In the "Consolidated Pageviews with Browser Detection (Experimental)"
report we used the same color for "Known Crawler" and "Other pageviews"
which makes the report confusing to look at, this commit makes them
different.
We were getting this error causing it to flake when
creating users:
```
ActiveRecord::StatementInvalid:
PG::ReadOnlySqlTransaction: ERROR: cannot execute INSERT in a read-only transaction
```
This commit introduces a few changes as a result of
customer issues with finding why a topic was relisted.
In one case, if a user edited the OP of a topic that was
unlisted and hidden because of too many flags, the topic
would get relisted by directly changing topic.visible,
instead of going via TopicStatusUpdater.
To improve tracking we:
* Introduce a visibility_reason_id to topic which functions
in a similar way to hidden_reason_id on post, this column is
set from the various places we change topic visibility
* Fix Post#unhide! which was directly modifying topic.visible,
instead we use TopicStatusUpdater which sets visibility_reason_id
and also makes a small action post
* Show the reason topic visibility changed when hovering the
unlisted icon in topic status on topic titles
That could cause flakeyness in specs depending in which timing message bus would arrive and it's not necessary as it should be updated with `handleThreadOriginalMessageUpdate`.
A change in relative picker was causing a serie of events which ultimately would cause the whole list of time options to be reset and re-rendered which would cause a new instance of the picker to be created, causing a reset.
The fix is using id in the each loop to help ember identify that it doesn’t have to re-render a specific component.
Follow up to #26712 to account for older threads that don't have a persisted excerpt, as this was previously generated on every page load.
This change allows us to build the excerpt on the fly when none exists, fixing the issue of missing message excerpts for thread previews (within channel) and thread lists (on mobile/desktop).
This commit adds a test to ensure that settings for a theme are retained
even if saving a theme setting after a theme setting migration fails.
Prior to the fix introduced in 35bc27a36d,
failing to save the new settings will actually cause some or all of the
theme's setting to be lost.
e05628c0 introduced an optimization to remove basic-HTML content for authenticated users. The assumption is that, if they were able to log in, they must have a JS capable browser and do not need the basic HTML.
However, there are use-cases where an API-key is used to crawl a private site, or private categories of a public site. This commit re-enables those use cases by keeping the basic-html in place for crawler/bot user agents.
Selecting the +subcategories option does not work sometimes when "lazy
load categories" is enabled because the subcategories may not be
fetched. This ensures that subcategories are loaded by requesting them
before being used.
This commit fixes a bug in theme settings migrations where values of `objects` typed theme settings aren't passed to migrations even when there are overriding values for those settings. What causes this bug is that, when creating the hash that contains all the overridden settings and will be passed to migrations, the values of `objects` typed settings are incorrectly retrieved from the `value` column (which is always nil for `objects` type) instead of `json_value`. `objects` settings are different from all other types in that they store their values in the `json_value` column and they need to be special-cased when retrieving their values.
In a large forum with millions of users and millions of user_fields
updating the list of dropdown user field options will result in a
502 now due to the large number of fields.
This commit moves the indexing into a job.
This change moves the chat message excerpt into a new database column (string) on the chat_messages table.
As part of this change, we will now set the excerpt within the `Chat::CreateMessage` service, and update it within the `Chat::UpdateMessage` service.
Our 'page_view_crawler' / 'page_view_anon' metrics are based purely on the User Agent sent by clients. This means that 'badly behaved' bots which are imitating real user agents are counted towards 'anon' page views.
This commit introduces a new method of tracking visitors. When an initial HTML request is made, we assume it is a 'non-browser' request (i.e. a bot). Then, once the JS application has booted, we notify the server to count it as a 'browser' request. This reliance on a JavaScript-capable browser matches up more closely to dedicated analytics systems like Google Analytics.
Existing data collection and graphs are unchanged. Data collected via the new technique is available in a new 'experimental' report.
This commit will now allow us to track read position in a thread and returns to this position when you open the thread.
Note this commit is also extracting the following components to make it possible:
- `<ChatMessagesScroller />`
- `<ChatMessagesContainer />`
The `UpdateUserThreadLastRead` has been updated to allow this.
Various refactorings have also been done to the code and specs to improve the support of last read.
This commit fixes a bug in the `themes:update` rake task which resulted
in the ActiveRecord transaction not being rolled back when an error was
encountered. The transaction was first introduced in
7f0682f4f2 which changed a `begin..rescue`
block to `transaction do..rescue`. The problem with that change
prevented the transaction from ever rolling back as the code block
looks something like this:
```
transaction do
begin
update_theme
rescue => e
# surpress error
end
end
```
From the transaction's point of view now, it will never rollback even if
an error was encountered when updating the remote theme because it will
never see the error.
Instead we should have done something like this if we wanted to surpress
the errors encountered while still ensuring that the transaction is
rolled back.
```
begin
transaction do
update_theme
end
rescue => e
# surpress error
end
```
This is essential for us to determine which site is encountering an
error while updating remote themes. We are also including the theme's id
because themes can have the same name.
Fixes two issues:
- frontend was reloading the page when clicking-to-remove avatar
- backend wasn't allowing resetting the setting by deleting all avatars