This change only applies when uppy is calling the media-optimization-worker.
Since the old way of calling the worker via jQuery file uploader will
be removed soon, there is no point coming up with some random string
to use in place of the file name for the promise resolvers there, we
can live with this for now.
Adds uppy upload functionality behind a
enable_experimental_composer_uploader site setting (default false,
and hidden).
When enabled this site setting will make the composer-editor-uppy
component be used within composer.hbs, which in turn points to
a ComposerUploadUppy mixin which overrides the relevant
functions from ComposerUpload. This uppy uploader has parity
with all the features of jQuery file uploader in the original
composer-editor, including:
progress tracking
error handling
number of files validation
pasting files
dragging and dropping files
updating upload placeholders
upload markdown resolvers
processing actions (the only one we have so far is the media optimization
worker by falco, this works)
cancelling uploads
For now all uploads still go via the /uploads.json endpoint, direct
S3 support will be added later.
Also included in this PR are some changes to the media optimization
service, to support uppy's different file data structures, and also
to make the promise tracking and resolving more robust. Currently
it uses the file name to track promises, we can switch to something
more unique later if needed.
Does not include custom upload handlers, that will come
in a later PR, it is a tricky problem to handle.
Also, this new functionality will not be used in encrypted PMs because
encrypted PM uploads rely on custom upload handlers.
On iOS 15 beta, if you select the camera app when uploading an image
and try to upload a freshly taken picture, from the second picture
onwards the resize WASM operation will return an array filled with
zeroes.
Since every 4th byte is alpha, and at this step we are only dealing with
non-transparent images this a O(1) way to detect that the bug was hit.
(On normal images, all 4th bytes are 255 at this point)
Also adds a "catch-all" when the original image became too small to try
to accomodate other bugs of the same type. By default we only trigger
this whole operation on images over 1MB, so if the end result is <20KB
something weird did happen. Throwing here will let the upload continue
using the original file, so nothing is lost and the user can continue.
There are some hard limits in browser Canvas implementations, that will
throw a runtime exception when crossed. Since those limits are platform
dependent, the best we can do is catch it and back off from trying to
optimize a problematic file.
For example, a 60MB PNG can be processed fine by Chrome but Firefox will
fail trying to extract the ImageData from the CanvasRenderingContext2D
with NS_ERROR_FAILURE.
Also cleans up the media-optimization-utils and add post-resize size logs
To prevent opaque cache files, now all the CDN files will be requested in 'cors' mode if the cdn_cors_enabled global setting is enabled. Before enabling the setting, should enable the cors in the CDN server by adding the response header `access-control-allow-origin: *` or `access-control-allow-origin: https://discourse.example.com.`
And other external file requests other than CDN will not be cached if the response type is opaque.
This reverts commit e3de45359f.
We need to improve out strategy by adding a cache breaker with this change ... some assets on CDNs and clients may have incorrect CORS headers which can cause stuff to break.
The poll breakdown modal replaces the grouped pie charts feature.
Includes:
* MODAL: Untangle `onSelectPanel`
Previously modal-tab component would call on click the onSelectPanel callback with itself (modal-tab) as `this` which severely limited its usefulness. Now showModal binds the callback to its controller.
"The PR includes a fix/change to d-modal (b7f6ec6) that hasn't been extracted to a separate PR because it's not currently possible to test a change like this in abstract, i.e. with dynamically created controllers/components in tests. The percentage/count toggle test for the poll breakdown feature is essentially a test for that d-modal modification."
This adds support for a `<d-topics-list>` tag you can embed in your site
that will be rendered as a list of discourse topics. Any attributes on
the tag will be passed as filters. For example:
`<d-topics-list discourse-url="URL" category="1234">` will filter to category 1234.
To use this feature, enable the `embed topics list` site setting. Then
on the site you want to embed, include the following javascript:
`<script
src="http://URL/javascripts/embed-topics.js"></script>`
Where `URL` is your discourse forum's URL.
Then include the `<d-topics-list discourse-url="URL">` tag in your HTML document and it will
be replaced with the list of topics.
This commit adds a new property "discourseReferrerPolicy" to the
set of supported configuration properties for the comment embed
script. If provided the value will be used to set the "referrerPolicy"
attribute on the iframe created to display the comments. This in turn
will allow embedding pages to define a more lenient referer policy on
the embed iframe for pages whose default policy is so strict it
keeps the comment embed from working.
Example:
* Setup:
* Discourse hosted at discourse.example.com
* Comments embedded at example.com
* Referrer-Policy at example.com set to 'same-origin'
* Without this commit:
* Loading the comments fails due to the referer being empty
* With this commit and no adjusted configuration:
* Loading the comments fails due to the referer being empty
(= same behaviour as without the commit)
* With this commit and DiscourseEmbed.discourseReferrerPolicy =
'no-referrer-when-downgrade' as additional configuration:
* Loading the comments succeeds
Note that this change is of special interest for embedding pages
wanting to restrict data flows under the terms of the GDPR since
it allows selectively whitelisting comment embeds while preventing
referer leaking by default.
This is the first iteration of an effort towards making a very good dashboard.
Until we feel confident this is good, this dashboard will only be accessible through /admin/dashboard_next
This feature introduces the concept of themes. Themes are an evolution
of site customizations.
Themes introduce two very big conceptual changes:
- A theme may include other "child themes", children can include grand
children and so on.
- A theme may specify a color scheme
The change does away with the idea of "enabled" color schemes.
It also adds a bunch of big niceties like
- You can source a theme from a git repo
- History for themes is much improved
- You can only have a single enabled theme. Themes can be selected by
users, if you opt for it.
On a technical level this change comes with a whole bunch of goodies
- All CSS is now compiled using a custom pipeline that uses libsass
see /lib/stylesheet
- There is a single pipeline for css compilation (in the past we used
one for customizations and another one for the rest of the app
- The stylesheet pipeline is now divorced of sprockets, there is no
reliance on sprockets for CSS bundling
- CSS is generated with source maps everywhere (including themes) this
makes debugging much easier
- Our "live reloader" is smarter and avoid a flash of unstyled content
we run a file watcher in "puma" in dev so you no longer need to run
rake autospec to watch for CSS changes