The user interface has been reorganized to show email and link invites
in the same screen. Staff has more control over creating and updating
invites. Bulk invite has also been improved with better explanations.
On the server side, many code paths for email and link invites have
been merged to avoid duplicated logic. The API returns better responses
with more appropriate HTTP status codes.
* DEV: Escape backslashes in curl example
We need to escape these backslashes otherwise they get filtered out when
generating the api docs.
* FIX: uniqItems should be uniqueItems
The 'Discourse SSO' protocol is being rebranded to DiscourseConnect. This should help to reduce confusion when 'SSO' is used in the generic sense.
This commit aims to:
- Rename `sso_` site settings. DiscourseConnect specific ones are prefixed `discourse_connect_`. Generic settings are prefixed `auth_`
- Add (server-side-only) backwards compatibility for the old setting names, with deprecation notices
- Copy `site_settings` database records to the new names
- Rename relevant translation keys
- Update relevant translations
This commit does **not** aim to:
- Rename any Ruby classes or methods. This might be done in a future commit
- Change any URLs. This would break existing integrations
- Make any changes to the protocol. This would break existing integrations
- Change any functionality. Further normalization across DiscourseConnect and other auth methods will be done separately
The risks are:
- There is no backwards compatibility for site settings on the client-side. Accessing auth-related site settings in Javascript is fairly rare, and an error on the client side would not be security-critical.
- If a plugin is monkey-patching parts of the auth process, changes to locale keys could cause broken error messages. This should also be unlikely. The old site setting names remain functional, so security-related overrides will remain working.
A follow-up commit will be made with a post-deploy migration to delete the old `site_settings` rows.
* document user endpoints, allow for empty request/response bodies
* document more user endpoints, improve debugging output if no details are specified
* document some more user endpoints
* minor cleanup
* FIX: flakey tests due to bad regex
- Read in schemas from actual json files instead of a ruby hash. This is
helpful because we will be automatically generating .json schema files
from json responses and don't want to manually write ruby hash schema
files.
- Create a helper method for rspec schema validation tests to dry up code
* DEV: Add schema checking to api doc testing
This commit improves upon rswag which lacks schema checking. rswag
really only checks that the https status matches, but this change adds
in the json-schema_builder gem which also has schema validation.
Now we can define schemas for each of our requests/responses in the
`spec/requests/api/schemas` directory which will make our documentation
specs a lot cleaner.
If we update a serializer by either adding or removing an attribute the
tests will now fail (this is a good thing!). Also if you change the type
of an attribute say from an array to a string the tests will now fail.
This will help significantly with keeping the docs in sync with actual
code changes! Now if you change how an endpoint will respond you will
have to update the docs too in order for the tests to pass. :D
This PR is inspired by:
https://www.tealhq.com/post/how-teal-keeps-their-api-tests-and-documentation-in-sync
* Swap out json schema validator gem
Swapped out the outdated json-schema_builder gem with the json_schemer
gem.
* Add validation fields to schema
In order to have "strict" validation we need to add
`additionalProperties: false` to the schema, and we need to specify
which attributes are required.
Updated the debugging test output to print out the error details if
there are any.
Added GET user by external_id to the api docs.
Fixed `/users/{username}` docs to be `/u/{username}`
Extracted out common user response into a shared helper.
Documenting a few more endpoints so that our api docs can be
automatically generated. Made a couple other minor changes, like
including the "OK" example for our default success response.
This PR removes the user reminder topic timers, because that system has been supplanted and improved by bookmark reminders. The option is removed from the UI and all existing user reminder topic timers are migrated to bookmark reminders.
Migration does this:
* Get all topic_timers with status_type 5 (reminders)
* Gets all bookmarks where the user ID and topic ID match
* Loops through the found topic timers
* If there is no bookmark for the OP of the topic, then we just create a bookmark with a reminder
* If there is a bookmark for the OP of the topic and it does **not** have a reminder set, then just
update it with the topic timer reminder
* If there is a bookmark for the OP of the topic with a reminder then just discard the topic timer
* Cancels all outstanding user reminder topic timers
* **Trashes (not deletes) all user reminder topic timers**
Notes:
* For now I have left the user reminder topic timer job class in place; this is so the jobs can be cancelled in the migration. It and the specs will be deleted in the next PR.
* At a later date I will write a migration to delete all trashed user topic timers. They are not deleted here in case there are data issues and they need to be recovered.
* A future PR will change the UI of the topic timer modal to make it look more like the bookmark modal.
* DEV: api documentation updates
- Created a script to convert json responses to rswag
- Documented several api endpoints
- Switched rswag to use header based auth
* Update script, fix some schema missmatches