Admins can now edit translations in different languages without having to change their locale. We display a warning when there's a fallback language set.
A while ago we made a change to display a warning after installing a theme component when the admin tries to leave the page without adding the new installed component to any themes (see 5e29ae3ef5).
However there is an edge case that we forgot to address, and that's when an admin installs a component and then immediately opens the install modal again to install another one which can result in the warning being shown twice at the same time.
This PR prevents that by showing the warning when opening the install modal if the conditions are met (new component and not added to any themes) instead of showing it after installing the second component.
Installing multiple copies of the same theme/component is possible, but you rarely need to actually have multiple copies installed. We've seen many times new admins installing duplicates of components because they were unaware it was already installed. This PR makes the theme installer modal loop through the existing themes when you click on 'install', and if there is a theme with a URL that matches the URL you entered, a warning will show up and you will need to click 'install' again to proceed.
We want to wrap the `Ember.run.debounce` function and internally call `Ember.run` instead when running tests.
This commit changes discourseDebounce to work the same way as `Ember.run.debounce`.
Now that `discourseDebounce` works exactly like `Ember.run.debounce`, let's replace it and only use `DiscourseDebounce` from now on.
Move debounce to discourse-common to be able to reuse it in different bundles
Keep old debounce file for backwards-compatibility
Being that system badges ship with every instance of Discourse, we've opted to define the name, description, and long description in our locales files to promote translation into other languages. When an admin visited the overview page of a system badge in their admin panel, they were met with disabled inputs for these text properties. The problem is that we failed to educate the admin that the text needs to be managed via the site text customization settings.
This change adds a small "Customize Text" link under theses inputs that takes the admin to the specific site text customization where they can make desired changes.
Force pushing a commit to a theme repository used to break the updater,
because the system was not able to count the commits behind the old and
new version. This operation failed because a force push deleted the old
commits.
The user was prompted with a simple "500 server error" message.
Themes marked for auto update will be automatically updated when
Discourse is updated. This is triggered by discourse_docker or
docker_manager running Rake task 'themes:update'.
Allowing the editing of remote themes has been something Discourse has advised against for some time. This commit removes the ability to edit or upload files to remote themes from Admin > Customize to enforce the recommended practice.
This makes it much easier to check the staff action logs for a specific site setting. A small history icon will appear when hovering over a site setting name. On click, you will be taken to the pre-filtered staff action log for the site setting.
Users could be silenced or suspended by two staff members at the same time and
would not be aware of it. This commit shows an error message if another penalty
has been applied.
We were trying to observe a non-ember object which is undefined
behavior and was leaking to odd bugs. This replaces the `filter` object
with an Ember Object and things seem to work.
Prior to this fix, weekly could be 8 days and we could have differences between period chooser text and actual results in the chart.
A good followup to this PR would be to add custom date ranges in period-chooser component.