It switches to a different command for detecting the current git branch because the old command always returned HEAD as branch when the git repository is on a detached head (e.g. tag). The new command doesn't return a branch when the repository is on a detached head, which allows us to fall back to the `version` variable that is stored in the git config since https://github.com/discourse/discourse_docker/pull/707. It contains the value of the `version` from `app.yml`.
It also includes a small change to specs, because our tests usually run on specific commits instead of a branch or tag, so Discourse.git_branch always returns "unknown". We can use the "unknown" branch for tests, so it makes sense to ignore it only in other envs.
This fixes a 500 error that occurs when adding a tag to a category's
restricted tag list if the category's restricted tags already included a
synonym tag.
* DEV: Support `likes-(min:max):<count>` on `/filter` route
This commit adds support for the following filters:
1. `likes-min`
2. `likes-max`
3. `views-min`
4. `views-max`
5. `likes-op-min`
6. `likes-op-max`
If the filter has an invalid value, i.e string that cannot be converted
into an integer, the filter will be ignored.
If either of each filter is specify multiple times, only the last
occurrence of each filter will be taken into consideration.
This commit adds support for the `posters-min:<count>` and
`posters-max:<count>` filters for the topics filtering query language.
`posters-min:1` will filter for topics with at least a one poster while
`posters-max:3` will filter for topics with a maximum of 3 posters.
If the filter has an invalid value, i.e string that cannot be converted
into an integer, the filter will be ignored.
If either of each filter is specify multiple times, only the last
occurence of each filter will be taken into consideration.
This commit adds support for the `posts-min:<count>` and
`posts-max:<count>` filters for the topics filtering query language.
`posts-min:1` will filter for topics with at least a one post while
`posts-max:3` will filter foor topics with a maximum of 3 posts.
If the filter has an invalid value, i.e string that cannot be converted
into an integer, the filter will be ignored.
If either of each filter is specify multiple times, only the last
occurence of each filter will be taken into consideration.
When we "pull hotlinked images" on onebox images, they are added to the uploads table and their dominant color is calculated. This commit adds the data to the HTML so that it can be used by the client in the same way as non-onebox images. It also adds specific handling to the new `discourse-lazy-videos` plugin.
This feature will allow sites to define which emoji are not allowed. Emoji in this list should be excluded from the set we show in the core emoji picker used in the composer for posts when emoji are enabled. And they should not be allowed to be chosen to be added to messages or as reactions in chat.
This feature prevents denied emoji from appearing in the following scenarios:
- topic title and page title
- private messages (topic title and body)
- inserting emojis into a chat
- reacting to chat messages
- using the emoji picker (composer, user status etc)
- using search within emoji picker
It also takes into account the various ways that emojis can be accessed, such as:
- emoji autocomplete suggestions
- emoji favourites (auto populates when adding to emoji deny list for example)
- emoji inline translations
- emoji skintones (ie. for certain hand gestures)
Why this change?
Previously `TopicsFilter` was designed in such a way that we act on a
filter sequentially based on the order it was matched. However, this
made it hard to support filters composition where a similar filter may
be present further in the query string. Because of this limitation, I
previously introduced a private API `TopicsFilter.register_scope` which
allows us to act on a filter only after the entire query string has been
scanned. However, I felt that it made the code complicated and hard to
reason about.
In thie commit, I've changed it such that we scan through the entire
query string and group the values of each filter together. This allows
us to act on the values of a given filter in one go which I find easier
to reason about. This also opens up the possibility for us to ignore
certain filters when it has been specified multiple times.
This commit adds support for the `created-by:<username>` query filter
which will return topics created by the specified user. Multiple
usernames can be specified by comma seperating the usernames like so:
`created-by:username1,username2`. This will filter for topics created by
either of the specified users. Multiple `created-by:<username>` can also
be composed together. `created-by:username1 created-by:username2` is
equivalent to `created-by:username1,username2`.
This was inadvertently removed in 4c46c7e. In very specific scenarios,
this could be used execute arbitrary JavaScript.
Only affects instances where SVGs are allowed as uploads and CDN is not
configured.
Previously, Discourse's password hashing was hard-coded to a specific algorithm and parameters. Any changes to the algorithm or parameters would essentially invalidate all existing user passwords.
This commit introduces a new `password_algorithm` column on the `users` table. This persists the algorithm/parameters which were use to generate the hash for a given user. All existing rows in the users table are assumed to be using Discourse's current algorithm/parameters. With this data stored per-user in the database, we'll be able to keep existing passwords working while adjusting the algorithm/parameters for newly hashed passwords.
Passwords which were hashed with an old algorithm will be automatically re-hashed with the new algorithm when the user next logs in.
Values in the `password_algorithm` column are based on the PHC string format (https://github.com/P-H-C/phc-string-format/blob/master/phc-sf-spec.md). Discourse's existing algorithm is described by the string `$pbkdf2-sha256$i=64000,l=32$`
To introduce a new algorithm and start using it, make sure it's implemented in the `PasswordHasher` library, then update `User::TARGET_PASSWORD_ALGORITHM`.
This commit adds support for the `in:<topic notification level>` query
filter. As an example, `in:tracking` will filter for topics that the
user is watching. Filtering for multiple topic notification levels can
be done by comma separating the topic notification level keys. For
example, `in:muted,tracking` or `in:muted,tracking,watching`.
Alternatively, the user can also compose multiple filters with `in:muted
in:tracking` which translates to the same behaviour as
`in:muted,tracking`.
This commit adds support for the `in:pinned` filter to the topics filtering
query language. When the filter is present, it will filter for topics
where `Topic#pinned_until` is greater than `Topic#pinned_at`.
This adds a SiteSetting, which when enabled, creates a small_action post for tag/category changes to the topic. It uses `topic.add_moderator_post, and passes raw text in, to describe the change.
This was introduced to the standard library in Ruby 2.4. In my testing, it produces the same result, and is around 8x faster than our pure-ruby implementation
Before this commit, composing multiple category filters with a query such as category:category1 and category:category2 would not return any results. This is because we were filtering for topics that belonged to both category1 and category2, which is impossible since a topic can only belong to a single category.
With this commit, specifying a query like category:category1 category:category2 will now translate to filtering for topics that belong to either the category1 or category2 category.
Invite only and Discourse connect could not be enabled at the same time
because of some legacy reason. This is a follow up commit to ce04db8,
355d51a and 40f6ceb.
Followup to #20915. If we're grouping search results that don't rely on core's search, we won't have access to pg headlines. This is now configurable via the constructor, defaulting to `SiteSetting.use_pg_headlines_for_excerpt`
We use schema_migration_details to determine the age of a site in multiple migrations. This commit moves the logic into a dedicated `Migration::Helpers` module so that it doesn't need to be re-implemented every time.
This commit adds support for filtering for topics in specific
subcategories via the categories filter query language.
For example: `category:documentation:admins` will filter for topics and
subcategory topics in
the category with slug "admins" whose parent category has the slug
"documentation".
The `=` prefix can also be used such that
`=category:documentation:admins` will exclude subcategory topics of the
category with slug "admins" whose parent category has the slug
"documentation".
On the `/filter` route, the categories filtering query language is now
supported in the input per the example provided below:
```
category:bug => topics in the bug category AND all subcategories
=category:bug => topics in the bug category excluding subcategories
category:bug,feature => allow for categories either in bug or feature
=category:bug,feature => allow for exact categories match excluding sub cats
categories: => alias for category
```
Currently composing multiple category filters is not supported as we
have yet to determine what behaviour it should result in. For example,
`category:bug category:feature` would now return topics that are in both
the `bug` and `feature` category but it is not possible for a topic to
belong to two categories.
Add a modifier that will allow us to tune the results returned by suggested.
At the moment the modifier allows us to toggle including random results.
This was created for the discourse-ai module. It needs to switch off random
results when it returns related topics.
Longer term we can use it to toggle unread/new and other aspects.
This also demonstrates how to test the contract when adding modifiers.
This was added in d3f02a1270
for hashtags but later removed usage in
b2acc416e7. It was removed because
serializing the user does not include things like their
secure_categories.
It is not used by any other plugins or themes, and can cause
issues where it will error when operating on a null user. Better
to just pass in the user_id and use it to look up a user
directly in a PrettyText::Helper
Similar to the _map added for group_list SiteSettings in
e62e93f83a, this commit adds
the same extension for simple and compact `list` type SiteSettings,
so developers do not have to do the `.to_s.split("|")` dance
themselves all the time.
For example:
```
SiteSetting.markdown_linkify_tlds
=> "com|net|org|io|onion|co|tv|ru|cn|us|uk|me|de|fr|fi|gov|ddd"
SiteSetting.markdown_linkify_tlds_map
=> ["com", "net", "org", "io", "onion", "co", "tv", "ru", "cn", "us", "uk", "me", "de", "fr", "fi", "gov"]
```
There is no need to validate the user's emails when
promoting/demoting their trust level, this can cause
issues in things like Jobs::Tl3Promotions, we don't
need to fail in that case when all we are doing is changing
trust level.
Introduces a new API for plugin data modification without class-based extension overhead.
This commit introduces a new API that allows plugins to modify data in cases where they return different data rather than additional data, as is common with filtered_registers in DiscoursePluginRegistry. This API removes the need for defining class-based extension points.
When a plugin registers a modifier, it will automatically be called if the plugin is enabled. The core will then modify the parameter sent to it using the block registered by the plugin:
```ruby
DiscoursePluginRegistry.register_modifier(plugin_instance, :magic_sum_modifier) { |a, b| a + b }
sum = DiscoursePluginRegistry.apply_modifier(:magic_sum_filter, 1, 2)
expect(sum).to eq(3)
```
Key features of these modifiers:
- Operate in a stack (first registered, first called)
- Automatically disabled when the plugin is disabled
- Pass the cumulative result of all block invocations to the caller
The following are the changes being introduced in this commit:
1. Instead of mapping the query language to various query params on the
client side, we've decided that the benefits of having a more robust
query language far outweighs the benefits of having a more human readable query params in the URL.
As such, the `/filter` route will just accept a single `q` query param
and the query string will be parsed on the server side.
1. On the `/filter` route, the tags filtering query language is now
supported in the input per the example provided below:
```
tags:bug+feature tagged both bug and feature
tags:bug,feature tagged either bug or feature
-tags:bug+feature excluding topics tagged bug and feature
-tags:bug,feature excluding topics tagged bug or feature
```
The `tags` filter can also be specified multiple
times in the query string like so `tags:bug tags:feature` which will
filter topics that contain both the `bug` tag and `feature` tag. More
complex query like `tags:bug+feature -tags:experimental` will also work.
This change sets the ground work for allowing us to filter topics list
by tags in the following ways:
1. Filter for topics that matches all tags in a given set of tags
2. Filter for topics that matches any tags in a given set of tags
3. Exclude topics that matches all tags in a given set of tags
4. Exclude topics that matches any tags in a given set of tags
Before, incorrectly filled fields were marked with red border. Now, additional information under the field is displayed to notify the user what is incorrect.
/t/93696
When we renamed the `default_categories_regular` to `default_categories_normal` we missed a site setting validation method. It allowed the duplicate category ids in `default_categories_normal` site setting and caused the problem in user registration process.
5176c689e9
When setting the ACL for optimized images after setting the
ACL for the linked upload (e.g. via the SyncACLForUploads job),
we were using the optimized image path as the S3 key. This worked
for single sites, however it would fail silently for multisite
sites since the path would be incorrect, because the Discourse.store.upload_path
was not included.
For example, something like this:
somecluster1/optimized/2X/1/3478534853498753984_2_1380x300.png
Instead of:
somecluster1/uploads/somesite1/2X/1/3478534853498753984_2_1380x300.png
The silent failure is still intentional, since we don't want to
break other things because of ACL updates, but now we will update
the ACL correctly for optimized images on multisite sites.
Sites with many categories and many of them in muted by default (see
`default_categories_muted`) reported bad performance when requesting
the homepage as an anonymous user. This was the case because of the
long query that iterated over topics and categories trying to remove
those from the muted categories.
Our SafeMigrate system is designed to prevent tables/columns being dropped in pre-deploy migrations. Its regex-based detection was triggering incorrectly on `ALTER COLUMN DROP NOT NULL`.
There are many situations that may cause users to lose permission to
send messages in a chat channel. Until now we have relied on security
checks in `Chat::ChatChannelFetcher` to remove channels which the
user may have a `UserChatChannelMembership` record for but which
they do not have access to.
This commit takes a more proactive approach. Now any of these following
`DiscourseEvent` triggers may cause `UserChatChannelMembership`
records to be deleted:
* `category_updated` - Permissions of the category changed
(i.e. CategoryGroup records changed)
* `user_removed_from_group` - Means the user may not be able to access the
channel based on `GroupUser` or also `chat_allowed_groups`
* `site_setting_changed` - The `chat_allowed_groups` was updated, some
users may no longer be in groups that can access chat.
* `group_destroyed` - Means the user may not be able to access the
channel based on `GroupUser` or also `chat_allowed_groups`
All of these are handled in a distinct service run in a background
job. Users removed are logged via `StaffActionLog` and then we
publish messages on a per-channel basis to users who had their
memberships deleted.
When the user has a channel they are kicked from open, we show
a dialog saying "You no longer have access to this channel".
When they click OK we redirect them either:
* To their first other public channel, if they have any followed
* The chat browse page if they don't
This is to save on tons of requests from kicked out users getting messages
from other channels.
When the user does not have the kicked channel open, we can just
silently yoink it out of their sidebar and turn off subscriptions.
There was a lot of duplication in the svg parsing and coercion code. This reduces that duplication and causes svg sprite parsing to happen earlier so that more computation is cached.
Our schema allows `category.topic_id` to be NULL. Null values shouldn't actually happen in production, but it is very common in tests because `Fabricate(:category)` skips creating the definition topic to improve performance. Before this commit, a NULL category.topic_id would cause all subcategory topics to be excluded from a TopicQuery result. This is because, in postgres, `NULL <> anything` is falsy. Instead, we can use `IS DISTINCT FROM`, which will return true when NULL is compared to a non-NULL value.
Why is this change required?
Prior to this change, we would list all group messages that a user
has access to in the user menu messages notifications panel dropdown.
However, this did not respect the topic's notification level setting and
group messages which the user has set to 'normal' notification level were
being displayed
What does this commit do?
With this commit, we no longer display all group messages that a user
has access to. Instead, we only display group messages that a user is
watching in the user menu messages notifications panel dropdown.
Internal Ref: /t/94392
Follow up to 4d2a95ffe6. Sometimes
due to the original UploadReference migration or other issues,
multiple UploadReference records can have the exact same
created_at date and time. To tiebreak and correct the SQL order
when this happens, we can add a secondary `id ASC` ordering
when we check for the first upload reference.
Way back when this was introduced way back in b96c10a903
I didn't have any frame of reference for what these max rate
limit numbers should be, so 10 seemed like a reasonable limit
until a real world case where this did not make sense came
along.
The time has come.
Moving these into site settings, which are hidden since in most
cases there is no need to change these.
Similar spirit to e195e6f614,
this moves the Bookmarkable registration to DiscoursePluginRegistry
so plugins which are not enabled do not register additional
bookmarkable classes.
When a theme setting of type `upload` has a default upload, it should return the URL of the specified default upload until a custom upload is used for the setting. However, currently this isn't the case and we get null instead of the default upload URL.
The reason for this is because the `super` method of `#value` already returns the default upload URL (if there's one), so we can't pass that to `cdn_url` which expects an upload ID:
c961dcc757/lib/theme_settings_manager.rb (L212)
This commit fixes the bug by skipping the call to `cdn_url` when we fallback to the default upload for the setting value.
* UX: add type tag and design update
* UX: clarify status copy in reviewQ
* DEV: switch to selectKit
* UX: color approve/reject buttons in RQ
* DEV: regroup actions
* UX: add type tag and design update
* UX: clarify status copy in reviewQ
* Join questions for flagged post with "or" with new I18n function
* Move ReviewableScores component out of context
* Add CSS classes to reviewable-item based on human type
* UX: add table header for scoring
* UX: don't display % score
* UX: prefix modifier class with dash
* UX: reviewQ flag table styling
* UX: consistent use of ignore icon
* DEV: only show context question on pending status
* UX: only show table headers on pending status
* DEV: reviewQ regroup actions for hidden posts
* UX: reviewQ > approve/reject buttons
* UX: reviewQ add fadeout
* UX: reviewQ styling
* DEV: move scores back into component
* UX: reviewQ mobile styling
* UX: score table on mobile
* UX: reviewQ > move meta info outside table
* UX: reviewQ > score layout fixes
* DEV: readd `agree_and_keep` and fix the spec tests.
* Fix the spec tests
* fix the quint test
* DEV: readd deleting replies
* UX: reviewQ copy tweaks
* DEV: readd test for ignore + delete replies
* Remove old
* FIX: Add perform_ignore back in for backwards compat
* DEV: add an action alias `ignore` for `ignore_and_do_nothing`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Martin Brennan <martin@discourse.org>
Co-authored-by: Vinoth Kannan <svkn.87@gmail.com>
Follow up to 098ab29d41. Since
we just used a `cattr_reader` on `About` this was not safe
for multisite, since some sites could have the chat plugin
enabled and some may not. Using `DiscoursePluginRegistry` gets
around this issue, and makes it so the chat stats only show
for a site if `chat_enabled` is true.
Sometimes we get Maps URL containing a zoom level as a float (17.5z and
not 17z) but this doesn’t work with our current onebox implementation.
While Google accepts those float zoom levels, it removes automatically
the floating part in the URL (thus when visiting a Maps URL containing
17.5z, the URL will be rewritten shortly after as 17z). When putting a
float zoom level in an embedded URL, this actually breaks (Maps API
returns a 400 error).
This patch addresses the issue by allowing the onebox engine to match on
a zoom level expressed as a float but we only keep the integer part thus
rendering properly maps.
The ensure_consistency rake task was not marking posted as true for post authors in the TopicUser table, post migration. Create another step to set posted='t'.
Forcing distributed muted to raise when a notify reviewable job is running
leads to excessive errors in the logs under many conditions.
The new pattern
1. Optimises the counting of reviewables so it is a lot faster
2. Holds the distributed lock for 2 minutes (max)
The downside is the job queue can get blocked up when tons of notify
reviewables are running at the same time. However this should be very
rare in the real world, as we only notify when stuff is flagged which
is fairly infrequent.
This also give a fair bit more time for the notifications which may be
a little slow on large sites with tons of mods.
This commit implements many changes to topic and comments embedding. It
deprecates the class_name field from EmbeddableHost and suggests using
the className parameter. discourse_username parameter has been
deprecated and it will fetch it from embedded site from the author or
discourse-username meta.
See the updated code sample from Admin > Customize > Embedding page.
* FEATURE: Add className parameter for Discourse embed
* DEV: Hide class_name from EmbeddableHost
* DEV: Deprecate class_name field of EmbeddableHost
* FEATURE: Use either author or discourse-username meta tag
* DEV: Deprecate discourse_username parameter
* DEV: Improve embed code sample
This commit introduces a few experimental changes to the New topics list and "Everything" link in the sidebar:
1. Make the New topics list include unread topics
2. Make the Everything section in the sidebar link to the New topics list (`/new`)
3. Remove "unread" or "new" text next to the count and keep the count
4. The count is a sum of new and unread topics counts
All of these of changes are behind an off-by-default feature flag. I've not written extensive tests for these changes because they're highly experimental.
Internal topic: t/77234.
When invoking e.g. `can_see?(Foo.new)`, the guardian checks if there's a method `#can_see_foo?` defined and if so uses that to determine whether the user can see it or not.
When such a method is not defined, the guardian currently returns `true`, but it is probably a better call (pun intended) to make it "safe by default" and return `false` instead. I.e. if you can't explicitly see it, you can't see it at all.
This change makes the change to `Guardian#can_see?` to fall back to `false` if no visibility check method is defined.
For `#can_see_user?` and `#can_see_tag?` we don't have any particular logic that prevents viewing. We previously relied on the implicit `true` value, but since that's now change to `false`, I have explicitly implemented these two methods in `UserGuardian` and `TagGuardian` modules. If in the future we want to add some logic for it, this would be the place.
To be clear, **the behaviour remains the same**, but the `true` value is now explicit rather than implicit.
We were only supporting the main name of each HighlightJS language. So, by default, you could not use `js` or `jsx` to highlight Javascript, given they are aliases for `javascript`.
This PR adds a list of aliases as a constant to core (built via a rake task), and then checks against the `highlighted_languages` site settings plus the list of aliases when processing a code block.