There was a bug with changing timestamps using the topic wrench button. Under some circumstances, a topic was disappearing from the top of the latest tab after changing timestamps. Steps to reproduce:
- Choose a topic on the latest tab (the topic should be created some time ago, but has recent posts)
- Change topic timestamps (for example, move them one day forward):
- Go back to the latest tab and see that topic has disappeared.
This PR fixes this. We were setting topic.bumped_at to the timestamp user specified on the modal. This is incorrect. Instead, we should be setting topic.bumped_at to the created_at timestamp of the last regular (not a whisper and so on) post on the topic.
We have had reports of tabs freezing in Firefox, and reporting an error
in this line. I haven't been able to reproduce, but I suspect the
`forEach` loop is at the heart of the issue, so I have replaced it with
(hopefully) a safer call.
* More refactoring
* Do not reload stylesheets with unchanged filenames
* Select last matching stylesheet
* No need to return anything except a status code from the server
* Switch a badge state before sending a request and then switch it back in case of an error
We are trying to not use "private message" in the interface, in favor of "personal message", because of course admins can read all messages so they are not really private unless encrypted messaging is turned on..
* DEV: Improve rake `release_note:generate` date handling
A commit-ish value like HEAD@{2021-01-01} is based on the **local state** of HEAD on that date. It does not use dates attached to commits.
Instead, the rake task now detects date-like strings and supplies them to `git log` via the `--after` and `--before` flags
* Skip printing plugin when there are no changes found
A list of skipped plugins is printed on a single line at the end of the output
After every new random record created using the `dev:populate` rake task a new Discourse event will be triggered. So the plugins can modify the records if needed.
Currently when bulk-awarding a badge that can be granted multiple times, users in the CSV file are granted the badge once no matter how many times they're listed in the file and only if they don't have the badge already.
This PR adds a new option to the Badge Bulk Award feature so that it's possible to grant users a badge even if they already have the badge and as many times as they appear in the CSV file.
A couple of weeks we made a change that skipped compressing assets used by the theme qunit page: https://github.com/discourse/discourse/pull/13619. This is a follow-up PR to stop the application helper from generating the assets for the theme qunit page with `.br` or `.gzip` extensions when a site uses S3 as a CDN.
Fixes two issues:
- ignores invalid XML in custom icon sprite SVG file (and outputs an error if sprite was uploaded via admin UI)
- clears SVG sprite cache when deleting an `icons-sprite` upload in a theme
Use a Map to hold the best link element for each Onebox HTML element.
Using an Object did not work as intended because Object can use only
Strings or Symbols as keys. Using HTML elements (representing oneboxes)
as keys most probably converted them to some generic string and sometimes
different Oneboxes were associated same key. It seems to be browser and
content dependent, without any clear indication of what is happening
internally.
This bug caused link counts to show only for the last Onebox because
the best link from the last Onebox was considered for all the other
Oneboxes.
This PR fixes a couple of issues related to group SMTP:
1. When running the group SMTP job, we were exiting early if the email was for the OP because of an IMAP race condition. However this causes issues when replying as a new topic for an existing SMTP topic, as the recipient does not get the OP email which can cause threading problems.
2. When sending emails for a new topic spun out like the issue in 1., we are not maintaining the original subject/topic title because that is based on the incoming email record, which we were not doing because the group SMTP email was never sent because of issue 1.
Size of headings increased proportionally with their nesting because
their size was relative to the parent element (used em). This commit
makes headings from posts use rem instead which are relative to the
root HTML element.
<h1><div><h1>test</h1></div></h1> looks the same as <h1>test</h1> now.
By default, Twitter will return the URL for the avatar image of the tweet poster as the `og:image` value.
However, if the `user_generated` attribute is true, we should not use this as the avatar URL as this will be an URL of an image in the tweet itself (e.g., an image belonging to a tweeted news story).
Both of the commits in this PR are meant to fix the problem of invalid
option being shown in the flair chooser. An invalid option can be shown
if at some point it was a valid one - a group with a flair that was
later changed by an admin and flair was removed. The other option an
invalid option can be selected is if the user had a primary group when
the migration ran and copied the same value to the flair_group_id
column.
* FIX: Set flair_group_id only if group has flair
Follow up to 4ba93aac66.
* FIX: Do not show invalid option in flair chooser
If selected flair group became unavailable because the flair was removed
then the option would still be selected and visible as an ID only.
Without checking if t.table_schema = '#{@schema}' the SELECT with JOIN in the script were returning every column twice in case there is a 'backup' scheme with exactly the same tables as in the 'public scheme'
Previously we would re-calculate topic_user.liked for all users who have ever viewed the source or destination topic. This can be very expensive on large sites. Instead, we can use the array of moved post ids to find which users are actually affected by the move, and restrict the update query to only check/update their records.
On an example site this reduced the `update_post_action_cache` time from ~27s to 300ms
Scanning for all possible invalid post_timing records in the destination topics can be a very expensive operation. The main aim is to avoid the data clashing with soon-to-be-moved posts, so we can reduce the scope of the query by targeting only rows which would actually cause a clash. post_timings has an index on (topic_id, post_number), so this is very fast.
On an example site, this reduced the query from ~6s to <10ms
This is a follow up to commit 87c1e98571
which introduced different fields for primary and flair groups. Before
that, primary group was used as a flair group too.