no content is covered by the composer, a bottom padding is added
equal to the height of the composer. When the composer is opened or
closed that padding is added after around 300ms because of a debounce.
This commit makes sure that the padding is added as soon as the composer
state changes by using a CSS custom property (variable) and transition
property for a smooth user interface.
Note this commit also introduce a new {{d-popover}} component, example usage:
```hbs
{{#d-popover |state|}}
{{d-button label="foo.things" class="d-popover-trigger"}}
<div class="d-popover-content">
Some content
<div>
{{/d-popover}}
```
- Ensure the set of rendered `<link rel=stylesheet>` tags is consistent
- Add var() references for all crawler-view styles. Basic color definitions are defined first, as a fallback for super old browsers
There are still some, but those are in actual code that's used outside core, so the change there would need to go through the deprecation cycle. That's a task for another day.
Previously we only supported a single 'required tag group' for a category. This commit allows admins to specify multiple required tag groups, each with their own minimum tag count.
A new category_required_tag_groups database table replaces the existing columns on the categories table. Data is automatically migrated.
Browsers automatically calculate an aspect ratio based on the width/height attributes of an `<img`. HOWEVER that aspect ratio only applies while the image is loading. Once loaded, it'll use the image's actual dimensions. This can cause things to jump around after loading. For example:
- if a user deliberately inserts false width/height
- the image fails to load (404)
- an optimised image is a few pixels different, due to a rounding when resizing
This decorator explicitly sets the `aspect-ratio` property so that things are consistent throughout the lifetime of all `<img` elements.
Another attempt at fixing https://meta.discourse.org/t/discourse-with-a-screen-reader/178105/88?u=osama. Previous PR (reverted): #16240.
The problems with the previous PR were:
1. As you scrolled down a topics list, the first topic of every new batch of topics would receive focus and the indicator would show up.
2. Similar to 1, clicking the `See X new or updated topics` notice would also focus a random topic from the new topics that were just loaded.
3. Topics in the suggested topics list received focus too
4. Our custom focus indicator appeared on mobile, but it shouldn't.
This commit should have none of these problems.
This reverts commit 5d77f485cb.
There are some edge cases that we need to handle better. Reverting this
commit because we're going to do a beta release later today.