While it's generally not recommended from a UX perspective, the DModal system is intended to allow multiple modals to be rendered simultaneously when using the declarative API. This wasn't working because `{{#in-element` was configured to replace the content of the container rather than append a new modal.
This commit fixes that and adds a test for the functionality.
```
deprecate-shim.js:33 DEPRECATION: You set the 'hasSavedVote' property on a {{hash}} object. Setting properties on objects generated by {{hash}} is deprecated. Please update to use an object created with a tracked property or getter, or with a custom helper. [deprecation id: setting-on-hash]
```
- do not prevent the event (it was a violation anyways as the touchstart is passive)
- waits for at least 25px horizontal move before showing the remove action, it avoids showing the remove while scrolling and moving a little bit horizontally
On mobile swiping a channel row will now show a "Remove" option. Holding this to the end will now remove this row from your list of followed direct message channels.
Co-authored-by: chapoi <101828855+chapoi@users.noreply.github.com>
This comment isn't necessarily on a line by itself, so we need to remove the `^` from the regex. This will fix `EMBER_ENV=development bin/rake assets:precompile`
By default this is linked to the `tests` boolean, which we disabled for Embroider builds in 96674859. We want deprecation-workflow features to be available in production builds, so let's enable it unconditionally.
Introduce max length on text columns for description and slug fields within chat.
At a later date we will probably want to convert these text columns to string/varchar through a migration, but for now this change introduces a limit within the active record model.
Until now, we have allowed testing themes in production environments via `/theme-qunit`. This was made possible by hacking the ember-cli build so that it would create the `tests.js` bundle in production. However, this is fundamentally problematic because a number of test-specific things are still optimized out of the Ember build in production mode. It also makes asset compilation significantly slower, and makes it more difficult for us to update our build pipeline (e.g. to introduce Embroider).
This commit removes the ability to run qunit tests in production builds of the JS app when the Embdroider flag is enabled. If a production instance of Discourse exists exclusively for the development of themes (e.g. discourse.theme-creator.io) then they can add `EMBER_ENV: development` to their `app.yml` file. This will build the entire app in development mode, and has a significant performance impact. This must not be used for real production sites.
This commit also refactors many of the request specs into system specs. This means that the tests are guaranteed to have Ember assets built, and is also a better end-to-end test than simply checking for the presence of certain `<script>` tags in the HTML.
This method is used by assets:precompile to decide whether to apply `terser` to a file. Embroider chunks do not necessarily start with `chunk.`, and so they were incorrectly being re-terser'd by our assets:precompile task. This is inefficient, and also led to broken sourcemaps on some assets.
What motivated this change?
A core migration contains chat related code and this should not be the
case since chat related migration code should live in the chat plugin.
What does this change do?
This change removes the migration which was introduced to keep existing
sites on the legacy navigation menu as well as keep chat disabled when
the defaults for the `navigation_menu` and `chat_enabled` site settings
were flipped. Since this migration doesn't apply to new sites and
the migration has already been introduced for 9 months, it is safe for
us to remove it.
Why this change?
When using a remote capybara driver configured through the
`CAPYBARA_REMOTE_DRIVER_URL` env, webmock is thinking that is an
external request and blocking it. As such, we need to set the URL to the
allowlist for webmock.
Why this change?
When running in a Docker container, we want to bind the Rails server
started by Capybara to 0.0.0.0 instead of localhost. This is done via
the `server_host` config for Capybara which can now be configured via
the `CAPYBARA_SERVER_HOST` env.
This is a follow up to 9caba30d5c
In that commit, we were migrating the database but we didn't actually
ensure that the database was created and that plugins were updated
before the databases were migrated.
Mixins are considered deprecated by Ember, and cannot be applied to modern framework objects. Also, the coupling they introduce can make things very difficult to refactor.
This commit takes the state/logic from BulkTopicSelection and turns it into a helper object. This avoids it polluting any controllers/components its included in.
In future, the entire helper object can be passed down to child components so that they don't need to lookup controllers using the resolver. Those kinds of changes would involve changing some very heavily-overridden templates, so they are not included in this PR. It will likely be done as part of the larger refactor in https://github.com/discourse/discourse/pull/22622.
- Add data-embroider-ignore to all script tags which are not currently being compiled by embroider
- Ensure all remaining script tags are wrapped in `<discourse-chunked-script>` so that Rails will follow any renames which Embroider makes (e.g. when it adds fingerprints to filenames)
Discourse core now builds and runs with Embroider! This commit adds
the Embroider-based build pipeline (`USE_EMBROIDER=1`) and start
testing it on CI.
The new pipeline uses Embroider's compat mode + webpack bundler to
build discourse code, and leave everything else (admin, wizard,
markdown-it, plugins, etc) exactly the same using the existing
Broccoli-based build as external bundles (<script> tags), passed
to the build as `extraPublicTress` (which just means they get
placed in the `/public` folder).
At runtime, these "external" bundles are glued back together with
`loader.js`. Specifically, the external bundles are compiled as
AMD modules (just as they were before) and registered with the
global `loader.js` instance. They expect their `import`s (outside
of whatever is included in the bundle) to be already available in
the `loader.js` runtime registry.
In the classic build, _every_ module gets compiled into AMD and
gets added to the `loader.js` runtime registry. In Embroider,
the goal is to do this as little as possible, to give the bundler
more flexibility to optimize modules, or omit them entirely if it
is confident that the module is unused (i.e. tree-shaking).
Even in the most compatible mode, there are cases where Embroider
is confident enough to omit modules in the runtime `loader.js`
registry (notably, "auto-imported" non-addon NPM packages). So we
have to be mindful of that an manage those dependencies ourselves,
as seen in #22703.
In the longer term, we will look into using modern features (such
as `import()`) to express these inter-dependencies.
This will only be behind a flag for a short period of time while we
perform some final testing. Within the next few weeks, we intend
to enable by default and remove the flag.
---------
Co-authored-by: David Taylor <david@taylorhq.com>