When a theme's default color scheme is not marked as user selectable, we were outputting the numeric ID in the UI. This outputs "Theme default" instead.
I was storing the wrong object as the event listener
reference for the paste and mobile upload button click
events so they were not being cleaned properly on element
destruction.
Also renamed `uploadButton` to the more descriptive
`mobileUploadButton`.
When the composer reply is cancelled and the draft is trashed,
the isUploading and isProcessing statuses were not being reset,
so when the composer was opened again the Uploading... or
Processing... message still showed even when the uploads had
been cancelled correctly.
The regular composer-upload mixin suffered the same problem
as the uppy one, where the Processing/Uploading message was not
reset when a reply was cancelled and the draft destroyed.
When I added the paste event for files in the composer to
send to Uppy, I inadvertently called event.preventDefault()
if the pasted data was text. I removed that now, and I only
return early if the user cannot upload, and if there are no
files on the clipboard nothing happens.
Adds uppy upload functionality behind a
enable_experimental_composer_uploader site setting (default false,
and hidden).
When enabled this site setting will make the composer-editor-uppy
component be used within composer.hbs, which in turn points to
a ComposerUploadUppy mixin which overrides the relevant
functions from ComposerUpload. This uppy uploader has parity
with all the features of jQuery file uploader in the original
composer-editor, including:
progress tracking
error handling
number of files validation
pasting files
dragging and dropping files
updating upload placeholders
upload markdown resolvers
processing actions (the only one we have so far is the media optimization
worker by falco, this works)
cancelling uploads
For now all uploads still go via the /uploads.json endpoint, direct
S3 support will be added later.
Also included in this PR are some changes to the media optimization
service, to support uppy's different file data structures, and also
to make the promise tracking and resolving more robust. Currently
it uses the file name to track promises, we can switch to something
more unique later if needed.
Does not include custom upload handlers, that will come
in a later PR, it is a tricky problem to handle.
Also, this new functionality will not be used in encrypted PMs because
encrypted PM uploads rely on custom upload handlers.
The invite acceptance page is an alternative signup flow, so it makes sense to include the new 'link' functionality there as well.
Followup to 7dc8f8b794
We've recently added a limit to the posts history modal so it displays the last 100 revisions only for performance reasons. However, the title of the modal now always says `History, last 100 revisions` even when the post has fewer than 100 revisions which can be a bit noisy.
This PR amends the history modal so the title of the modal says `History` when the post's revisions count is ≤100, and `History, last 100 revisions` when it has more >100 revisions.
When a user signs up via an external auth method, a new link is added to the signup modal which allows them to connect an existing Discourse account. This will only happen if:
- There is at least 1 other auth method available
and
- The current auth method permits users to disconnect/reconnect their accounts themselves
This handles a few edge cases which are extremely rare (due to the UI layout), but still technically possible:
- Ensure users are authenticated before attempting association.
- Add a message and logic for when a user already has an association for a given auth provider.
When no element is selected, on the homepage for example, pressing `s` would generate the following error:
```
Uncaught TypeError: Cannot read property 'click' of undefined
```
Note that this commit also removes jquery usage.
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.
This disallows putting URLs in topic titles for TL0 users, which means that:
If a TL-0 user puts a link into the title, a topic featured link won't be generated (as if it was disabled in the site settings)
Server methods for creating and updating topics will be refusing featured links when they are called by TL-0 users
TL-0 users won't be able to put any link into the topic title. For example, the title "Hey, take a look at https://my-site.com" will be rejected.
Also, it improves a bit server behavior when creating or updating feature links on topics in the categories with disabled featured links. Before the server just silently ignored a featured link field that was passed to him, now it will be returning 422 response.
In the group interaction UI, if the default_notification_level for
a group was set to 0 (muted) it incorrectly showed as Watching in
the UI because of the ember or() helper, using JS comparison, considered
0 to be a falsey value and always showed 3 (watching) instead.
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.
When declaring your widget you can now add an option like: `services: ['cool']`
And your widget instances will automatically get a `this.cool` property
which will resolve to the service. This saves having to look it up
yourself.
We rely on yarn workspaces so we don't want people using npm in the repo by accident.
Also updated the required node version to 12+.
~~Not sure about the min yarn version – the latest one could be missing in various CI-like envs, so I might change it yet.~~
Downgraded yarn to ">= 1.21.1" (the oldest of "current" versions, tagged "legacy")
Currently when a user clicks on an edit notification, we use `appEvents` to
notify the topics controller that it should open up the history modal for the
edited post and the appEvents callback opens up the history modal in the next
Ember runloop (by scheduling an `afterRender` callback).
There are 2 problems with this implementation:
1) the callbacks are fired/executed too early and if the post has never been
loaded from the server (i.e. not in cache), we will not get a modal history
because the method that shows the modal `return`s if it can't find the post:
016efeadf6/app/assets/javascripts/discourse/app/controllers/topic.js (L145-L152)
2) when clicking an edit notification from a non-topic page, you're redirected
to the topic page that contains the edited post and you'll see the history
modal briefly and it'll be closed immediately. The reason for this is because
we attempt to show the history modal before the route transition finishes
completely, and we have cleanup code in `initializers/page-tracking.js` that's
called after every transition and it does several things one of which is
closing any open modals.
The fix in this commit defers showing the history modal until posts are loaded
(whether fresh or cached). It works by storing some bits of information (topic
id, post number, revision number) whenever the user clicks on an edit
notification, and when the user is redirected to the topic (or scrolled to the
edited post if they're already in the topic), the post stream model checks if
we have stored information of an edit notification and requests the history
modal to be shown by the topics controller.
This PR moves all the upload related functions into a new
ComposerUpload mixin that is extended by the composer-editor
component. This is being done so I can introduce a ComposerUploadUppy
mixin that overrides functions in the regular ComposerUpload mixin,
via a new composer-editor-uppy component that inherits from
ComposerEditor. The proposed structure, which will be in the next PR,
looks like this:
composer-editor-uppy
```javascript
import ComposerEditor from "discourse/components/composer-editor"
import ComposerUploadUppy from "discourse/mixins/composer-upload-uppy"
export default ComposerEditor.extend(ComposerUploadUppy, {
layoutName: "components/composer-editor"
});
```
This way the new composer-editor is a dumb component purely used for
testing uppy safely, and within the template for composer.hbs we do
this:
```javascript
@discourseComputed
composerComponent() {
return this.siteSettings.enable_experimental_composer_uploader
? "composer-editor-uppy"
: "composer-editor";
},
```
```handlebars
{{component composerComponent ...}}
```
This is the only way I can think to do it, because it is not possible to
access the site settings when the component is first declared I can't do
something like:
```javascript
const uploaderMixin = this.siteSettings.use_experimental_uploader?
ComposerUploaderUppy : ComposerUploader;
Component.extend(uploaderMixin, {});
```
An additional change in this PR is explicitly passing in these four
plugin data structures to the composer-editor Component, rather
than relying on JS closures which the mixin cannot do:
* uploadMarkdownResolvers
* uploadProcessorActions
* uploadProcessorQueue
* uploadHandlers