Currently in composer preview, if the image scale buttons are inside a `<a>` link then it redirects to the `href` location after the image scaling task.
* Do not autofocus name input on mobile
* Improve code for formatted reminder type times to not be computed, so the modal times update correctly
* Change wording of "Next Monday" to "Monday" for all days except when today is Monday
Category and tag hashtags used to be handled differently even though
most of the code was very similar. This design was the root cause of
multiple issues related to hashtags.
This commit reduces the number of requests (just one and debounced
better), removes the use of CSS classes which marked resolved hashtags,
simplifies a lot of the code as there is a single source of truth and
previous race condition fixes are now useless.
It also includes a very minor security fix which let unauthorized users
to guess hidden tags.
* Remove unused Discourse.SiteSettings
* Remove `Discourse.SiteSettings` from many tests
* REFACTOR: `lib:formatter` was using a lot of leaky state
* Remove more `Discourse.SiteSettings` from tests
* More SiteSettings removed from tests
* FIX: Fix race condition when resolving tag and category hashtags
If the category hashtags were resolved first and then tag hashtags, then
the tags would overwrite the categories. Similarly, if the category
hashtags were resolved last it would overwrite even hashtags which ended
with '::tag'.
* DEV: Add test
* DEV: Fix test
This reverts commit 20780a1eee.
* SECURITY: re-adds accidentally reverted commit:
03d26cd6: ensure embed_url contains valid http(s) uri
* when the merge commit e62a85cf was reverted, git chose the 2660c2e2 parent to land on
instead of the 03d26cd6 parent (which contains security fixes)
In my original PR (#9647) I attempted to solve the problem of
using fake timers in acceptance tests by using the new sinon
clock.tickAsync methods. This way of doing things seems to be flawed,
however, as we are getting random spec timeouts starting with the
bookmark acceptance test where this was introduced.
I think I was going about things the wrong way. This commit introduces
a new function with callback (acceptanceUseFakeClock) that sets up the
fake timers using sinon.useFakeTimers with the shouldAdvanceTime option
set to true. This advances time at a normal rate of 20ms per tick, which
means that we are not freezing any time and existing setTimeout funcs.
should proceed as normal. Along with this the callback passed will
run clock.reset() at the end to make sure all the timers are cleaned
up correctly.
There is an optional third parameter after the callback, which is the
timezone. If the user is logged in for the acceptance test then their
timezone is used, otherwise we default to America/Denver.
Usage is (inside an acceptance test):
```
test("Name of the test", async assert => {
// first parameter is time to start fake clock at
await acceptanceUseFakeClock("2020-05-04T13:00:00", async () => {
// test code goes here e.g. await visit("/url");
});
});
```
* This is to prevent user's timezones being changed accidentally
e.g. by admin looking at a user
* This problem only occurred via the user card, however the user card
was still calling userTimezone even if the setting to display user
time in card was disabled
There were two constants here, `INLINE_ONEBOX_LOADING_CSS_CLASS` and
`INLINE_ONEBOX_CSS_CLASS` that were both longer than the strings they
were DRYing up: `inline-onebox-loading` and `inline-onebox`
I normally appreciate constants, but in this case it meant that we had
a lot of JS imports resulting in many more lines of code (and CPU cycles
spent figuring them out.)
It also meant we had an `.erb` file and had to invoke Ruby to create the
JS file, which meant the app was harder to port to Ember CLI.
I removed the constants. It's less DRY but faster and simpler, and
arguably the loss of DRYness is not significant as you can still search
for the `inline-onebox-loading` and `inline-onebox` strings easily if
you are refactoring.