1. Add `cgi` (ruby terms)
2. Move `strscan`, ~~`ruby2_keywords`, and `openssl`~~ to "reviewed" section (update: two of those are postponed, need to debug stuff in our docker image)
3. Sort
A few specs in `dashboard_controller_spec.rb` set some state in redis but don't clean it up afterwards which causes other specs to fail when they're ran after `dashboard_controller_spec.rb`.
Related commit: 18467d4.
I could repro the same failure by doing: `page.driver.browser.network_conditions = { offline: false, latency: 3000, throughput: 0 }`
Wait shouldn't be needed as we wait for selector, but I couldn't find a better solution on this case for now.
Autocomplete with fadeout was not scrolling on arrow
key press in chat, since the input is treated slightly
differently. We just need to find the fadeout div sooner.
Follow up to 64a7a2aac2
We are all in on system specs, so this commit moves all the chat quoting acceptance tests (some of which have been skipped for a while) into system specs.
The way our markdown raw_html hoisting worked, we only
supported one level of hoisting the HTML content. However
when nesting [chat] transcript BBCode we need to allow
for multiple levels of it. This commit changes opts.discourse.hoisted
to be more constant, and the GUID keys that have the hoisted
content are only deleted by unhoistForCooked rather than
the cook function itself, which prematurely deletes them
when they are needed further down the line.
Honestly seems like it's being in some weird loop for
discourse/hashtag_autocomplete_spec.rb for this:
```ruby
within topic_page.post_by_number(2) do
cooked_hashtags = page.all(".hashtag-cooked", count: 2)
expect(cooked_hashtags[0]["outerHTML"]).to eq(<<~HTML.chomp)
<a class=\"hashtag-cooked\" href=\"#{category.url}\" data-type=\"category\" data-slug=\"cool-cat\"><svg class=\"fa d-icon d-icon-folder svg-icon svg-node\"><use href=\"#folder\"></use></svg><span>Cool Category</span></a>
HTML
expect(cooked_hashtags[1]["outerHTML"]).to eq(<<~HTML.chomp)
<a class=\"hashtag-cooked\" href=\"#{tag.url}\" data-type=\"tag\" data-slug=\"cooltag\"><svg class=\"fa d-icon d-icon-tag svg-icon svg-node\"><use href=\"#tag\"></use></svg><span>cooltag</span></a>
HTML
end
```
I see this many times in the full logs with `SELENIUM_VERBOSE_DRIVER_LOGS=1`:
```
COMMAND FindElements {
"using": "css selector",
"value": "#post_2"
}
Followed by:
COMMAND FindChildElements {
"id": "26dfe542-659b-46cc-ac8c-a6c2d9cbdf0a",
"using": "css selector",
"value": ".hashtag-cooked"
}
```
Over and over and over, there are 58 such occurrences. I am beginning to
think `within` is just poison that should be avoided.
* FIX: Ensure we have a patched version of CGI gem
Per https://github.com/ruby/cgi/pull/29 the current shipped version of
the CGI gem doesn't allow for leading dots in domain names, which breaks
setting cookies like `.example.com`.
* Update Gemfile
Co-authored-by: Jarek Radosz <jradosz@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Jarek Radosz <jradosz@gmail.com>
Featured topics are eventually serialized by `ListableTopicSerializer`
which calls `Topic#image_url` which requires us to preload
`Topic#topic_thumbnails`.
Previously, calling `sign_in` would cause the browser to be redirected to `/`, and would cause the Ember app to boot. We would then call `visit()`, causing the app to boot for a second time.
This commit adds a `redirect=false` option to the `/session/username/become` route. This avoids the unnecessary boot of the app, and leads to significantly faster system spec run times.
In local testing, this takes the full system-spec suite for chat from ~6min to ~4min.
1. `test()` and `render()` instead of `componentTest()`
2. Angle brackets
3. `strictEqual()`/`true()`/`false()` assertions
This removes all remaining uses of `componentTest` from core
Follow up to 8820e9418a,
only the hashtag autocomplete has a fadeout scroll, so
we still need to scroll on the original div in some
cases (e.g. mentions)
Following the removal of user in current_user_membership we were now doing: `User.create(null)`.
I don't think it has any impact but this is just wasteful and could lead to issues if used.
At the time of writing, this is how the `TopicPosterSerializer` looks
like:
```
class TopicPosterSerializer < ApplicationSerializer
attributes :extras, :description
has_one :user, serializer: PosterSerializer
has_one :primary_group, serializer: PrimaryGroupSerializer
has_one :flair_group, serializer: FlairGroupSerializer
end
```
Within `PosterSerializer`, the `primary_group` and `flair_group`
association is requested on the `user` object. However, the associations
have not been loaded on the `user` object at this point leading to the
N+1 queries problem. One may wonder
why the associations have not been loaded when the `TopicPosterSerializer`
has `has_one :primary_group` and `has_one :flair_group`. It turns out that `TopicPoster`
is just a struct containing the `user`, `primary_group` and
`flair_group` objects. The `primary_group` and `flair_group`
ActiveRecord objects are loaded seperately in `UserLookup` and not preloaded when querying for
the users. This is done for performance reason so that we are able to
load the `primary_group` and `flair_group` records in a single query
without duplication.
The client already has all the information about the current user so
there is no need for us to be serializing the current `User` object each
time per channel that is preloaded.
In production, profiling shows that this unneeded serializing
adds a roughly 5% overhead to a request.
We were adding to the resolver's work queue before setting up the `@lookup` and `@parent` information. That could lead to the lookup being performed on the wrong (or `nil`) hostname. This also lead to some flakiness in specs.
This task sometimes fails in CI due to temporary network issues. Retrying twice should help resolve those situations without needing to manually restart the job.