This patch removes some of our freedom patches that have been deprecated
for some time now.
Some of them have been updated so we’re not shipping code based on an
old version of Rails.
This allows text editors to use correct syntax coloring for the heredoc sections.
Heredoc tag names we use:
languages: SQL, JS, RUBY, LUA, HTML, CSS, SCSS, SH, HBS, XML, YAML/YML, MF, ICS
other: MD, TEXT/TXT, RAW, EMAIL
* FEATURE: RS512, RS384 and RS256 COSE algorithms
These algorithms are not implemented by cose-ruby, but used in the web
authentication API and were marked as supported.
* FEATURE: Use all algorithms supported by cose-ruby
Previously only a subset of the algorithms were allowed.
This adapter ensures that MiniSql locks the ActiveRecord mutex before using the raw PG connection. This ensures that multiple threads will not attempt to use the same connection simultaneously.
This commit also removes the schema_cache_concurrency freedom-patch, which is no longer required now that cross-thread connection use is controlled by the mutex.
For the original root cause of this issue, see https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/38577
Having to load `ip_addr` is confusing especially when that file exists
to monkey patch Ruby's `IpAddr` class. Moving it to our freedom patches
folder which is automatically loaded on initialization.
As an example, the lookup order for German was:
1. override for de
2. override for en
3. value from de
4. value from en
After this change the lookup order is the same as on the client:
1. override for de
2. value from de
3. override for en
4. value from en
see /t/16381
The seed-fu gem resets the sequence on all the tables it touches. In some situations, this can cause primary keys to be re-used. This commit introduces a freedom patch which ensures seed-fu only touches the sequence when it is less than the id of one of the seeded records.
Fixes our backend spec suite in GitHub Actions CI. For more information about the Docker issue see: https://github.com/docker/for-linux/issues/1015
(It's possible that error could also happen in dev/production, though thankfully that hasn't happened yet afaik)
See https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/42368
The impact is not quantifiable at the time of this writing but
prelimary investigation shows that `SELECT 1` accounts for 0.09 of CPU
time on a database. Note that Discourse runs thousands of databases so
the small impact may be amplified by the large number of databases that
we run.
Over the years we accrued many spelling mistakes in the code base.
This PR attempts to fix spelling mistakes and typos in all areas of the code that are extremely safe to change
- comments
- test descriptions
- other low risk areas
Sometimes, parts of the application pass in the locale as a string, not a symbol. This was causing the translate_accelerator to cache two versions of the locale separately: one cache for the symbol version, and one cache for the string version. For example, in a running production process:
```
irb(main):001:0> I18n.instance_variable_get(:@loaded_locales)
=> [:en, "en"]
```
This commit ensures the `locale` key is always converted to a symbol, and adds a spec to ensure the same locale cannot appear twice in `@loaded_locales`
Rails 6.1.3.1 deprecates a few API and has some internal changes that break our tests suite, so this commit fixes all the deprecations and errors and now Discourse should be fully compatible with Rails 6.1.3.1. We also have a new release of the rails_failover gem that's compatible with Rails 6.1.3.1.
Get rid of deprecation related to Zeitwerk autoloader.
Original PR was reverted because of multisite bug #12381 - thank you @davidtaylorhq for fixing it.
I added the last commit to fix that multisite problem.
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.
When plugin spec is evaluated for the first time, it took 30 seconds to run:
```
rm -rf tmp/* && LOAD_PLUGINS=1 be rspec ./plugins/discourse-solved/spec/requests/topics_controller_spec.rb
```
Applying sprocket patch in test environment solves that issue
This reverts commit 20780a1eee.
* SECURITY: re-adds accidentally reverted commit:
03d26cd6: ensure embed_url contains valid http(s) uri
* when the merge commit e62a85cf was reverted, git chose the 2660c2e2 parent to land on
instead of the 03d26cd6 parent (which contains security fixes)
* Remove Handlebars.SafeString usage
* DEV: Support for `import Handlebars from 'handlebars'`;
* FIX: Sprockets was broken when `node_modules` was present
By default the old version of sprockets looks for application.js
anywhere, including in a node_modules folder if this exists
(which it will when we move to Ember CLI.)
This is to help with the migration to Ember CLI. In the current running
version of Discourse everything should be the same as before, just with
a few extra files that are not used. However, using Ember CLI this can
be installed as an Ember addon.
Co-Authored-By: Jarek Radosz <jradosz@gmail.com>
This reverts commit 8b46f14744.
It corrects the reason for the revert:
We rely on SafeMigrate existing cause we call it from migrations,
Zeitwerk will autoload it.
Instead of previous pattern we explicitly bypass all the hacks in
production mode.
We need to disable SafeMigrate cause it is not thread safe.
A thread safe implementation is possible but not worth the effort,
we catch the issues in dev and test.
SafeMigrate outputs text when we detect attempts to unsafely drop tables
and columns
It is unfortunately not thread safe
This is not needed in production as we would have already caught it by then
in our test suite.