In the past, the result of template compilation would be stored directly in `Ember.TEMPLATES`. Following the move to more modern ember-cli-based compilation, templates are now compiled to es6 modules. To handle forward/backwards compatibility during these changes we had logic in `discourse-boot` which would extract templates from the es6 modules and store them into the legacy-style `Ember.TEMPLATES` object.
This commit removes that shim, and updates our resolver to fetch templates directly from es6 modules. This is closer to how 'vanilla' Ember handles template resolution. We still have a lot of discourse-specific logic, but now it is centralised in one location and should be easier to understand and normalize in future.
This commit should not introduce any behaviour change.
Previously we were trying to handle both async and sync use cases in a single function, but it was confusing to read and led to subtle race conditions. This commit separates the async version into a separate function.
- Count deprecations and print them to the console following QUnit runs
- In GitHub actions, write the same information as a job summary
- Add documentation to `discourse-common/lib/deprecated`
- Introduce `id` and `url` options to `deprecated`
- Introduce `withSilencedDeprecations` helper to allow testing deprecated code paths without making noise in the logs
This was previously reverted in 47035693b7.
This reverts commit 8c48285145. This introduced a bug which could cause sites to break when certain deprecations are hit. We'll re-introduce a fixed version of this change in a future commit.
- Count deprecations and print them to the console following QUnit runs
- In GitHub actions, write the same information as a job summary
- Add documentation to `discourse-common/lib/deprecated`
- Introduce `id` and `url` options to `deprecated`
- Introduce `withSilencedDeprecations` helper to allow testing deprecated code paths without making noise in the logs
This implementation attempts to be more resilient to background tab.
Notes:
- adds support for immediate arg in @debounce decorators
- fixes a bug in discourseDebounce which was not supporting immediate arg in tests
- chat-audio-manager has no tests as audio requires real user interaction and is hard to test reliably
This PR changes the icon for `posted` notification types (these are the notifications that you receive when someone posts in a topic you're watching) from `reply` to `discourse-bell-exclamation`. We're doing this to visually distinguish between the `posted` notifications and `replied` notifications which are the notifications that you receive when someone replies to you directly.
Internal topic: t72835.
Previously we were relying on a highly-customized version of the unmaintained Barber gem for theme template compilation. This commit switches us to use our own DiscourseJsProcessor, which makes use of more modern patterns and will be easier to maintain going forward.
In summary:
- Refactors DiscourseJsProcessor to move multiline JS heredocs into a companion `discourse-js-processor.js` file
- Use MiniRacer's `.call` method to avoid manually escaping JS strings
- Move Theme template AST transformers into DiscourseJsProcessor, and formalise interface for extending RawHandlebars AST transformations
- Update Ember template compilation to use a babel-based approach, just like Ember CLI. This gives each template its own ES6 module rather than directly assigning `Ember.TEMPLATES` values
- Improve testing of template compilation (and move some tests from `theme_javascript_compiler_spec.rb` to `discourse_js_processor_spec.rb`
Also, the change in insert-hyperlink (from `this.linkUrl.indexOf("http") === -1` to `!this.linkUrl.startsWith("http")`) was intentional fix: we don't want to prevent users from looking up topics with http in their titles.
This switches us to use the modern ember resolver package, and re-implements a number of our custom resolution rules within it. The legacy resolver remains for now, and is used as a fallback if the modern resolver is unable to resolve a package. When this happens, a warning will be printed to the console.
Co-authored-by: Peter Wagenet <peter.wagenet@gmail.com>
String.prototype.substr() is deprecated so we replace it with String.prototype.slice() which works similarily but isn't deprecated.
Signed-off-by: Tobias Speicher <rootcommander@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Jarek Radosz <jradosz@gmail.com>
The links returned by post.url and topic.url are relative, but contain
the subdirectory. When getAbsoluteURL is called to construct the
complete share URL, it adds the host and the subdirectory again. As a
result the created URLs contained the subdirectory twice.
This reverts commit 2c7906999a.
The changes break some things in local development (putting JS files
into minified files, not allowing debugger, and others)
Previously only `<div>one top element</div>` was allowed because we use `firstChild` instead of `children`.
We also want `<div>one</div><div>two</div>` to work with this method.
This reverts commit ea84a82f77.
This is causing problems with `/theme-qunit` on legacy, non-ember-cli production sites. Reverting while we work on a fix
This is quite complex as it means that in production we have to build
Ember CLI test files and allow them to be used by our Rails application.
There is a fair bit of glue we can remove in the future once we move to
Ember CLI completely.
Time spent in the 'find module with suffix' portion of our `customResolve` function were adding up to around 100ms-150ms when booting the app. This time is spread over 150+ calls, so it's not immediately obvious in flamegraphs.
This commit implements a (reversed) [Trie](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trie) which enables fast suffix-based lookups on a list of strings.
In my tests, this requires < 5ms to initialize, and brings the cumulative 'find module with suffix' time down to `< 5ms`. This corresponds to a ~100ms improvement in LCP metrics in my browser.
The only behavior change is to remove support for module filenames which are **not** dasherized. I haven't found any core/theme/plugin modules which are not dasherized in their filenames.
Before this fix if your forum was set up with a subfolder and you
clicked on a link to a different subfolder it would not work. For
example:
subfolder: /cool
link is: /about-us
Previously it would try to resolve /about-us as /cool/about-us. With
this fix it redirects to /about-us correctly.
There are a lot of little fixes to tests here, but the biggest issue was
too much recursion because we kept replacing the helpers over and over
again. I assume Chrome has tail recursion or something to speed this up
but Firefox hated it.
Otherwise, we can't rely on the order of attributes in rendered HTML so
I simplified most of those tests to just look for key strings in the
HTML that are rendered.
This is not a security issue because regular users are not allowed to insert FA icons anywhere in the app. Admins can insert icons via custom badges, but they do have the ability to create themes with JS.
* FIX: Subfolder replace should only affect URL prefix
Issue was reported in https://meta.discourse.org/t/-/179504
* DEV: Test subfolder handling in get-url when called twice on the same path
The bug was mentioned on [meta](https://meta.discourse.org/t/two-bugs-with-usernames-starting-with-subfolder-name/169505)
When discourse is installed on `/subfolder` and username is containing subfolder name like for example `subfolderadmin` - user URLs were incorrect.
Instead of having `/subfolder/u/subfolderadmin/summary/` we were leading to `/subfolder/uadmin/summary`.
The reason for that was incorrect check in `getUrl` helper:
```javascript
const found = url.indexOf(baseUri);
if (found >= 0 && found < 3) {
return url;
}
return baseUri + url;
```
baseUri is `/subfolder`, url is `/u/subfolderadmin` and indexOf returned position which in the end returned incorrect URL.
I think that we should check if the URL starts with baseUri and not if contains baseUri.