When looking for the first paragraph with content in a post,
it was matching the lightboxed image paragraph as "<p></p>".
Fix that and other potential empty paragraphs with the
p:not(:empty) selector.
Add a new selector to find the image links in lightboxed
images as valid content for emails.
This commit also fixes a deprecation warning as the previous component was overriding a computed property from the group model.
Finally a test has been added as this is the only place where we use list-setting outside of the settings, this was highly subject to regressions.
* Also fixes an issue where if webp was a downloaded hotlinked
image and then secure + sent in an email, it was not being
redacted because webp was not a supported media format in
FileHelper
* Webp originally removed as an image format in
https://github.com/discourse/discourse/pull/6377
and there was a spec to make sure a .bin webp
file did not get renamed from its type to webp.
However we want to support webp images now to make
sure they are properly redacted if secure media is
on, so change the example in the spec to use tiff,
another banned format, instead
* Attachments (non media files) were being marked as secure if just
SiteSetting.prevent_anons_from_downloading_files was enabled. this
was not correct as nothing should be marked as actually "secure" in
the DB without that site setting enabled
* Also add a proper standalone spec file for the upload security class
This is because the TOTP gem identifies as a colon as an addressable
protocol. The solution for now is to remove the colon in the issuer
name.
Changing the issuer changes the token values, but now it was completely
broken for colons so this should not be breaking anyone new.
d7d4612b2d removed the duplicate call to initState(). However, we are relying on a side effect of the duplicate call for subfolder sites to function correctly when accessed without a trailing slash. To avoid a large refactor before the stable release, this commit restores the old behavior.
Long term we should look at migrating to Ember's built-in location library, rather than maintaining our own (very similar) version
https://github.com/emberjs/ember.js/blob/master/packages/%40ember/-internals/routing/lib/location/history_location.ts
Follows up #64b35120
This also corrects it so bytes used for internal storage counts all the space
used, previously it was only counting uploads not optimized images.
Additionally we now correctly count storage for optimized images.
A follow-up correction to this change https://github.com/discourse/discourse/pull/9001.
When admin changes staff email still enforce old email confirm. Only allow auto-confirm of a new email by admin IF the target user is not also an admin. If an admin gets locked out of their email the site admin can use the rails console to solve the issue in a pinch.
When admin changes a user's email from the preferences page of that user:
* The user will not be sent an email to confirm that their
email is changing. They will be sent a reset password email
so they can set the password for their account at the new
email address.
* The user will still be sent an email to their old email to inform
them that it was changed.
* Admin and staff users still need to follow the same old + new
confirm process, as do users changing their own email.
A single SchemaCache instance is maintained by the connection pool, and made available via a schema_cache method on each connection. When the SchemaCache instance is fetched from the pool, its internal connection reference is updated to equal the requesting connection. However, since there is only one instance of SchemaCache, this internal connection reference is updated everywhere, and can ultimately result in multiple threads accessing the same database connection. In Discourse, this could result in Sidekiq jobs getting 'stuck' in database connections.
This patch modifies SchemaCache so that it caches the internal connection on a per-thread basis
Co-authored-by: Sam Saffron <sam.saffron@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Matt Palmer <mpalmer@hezmatt.org>
Tracking down concurrency issues from backtraces and manual repros is a fraught process.
Sometimes you've just got to get your hands dirty and do a live debug.