* scrub non-a html tags from tag descriptions on create, strips all tags from tag description when displayed in tag hover
* test for tag description links
* UX: basic render-tag test
* UX: fix linting
* UX: fix linting
* fix broken tests
* Update spec/models/tag_spec.rb
Co-authored-by: Penar Musaraj <pmusaraj@gmail.com>
* UX: use has_sanitizable_fields instead of has_scrubbable_fields to ensafen tag.description
---------
Co-authored-by: Penar Musaraj <pmusaraj@gmail.com>
104baab5 fixed double-counted pageviews for the initial page load. Under the default 'loading slider' implementation, that resolved all the known problems.
However, under the 'loading spinner', there is an additional problem. In 'spinner' mode, each navigation within the JS app involves transitioning to an intermediate 'loading' route. Previously, this intermediate state was being treated as a separate page by the app, and so any ajax requests fired during it would be counted as a distinct pageview. One known case of this is the `/presence/get` request which is made when logged-in users visit a topic.
This commit updates the logic to ignore 'intermediate' transitions, and introduces regression tests for both the 'spinner' and 'slider' modes.
In this commit 2.5 years ago, variables for showOnUserCard and showOnProfile were removed, but we still used them in the component. e29605b
This corrects the variable names and adds a test to confirm the text is now shown.
* DEV: allow `formTemplateIds` to be explicitly set via the composer service
* DEV: allow to skip the configured form template via the composer service
Our code assumed the content_range interval was inclusive, but they are open-ended due to Postgres' [discrete range types](https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/rangetypes.html#RANGETYPES-DISCRETE), meaning [1,2] will be represented as [1,3).
It also fixes some flaky tests due to test data not being correctly setup and the registry not being resetted after each test.
This resolves the issue in #23064.
This issue arises because we need to produce the trees for the
auxilary bundles in `ember-cli-build.js` to pass these trees as
argument to `app.toTree()`. In order to produce these trees, the
code internally need to set up babel, which deep-clones the addons'
babel configs.
When using `@embroider/macros`, the addon's babel config includes a
`MacrosConfig` object which is not supposed to be touched until the
configs are "finalized". In a classic build, the finalization step
happens when `app.toTree()` is called. In Embroider, this happens
somewhere deeper inside `CompatApp`.
We need to produce these auxilary bundle trees before we call
`app.toTree()` or before constructing `CompatApp` because they
need to be passed as arguments to these functions. So this poses a
tricky chicken-and-egg timing issue. It was difficult to find a
workaround for this that works for both the classic and Embroider
build pipeline.
Of all the internal addons that uses the auxilary bundle pattern,
this only affets `pretty-text` as it is (for now, at least) the
only addon that uses `@embroider/macros`.
Taking a step back, the only reason (for now, at least) it was
introduced was for the loader shim for the `xss` package. This
package is actually used inside the lazily loaded markdown-it
bundle. However, we didn't have a better way to include the dep
into the lazy bundle directly, so it ends up going into the main
addon tree, and, inturns, the discourse core bundle.
In core's main loader shim manifest, we already have an entry for
`xss`. This was perhaps a mistake at the time, but it doesn't make
a difference – as mentioned above, `xss` needs to be included into
the main bundle anyway.
So, for now, the simpliest solution is to avoid `@embroider/macros`
in these internal addons for the time being. Ideally we would soon
absorb these back into core as lazily loaded (`import()`-ed) code
managed by Webpack when we fully switch over to Embroider.
The new modal API removed the `#discourse-modal` id from the wrapper element, which meant that select-kit couldn't properly detect when it was inside a modal. This commit updates the detection to use `.fixed-modal` which will match both legacy and modern modals.
When we receive the stream parameter, we'll queue a job that periodically publishes partial updates, and after the summarization finishes, a final one with the completed version, plus metadata.
`summary-box` listens to these updates via MessageBus, and updates state accordingly.
The OpenComposer mixin comes from a time before we had a composer service. As well as being a general cleanup/refactor, this commit aims to removes interlinking between composer APIs and the discovery-related controllers which are being removed as part of #22622.
In summary, this commit:
- Removes OpenComposer mixin
- Adds and updates composer service APIs to support everything that `openComposer` did
- Updates consumers to call the composer service directly, instead of relying on the mixin (either directly, or via a route-action which bubbled up to some parent)
- Deprecates composer-related methods on `DiscourseRoute` and on the application route
Prior to this fix the user tip was rendered with panels and interfering with widget code. I suspect it was causing the widget node (revamped-hamburger-menu-wrapper) to not be removed, as a result clickOutside would be called two times, negating the effect of the click.
This fix is just rendering the tip in a different node, preventing the interference, it shouldn't impact behavior as the positioning is absolute.
Currently when we decide we're going to drop a column in the future we just mark it with a TODO comment and add it to ignored_columns. This makes it instantly unavailable, and we mostly forget about the TODO in the end. 😬
This change adds a HasDeprecatedColumns concern which offers a little bit more flexibility. We can still simulate the old behaviour by setting drop_from to the current version, but we can also set it to a future version, causing it to raise a deprecation warning until then if used.
This commit moves the calendar date and time picker shown in
the local dates modal into a core component that can be reused
in other places. Also add system specs to make sure there isn't
any breakages with this feature, and a section to the styleguide.
The original motivation for this change was to avoid mutating imported modules (by stubbing imported functions in tests)
Other than that it's a good practice to place code like this in services, especially (although not the case here) if it requires access to other services or controller.
The previous version of ember-on-resize-modifier depended on
ember-modifier@^3.2.7 while discourse had ember-modifier@^4.1.0.
As far as Yarn is concerned, it can accomplish this with:
node_modules
...
ember-modifier 4.1.0
...
ember-on-resize-modifier 1.1.0
...
ember-modifier 3.2.7
...
...
This does NOT work!
In a classic build everything is compiled down to AMD modules and
at runtime there can only be one uniquely named "ember-modifier"
module. When we have duplicates, depending on activation ordering,
one of them will randomly win.
In practice, it seems like ember-modifier 3.2.7 had "won" in the
current build, and we are shipping it to production, you can find
these modules in vendor.js like:
```js
;define("ember-modifier/-private/class/modifier", /* ... */, function(/* ... */) {
/* the 3.2.7 version with deprecations, etc */
})
/* ... */
;define("ember-modifier/index", /* ... */)
```
However, ember-auto-import also "found" the 4.1.0 version and in
one of the chunk.app.js:
```js
d('ember-modifier', /* ... */, function() { return __webpack_require__(/*! ember-modifier */ 227); });
```
...and in one of the chunk.vendors.js...
```js
/* 227 */
/*!****************************************************!*\
!*** ../node_modules/ember-modifier/dist/index.js ***!
\****************************************************/
/***/ ((__unused_webpack_module, __webpack_exports__, __webpack_require__) => {
"use strict";
/* ...the 4.1.0 version... */
}),
```
So, in practice:
* We are brining both copies into the production build
* The 3.2.7 modules are available in the AMD loader as "ember-modifier/..."
* But 4.1.0 modules are available in the AMD loader as "ember-modifier"
* Because mostly it's consumed as `import ... from "ember-modifier";`, the
latter end up actually winning
* Because the newer code is compatible enough, and the deprecated features
are unused, it seems to work ok..?
But in the Embroider build, ember-auto-import doesn't emit those shims
anymore. It does process most of the core modules through Webpack so the
imports get correctly wired up to the 4.1.0 as expected, as they no longer
go through/need the runtime AMD loader.js.
The older 3.2.7 copy is _still_ shipped in the vendor bundle and registered
the same, but not "stomped over" by the EAI shims anymore. Our manual shims
(#22703, merged yesterday) are more "polite" and check `require.has(...)`
before defining the module, and since `require.has(...)` check for the
`/index` alias and returns `true`, our shim does not stomp the 3.2.7 modules
either.
So then, when our "auxilary bundles" (admin, plugins, etc) tries to import
`"ember-modifier", they get the 3.2.7 version.
There is a case when developer would like to go to separated mode but not show switch panel buttons. We need additional functions to show/add buttons to support this case.
* REFACTOR: Glimerify topic summarization widgets.
Simplifies all the logic for generating/regenerating summaries and expanding/collapsing the summary box. It makes streaming easier to implement since now we can subscribe to message bus directly from the component.
* Update app/assets/javascripts/discourse/app/components/summary-box.hbs
Co-authored-by: David Taylor <david@taylorhq.com>
* Update app/assets/javascripts/discourse/app/components/summary-box.hbs
Co-authored-by: David Taylor <david@taylorhq.com>
* Update app/assets/javascripts/discourse/app/components/summary-box.hbs
Co-authored-by: David Taylor <david@taylorhq.com>
---------
Co-authored-by: David Taylor <david@taylorhq.com>
This adds a new `loaderShim()` function to ensure certain modules
are present in the `loader.js` registry and therefore runtime
`require()`-able.
Currently, the classic build pipeline puts a lot of things in the
runtime `loader.js` registry automatically. For example, all of
the ember-auto-import packages are in there.
Going forward, and especially as we switch to the Embroider build
pipeline, this will not be guarenteed. We need to keep an eye on
what modules (packages) our "external" bundles (admin, wizard,
markdown-it, plugins, etc) are expecting to be present and put
them into the registry proactively.
There is no decorateCooked equivalent for small action posts,
so we need to manually call decorateHashtags when there is a custom
message for small action posts in order for the hashtags to get
their coloured icon/square.
Bug when you click fast on the switch panel button. It is happening because we are not waiting for the transition to finish before update state.
In addition, unused currentPanel property was removed.
This commit removes any logic in the app and in specs around
enable_experimental_hashtag_autocomplete and deletes some
old category hashtag code that is no longer necessary.
It also adds a `slug_ref` category instance method, which
will generate a reference like `parent:child` for a category,
with an optional depth, which hashtags use. Also refactors
PostRevisor which was using CategoryHashtagDataSource directly
which is a no-no.
Deletes the old hashtag markdown rule as well.
This fixes:
- a regression from 30c152c, where navigating to a topic's last reply
via keyboard would lose track of the topic when returning to the topic
list
- an issue where if a topic's last post is a small post, navigating to it
via keyboard would not focus the post
Co-authored-by: David Taylor <david@taylorhq.com>
Adds a padding-bottom to the wrapper to avoid cutting the message on the mobile app and sets a max-width to align with the timeline on the desktop.
Fixes a bug on mobile where we updated the preference, but the user had a single list.
When Ember rendering fails for some reason, `this.header` will be undefined. This causes site-header to raise an error, which often gets printed to the console more obviously than the actual root cause.
This commit makes site-header fail more gracefully in this situation, to avoid it being a red-herring during development/debugging.
This function was previously expecting multiple services to be injected on any class that uses it. This kind of hidden requirement leads to some very difficult-to-debug situations, so this commit updates the function to lookup all its required services inline.
The filter-mode mixin was previously serving two distinct purposes via a complex arrangement of getters/setters:
1. To calculate a filterMode, given values for category, filterType and noSubcategories
2. To calculate a filterType, given a filterMode
This commit splits the mixin into two functions, and updates all call sites to use them instead of the mixin.
This makes more sense (and is likely faster) than redefining the entire route for every call to `buildTopicRoute`. Also moves the top-specific logic into the route rather than injecting it via an initializer.
Similar to d5107d1aba
This brings the theme development experience (via the discourse_theme cli) closer to the experience of making javascript changes in Discourse core/plugins via Ember CLI. Whenever a change is made to a non-css theme field, all clients will be instructed to immediately refresh via message-bus.
Why this change?
In production, this appeared as a small hotspot as where we're calling
`poster.name_and_description` twice which in turns makes a method call
to `I18n.t`. When we're rendering a topic list with many topics and each
topic has many posters, this repeated and unnecessary method call
quickly adds up.
In #20135 we prevented invalid inputs from being accepted in category setting form fields on the front-end. We didn't do anything on the back-end at that time, because we were still discussing which path we wanted to take. Eventually we decided we want to move this to a new CategorySetting model.
This PR moves the num_auto_bump_daily from custom fields to the new CategorySetting model.
In addition it sets the default value to 0, which exhibits the same behaviour as when the value is NULL.
This commit makes some visual tweaks to the admin panel plugin list, and introduces functional 'toggle switches' for admins to enable/disable plugins more easily.
Co-authored-by: Jordan Vidrine <jordan@jordanvidrine.com>
We need these Ember framework class overrides to be applied before anything attempts to extend them. An initializer is too late, because initializer files may `import` a module which defines classes which extend the framework classes.
In the past this rarely mattered because Ember's legacy `SomeObject.extend` is quite forgiving - it will respect changes made to `SomeObject` right up until the first `.create()` call. However, the native class syntax (`class extends SomeObject`) will 'freeze' `SomeObject` as soon as the class is defined.
Edit community section button is hidden in secondary/more section. However, when there are no secondary links, then more section is not shown. In that case, we should still display an edit button for admins, so they can edit the section.
This commit introduces the :push_notification event and deprecates :post_notification_alert.
The old :post_notification_alert event was not triggered when pushing chat notifications and did not respect when the user was in "do not disturb" mode.
The new event fixes these issues.
Should fix an iOS regression in f5e8e73. iOS does not pull up the keyboard if the `.focus()` call is delayed by a rendering timeout or an asynchronous ajax call. This PR adds earlier `.focus()` calls if the input element is present.
This was forgotten during the work in 22991bba44
This revealed two differences we were depending on: the merged `actions` hash (re-implemented on the service), and a couple of calls to `composer.send` (now removed)