This adds an optional ENV variable, `EMBER_CLI_PROD_ASSETS`. If truthy,
compiling production assets will be done via Ember CLI and will replace
the assets Rails would otherwise use.
We are still on a version of pretender since 2017
https://github.com/pretenderjs/pretender/releases/tag/v1.6.1
Since then many changes have been made, including adding support
for xhr.upload. Upgrading will let us write proper acceptance
tests for uppy, which uses XmlHTTPRequest internally including
xhr.upload.
Updates pretender to 3.4.7 and fake-xml-http-request to 2.1.2.
Note: There have been no breaking changes in the releases that would
affect us, mainly dropping support for old node versions.
There was a bunch of warnings repeated over and over during spec runs:
```
/var/www/discourse/lib/tasks/release_note.rake:3: warning: already initialized constant DATE_REGEX
/var/www/discourse/lib/tasks/release_note.rake:3: warning: previous definition of DATE_REGEX was here
/var/www/discourse/lib/tasks/release_note.rake:5: warning: already initialized constant CHANGE_TYPES
/var/www/discourse/lib/tasks/release_note.rake:5: warning: previous definition of CHANGE_TYPES was here
```
* DEV: Improve rake `release_note:generate` date handling
A commit-ish value like HEAD@{2021-01-01} is based on the **local state** of HEAD on that date. It does not use dates attached to commits.
Instead, the rake task now detects date-like strings and supplies them to `git log` via the `--after` and `--before` flags
* Skip printing plugin when there are no changes found
A list of skipped plugins is printed on a single line at the end of the output
This PR adds uppy to the project with a custom JS build and the shims needed to import it into our JS code. We need a custom build of Uppy because we do not use webpack for our JS modules/build. The only way to get what you want from Uppy is to use the webpack modules or to include the entire Uppy project including all plugins in a single JS file. This way we can just use the plugins we actually want. Future PRs will actually use Uppy!
Take 2 of https://github.com/discourse/discourse/pull/13466.
Fixes a few issues with the original PR:
- color definition stylesheet target now includes the theme id, to avoid themes set to use the default color scheme loading the same stylesheet
- changes the internal cache key for color definition stylesheet to reset the pre-existing cache
`bin/rake annotate` is an alias of `bin/annotate --models`
`bin/rake annotate:clean` generates annotations by using a temporary, freshly migrated database. This should help us to produce more consistent annotations, even if development databases have been polluted by plugin migrations.
A GitHub actions task is also added which generates annotations on a clean database, and raises an error if they differ from the committed annotations.
The `themes:isolated_test` rake task will now unset all `DISCOURSE_*` env variables if `UNSET_DISCOURSE_ENV_VARS` env var is set and will also spin up a temporary redis server so the unicorn web server that's spun up for the tests doesn't leak into the "main" redis server.
We had checks for the chrome binary in 3 different places
for tests and only one of them checked for google-chrome-stable,
which is problematic for Arch linux users (there are dozens of us!)
This PR moves all the code to one place and references it instead
of copying and pasting.
The purpose of this is to allow us to catch regressions for a feature we've built recently that allows theme tests to run in production. We recently had a regression that we didn't notice for days, so to prevent that from happening again we'll use this in our internal CI pipelines.
There are 2 changes in this PR:
1) Add a new environment variable called `DISCOURSE_SKIP_CSS_WATCHER` to disable our stylesheet watcher, and make the `qunit:test` rake task set this variable on the Unicorn/Rails server it spins up to disable our stylesheet watcher when running the tests because it doesn't really need it.
2) Print more Chrome logs (such as network/security errors) to the console.
Re-lands the change initially proposed on #8359 but without a new nginx
location block, so it has less change surface.
Co-authored-by: Jeff Wong <awole20@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Jeff Wong <awole20@gmail.com>
When testing theme components in development, it doesn't make sense to use the `test` environment. The `test` environment almost certainly has 0 themes installed.
This change still works fine when using the `themes:install_and_test` rake task, because that rake task explicitly specifies environment/database-config.
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
- Task name is themes:qunit, not themes:unit
- Some shells try to expand the square brackets. The whole thing should be enclosed in quotes to avoid this
We have a few places in the code where we need to validate various email related settings, and will have another soon with the improved group email settings UI. This PR introduces a class which can validate POP3, IMAP, and SMTP credentials and also provide a friendly error message for issues if they must be presented to an end user.
This PR does not change any existing code to use the new service. I have added a TODO to change POP3 validation and the email test rake task to use the new validator post-release.
It's been awhile since we have supported IE11 so it should be safe to remove
IntersectionObserver now.
From a TODO task in this repo:
> drop when we eventually drop IE11
Announcement of when we removed IE11 support:
https://meta.discourse.org/t/137984/40?u=blake
In development we regularly restart/reload Rails, which wipes out the schema cache. This then has to be regenerated using DDL queries on the database.
Instead, we can make use of the `rake db:schema:cache:dump` command. This will dump the schema cache to a YAML file, and then load it when needed. This is significantly faster than rebuilding the cache from DDL queries every time.
This commit allows site admins to run theme tests in production via a new `/theme-qunit` route. When you visit `/theme-qunit`, you'll see a list of the themes/components installed on your site that have tests, and from there you can select a theme or component that you run its tests.
We also have a new rake task `themes:install_and_test` that can be used to install a list of themes/components on a temporary database and run the tests of the themes/components that are installed. This rake task can be useful when upgrading/deploying a Discourse instance to make sure that the installed themes/components are compatible with the new Discourse version being deployed, and if the tests fail you can abort the build/deploy process so you don't end up with a broken site.
This commit allows site admins to run theme tests in production via a new `/theme-qunit` route. When you visit `/theme-qunit`, you'll see a list of the themes/components installed on your site that have tests, and from there you can select a theme or component that you run its tests.
We also have a new rake task `themes:install_and_test` that can be used to install a list of themes/components on a temporary database and run the tests of the themes/components that are installed. This rake task can be useful when upgrading/deploying a Discourse instance to make sure that the installed themes/components are compatible with the new Discourse version being deployed, and if the tests fail you can abort the build/deploy process so you don't end up with a broken site.
This commit allows themes and theme components to have QUnit tests. To add tests to your theme/component, create a top-level directory in your theme and name it `test`, and Discourse will save all the files in that directory (and its sub-directories) as "tests files" in the database. While tests files/directories are not required to be organized in a specific way, we recommend that you follow Discourse core's tests [structure](https://github.com/discourse/discourse/tree/master/app/assets/javascripts/discourse/tests).
Writing theme tests should be identical to writing plugins or core tests; all the `import` statements and APIs that you see in core (or plugins) to define/setup tests should just work in themes.
You do need a working Discourse install to run theme tests, and you have 2 ways to run theme tests:
* In the browser at the `/qunit` route. `/qunit` will run tests of all active themes/components as well as core and plugins. The `/qunit` now accepts a `theme_name` or `theme_url` params that you can use to run tests of a specific theme/component like so: `/qunit?theme_name=<your_theme_name>`.
* In the command line using the `themes:qunit` rake task. This take is meant to run tests of a single theme/component so you need to provide it with a theme name or URL like so: `bundle exec rake themes:qunit[name=<theme_name>]` or `bundle exec rake themes:qunit[url=<theme_url>]`.
There are some refactors to how Discourse processes JavaScript that comes with themes/components, and these refactors may break your JS customizations; see https://meta.discourse.org/t/upcoming-core-changes-that-may-break-some-themes-components-april-12/186252?u=osama for details on how you can check if your themes/components are affected and what you need to do to fix them.
This commit also improves theme error handling in Discourse. We will now be able to catch errors that occur when theme initializers are run and prevent them from breaking the site and other themes/components.
This commit allows themes and theme components to have QUnit tests. To add tests to your theme/component, create a top-level directory in your theme and name it `test`, and Discourse will save all the files in that directory (and its sub-directories) as "tests files" in the database. While tests files/directories are not required to be organized in a specific way, we recommend that you follow Discourse core's tests [structure](https://github.com/discourse/discourse/tree/master/app/assets/javascripts/discourse/tests).
Writing theme tests should be identical to writing plugins or core tests; all the `import` statements and APIs that you see in core (or plugins) to define/setup tests should just work in themes.
You do need a working Discourse install to run theme tests, and you have 2 ways to run theme tests:
* In the browser at the `/qunit` route. `/qunit` will run tests of all active themes/components as well as core and plugins. The `/qunit` now accepts a `theme_name` or `theme_url` params that you can use to run tests of a specific theme/component like so: `/qunit?theme_name=<your_theme_name>`.
* In the command line using the `themes:qunit` rake task. This take is meant to run tests of a single theme/component so you need to provide it with a theme name or URL like so: `bundle exec rake themes:qunit[name=<theme_name>]` or `bundle exec rake themes:qunit[url=<theme_url>]`.
There are some refactors to internal code that's responsible for processing themes/components in Discourse, most notably:
* `<script type="text/discourse-plugin">` tags are automatically converted to modules.
* The `theme-settings` service is removed in favor of a simple `lib` file responsible for managing theme settings. This was done to allow us to register/lookup theme settings very early in our Ember app lifecycle and because there was no reason for it to be an Ember service.
These refactors should 100% backward compatible and invisible to theme developers.
Highlight.js changed their default branch from master to main. This switches to the @highlightjs/cdn-assets package, thus sidestepping the problem. It's a slightly cleaner integration though (no need to build locally anymore).
Added a new task to test if indexes are coherent with a blank database
This allows us to detect for cases where somehow indexes are out of sync
FIX_INDEXES=1 or `rake db:validate_indexes[fix]` to correct the issues it finds.
Detects:
- Badly named indexes that need to be renamed
- Missing indexes
- Extra indexes
Can correct all 3 with the fix option
- removes the option from site settings
- deletes the site setting on existing sites that have it
- marks posts using emojis as requiring a rebake
Note that the actual image files are not removed here, the plan is to
remove them in a few weeks/months (when presumably the rebaking of old
posts has been completed).
`rake emails:test` task was always sending `localhost` as the domain name rather than using `smtp[:domain]` (aka `DISCOURSE_SMTP_DOMAIN`. `discourse-setup` has recently been modified to always set `DISCOURSE_SMTP_DOMAIN`, so it's important that this test rake task actually use the value.
I tested this change on a standard production install, and it's working as expected. Hopefully I managed not to bungle the copy/paste of the single line here in the github edit window.
Co-authored-by: Jay Pfaffman <jay@literatecomputing.com>
`UX` is the officially supported prefix per https://meta.discourse.org/t/19392, but sometimes `UI` is used instead. We should still include those commits.
Using our testing Docker image (`discourse/discourse_test:release`) allows us to drop "Update imagemagick" step which shaves ~10 minutes from all runs.
To prevent opaque cache files, now all the CDN files will be requested in 'cors' mode if the cdn_cors_enabled global setting is enabled. Before enabling the setting, should enable the cors in the CDN server by adding the response header `access-control-allow-origin: *` or `access-control-allow-origin: https://discourse.example.com.`
And other external file requests other than CDN will not be cached if the response type is opaque.
This PR adds security_last_changed_at and security_last_changed_reason to uploads. This has been done to make it easier to track down why an upload's secure column has changed and when. This necessitated a refactor of the UploadSecurity class to provide reasons why the upload security would have changed.
As well as this, a source is now provided from the location which called for the upload's security status to be updated as they are several (e.g. post creator, topic security updater, rake tasks, manual change).
Transient errors in migration are ignored, silently corrupting
data, and the migration is incomplete and misses many sources of
uploads, which will lead to an incorrect expectation of independence
from the remote object storage after announcing that the migration
was successful, regardles of whether transient errors permanently
corrupted the data.
Remove this migration until such time as it is re-written to
follow the same pattern has the migration to s3, moving the
core logic out of the task.
We can't use erb in ember-cli, and it seems the emoji groups rarely
change anyway. This commit migrates the ERB to pre-rendered javascript
that is updated via the `rake javascript:update_constants` task.
This moves the library into our lib folder, and refactored it to more
modern Javascript. I've kept the MIT license at the top of the file.
Doing this allows us to import it as a library in Ember CLI and ditch
yet another global variable.
Themes marked for auto update will be automatically updated when
Discourse is updated. This is triggered by discourse_docker or
docker_manager running Rake task 'themes:update'.
This reverts commit e3de45359f.
We need to improve out strategy by adding a cache breaker with this change ... some assets on CDNs and clients may have incorrect CORS headers which can cause stuff to break.
Limit git log output to the first line of the commit message
when generating the list of commits in a release. Some commit messages
are including the names of all commits that were squashed, resulting
in duplicate and confusing lines in the release notes.
discourse-perspective-api was not successfully running tests via the
qunit:test rake task due to inconsistent naming between core and the
repo. As a result we no longer need the mapping in the plugin rake task, too.
We can't use erb in Ember CLI (since it does not have Ruby) so this has
been ported to use our `javascript:update_constants` rake test instead.
Note we don't have to run this every time a notification type as it's
only used by fixtures to fill in some specific types we test against.
This is where they should be as far as ember is concerned. Note this is
a huge commit and we should be really careful everything continues to
work properly.
* DEV - versions of JS files written to a JS file to be included by load-script and appended as params to URLs
* Formatting
* Incorporate feedback from PR
* Update filename of public-js-versions