- Ensure it works with prefixed S3 buckets
- Perform a sanity check that all current assets are present on S3 before starting deletion
- Remove the lifecycle rule configuration and delete expired assets immediately. This task should be run post-deploy anyway, so adding a 10-day window is not required
Also adds end to end system tests to ensure navigation scenarios are working correctly. This separation will make it easier to implement state in/out from chat.
Meta topic: https://meta.discourse.org/t/meta-theme-color-is-not-respecting-current-color-scheme/239815
Currently, the dark mode theme-color `<meta>` tag doesn't apply because the light mode tag has `media="all"`. This means that the dark mode `<meta>` tag with `media="(prefers-color-scheme: dark)"` won't override it. This PR updates the light mode tag to `media="(prefers-color-scheme: light)"` if `dark_scheme_id` is defined and leaves it as `media="all"` otherwise.
Since the system user is a regular user, it can have its
`allow_private_messages` user option turned off, which
with our current `can_send_private_message?(Discourse.system_user)`
check inside the CurrentUserSerializer, will prevent any
user from sending messages in the UI if the system user is not
accepting PMs.
This commit adds a new `can_send_private_messages?` method to
the Guardian, which can be used in serializers and not depend
on the system user. When the user actually sends a message
we still rely on the old `can_send_private_message?(target)`
call to see if they are allowed to send the message to the target.
The new method is just to say they can "generally" send
private messages.
This commit adds last_editor_id to ChatMessage for parity with Post in
core, as well as adding user_id to the ChatMessageRevision record since
we need to know who is making edits and revisions to messages, in case
in future we want to allow more than just the current user to edit chat
messages. The backfill for data here simply uses the record's creating
user ID, but in future if we allow other people to edit the messages it
will use their ID.
Previously, we didn't have a site-wide setting to set the default behavior for user profile visibility and user presence features. But we already have a user preference for that.
Repro steps:
- enable permanent deletes (via hidden site setting)
- set `min_topic_views_for_delete_confirm` to 0
When permanently deleting, the delete confirm modal is shown (for a
second time) and it doesn't pass the `force_destroy` parameter to the
request and the action results in a 422 error (i.e. can't perma-delete).
This change skips showing the confirm modal when perma-deleting given
that it has already been show on the first delete action.
This task is supposed to skip uploading if the asset is already present in S3. However, when a bucket 'folder path' was configured, this logic was broken and so the assets would be re-uploaded every time.
This commit fixes that logic to include the bucket 'folder path' in the check
Passing a string action name to `DButton` causes it to use `sendAction`, which is deprecated and will be removed in Ember 4.x. The action helper converts a string to a closure action.
This also fixes compatibility with https://github.com/discourse/discourse/pull/17767
There are two possible ordering for categories shown in sidebar with
this commit.
When the `fixed_category_positions` site setting is enabled, the
categories are ordered based on `Category#position` which is a configurable
option by the user. When said site setting is disabled, the categories
are ordered based on `Category#name`.
The categories in Sidebar are also sorted in such a way where child
categories are always ordered right after their parents. When multiple
child categories are present, the child categories are ordered based on
the ordering described above.
This should fix fetching from gitlab.
In order to get SSRF protection, we had to prevent redirects when cloning via git, but some repos are behind redirects and we want to support those too. We use `FinalDestination` before cloning to try to simulate git with redirects, but this isn't quite how git works, so there's some discrepancies between our SSRF protected cloning behavior and normal git behavior that I'm trying to work around.
This is temporary fix. It would be better to use `FinalDestination` to simulate the first request that git makes. I aim to make it work like that in the not too distant future, but this is better for now.
Doing DOM operations in finally would cause them to happen even when the request was a failure. Consequence of these DOM operations would be new request, which would also end up in a 404, and so on.
This commit simply moves the DOM operations in the then block where it should be safe to make.
This is a followup of the previous refactor where we created two new
models to handle all the dedicated logic that was present in the
`ChatChannel` model.
For the sake of consistency, `DMChannel` has been renamed to
`DirectMessageChannel` and the previous `DirectMessageChannel` model is
now named `DirectMessage`. This should help reasoning about direct
messages.
Previously these were set to expire after 9999 days (27 years). This commit updates them to last 1 year, and to automatically be extended on every user visit.