Sometimes plugins need to have additional data or options available
when rendering custom markdown features/rules that are not available
on the default opts.discourse object. These additional options should
be namespaced to the plugin adding them.
```
Site.markdown_additional_options["chat"] = { limited_pretty_text_markdown_rules: [] }
```
These are passed down to markdown rules on opts.discourse.additionalOptions.
The main motivation for adding this is the chat plugin, which currently stores
chat_pretty_text_features and chat_pretty_text_markdown_rules on
the Site object via additions to the serializer, and the Site object is
not accessible to import via markdown rules (either through
Site.current() or through container.lookup). So, to have this working
for both front + backend code, we need to attach these additional options
from the Site object onto the markdown options object.
This reverts commit f43bba8d59.
Adding randomness has introduced a lot of flakiness in our ember-cli tests. We should fix those issues at the source. However, given the upcoming stable release, this randomness has been reverted so that the stable release includes a stable test suite. Having a stable test suite on stable will make backporting future commits much easier.
When staff visits the user profile of another user, the `email` field
in the model is empty. In this case, staff cannot send the reset email
password because nothing is passed in the `login` field.
This commit changes the behavior for staff users to allow resetting
password by username instead.
The topic ID portion of the topic URL is optional in Discourse as long as the topic slug is unique across the site. If you navigate to a topic without the ID in the URL, Discourse will redirect you to the canonical version of the URL that includes the ID.
However, we have a now regression where the client app doesn't correctly handle ID-less topic URLs displays an error message when the user clicks on such URL. The regression was introduced b537d591b3 when we switched from `DiscourseURL.routeTo` to using Ember's router to perform the redirecting to the canonical version of the URL, but the problem is that the canonical version comes from the server and it contains the hostname which the Ember router doesn't understand because it expects a relative URL.
This PR fixes the problem by constructing a relative URL that contains the topic slug and ID and passing that to the Ember route.
Removes one layer of indirection in the tests. `emoji-uploader`'s
`uploadDone` can call the test handler directly without going through
an additional action method.
It does this by creating a new initializer that runs every time the app
is booted to track the current test. Then after each test, we see if the
app needs to be torn down.
This creates a helper function with all the cleanup tasks we need to do
after tests, then makes sure to call it after tests that previously
weren't.
This fixes a lot of flakey tests.
Testing this is kinda complicated ATM (especially mobile template with hbr) , this is a component we should definitely aim to test very extensively when we move away from hbr templates.
The UI used to request a password reset by username when the user was
logged in. This did not work when hide_email_already_taken site setting
was enabled, which disables the lookup-by-username functionality.
This commit also introduces a check to ensure that the parameter is an
email when hide_email_already_taken is enabled as the single allowed
type is email (no usernames are allowed).
* FIX: Mark invites flash messages as HTML safe.
This change should be safe as all user inputs included in the errors are sanitized before sending it back to the client.
Context: https://meta.discourse.org/t/html-tags-are-explicit-after-latest-update/214220
* If somebody adds a new error message that includes user input and doesn't sanitize it, using html-safe suddenly becomes unsafe again. As an extra layer of protection, we make the client sanitize the error message received from the backend.
* Escape user input instead of sanitizing
If themes/plugins introduce a sidebar on the left of the screen, the quote button would sometimes be positioned underneath. This commit ensures that the positioning logic keeps the floating buttons within the width of `.topic-area`
Some safari-specific logic was inadvertently removed during the refactoring in b2d45c59. This commit restores it. The logic requires some state, so the getRangeBoundaryRect helper has to be moved back into the Component class. The functional change in this commit is the three lines enclosed by `if (this.capabilities.isSafari) {`.
As part of /t/10298, try to remove the first flaky test in the list.
One finding is that the /t/280 topic has a very long post stream, so that may have caused some delay when rendering the topic. One way is to wait for the first expected element to load, but that doesn't scale well given how many waits we will need to add. So I chose to render a shorter topic instead.
Previously we were adding `/assets/discourse/tests/core_plugin_tests.js` to the test html all the time. This works in development mode, but fails silently when using testem via the `ember test` CLI, because there is no proxy running.
This commit makes a few changes to fix this, and make it more useful:
- Only renders the plugin `<script>` when in development mode, or when `LOAD_PLUGINS=1` (matching core's behavior)
- Only loads plugin translations based on the same logic
- When running via testem, and the above conditions are met, testem is configured to proxy `core_plugin_tests.js` through to a rails server. (port based on the `UNICORN_PORT` env variable)
- Adds a descriptive error if the plugin `<script>` fails to load. This can happen if the rails server hasn't been started
- Updates the logic for testem browsers. Ember CLI always launches testem in "CI" mode, and we don't really want 3 browsers opening by default. Our CI explicitly specifies the 3 browsers at runtime
This expands cbf99f48 to apply to all mobile devices. It removes the old mobile positioning logic entirely, refactors the new system a little for robustness and readability, and removes some JQuery.
On Andoid, we also need to avoid the start selection handle. Therefore the logic for locating selection boundaries is abstracted into a function for easier re-use.