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.
We renamed the site setting for this long ago, but there
were a few places left in the code base where "ninja edit"
needed to be turned into "grace period". Doing this here
to avoid combatative language.
We changed (https://github.com/discourse/discourse/pull/13407) behaviour of the topic level bookmark button recently. That PR made the button be opening the edit bookmark modal when there is only one bookmark on the topic instead of just removing that bookmark as it was before.
This PR fixes the next problems that weren't taken into account in the previous PR:
1. Everything should work fine even on very big topics when a bookmarked post is unloaded from the post stream. I've added code that loads the post we need and makes everything work as expected
2. When at least one bookmark on the topic has a reminder, we should always be showing the icon with a clock on the topic level bookmark button
3. We should show correct tooltips for the topic level bookmark button
This PR makes several changes to the group SMTP email contents to make it look more like a support inbox message.
* Remove the context posts, they only add clutter to the email and replies
* Display email addresses of staged users instead of odd generated usernames
* Add a "please reply above this line" message to sent emails
This PR backtracks a fair bit on this one https://github.com/discourse/discourse/pull/13220/files.
Instead of sending the group SMTP email for each user via `UserNotifications`, we are changing to send only one email with the existing `Jobs::GroupSmtpEmail` job and `GroupSmtpMailer`. We are changing this job and mailer along with `PostAlerter` to make the first topic allowed user the `to_address` for the email and any other `topic_allowed_users` to be the CC address on the email. This is to cut down on emails sent via SMTP, which is subject to daily limits from providers such as Gmail. We log these details in the `EmailLog` table now.
In addition to this, we have changed `PostAlerter` to no longer rely on incoming email email addresses for sending the `GroupSmtpEmail` job. This was unreliable as a user's email could have changed in the meantime. Also it was a little overcomplicated to use the incoming email records -- it is far simpler to reason about to just use topic allowed users.
This also adds a fix to include cc_addresses in the EmailLog.addressed_to_user scope.
We are a few versions behind on this gem. We need to update it
for S3 multipart uploads. In the current version we are using, we
cannot do this:
```ruby
Discourse.store.s3_helper.object(key).presigned_url(:upload_part, part_number: 1, upload_id: multipart_upload_id)
```
The S3 client raises an error, saying the operation is undefined. Once
I updated the gem this operation works as expected and returns a
presigned URL for the upload_part operation.
Also remove use of Aws::S3::FileUploader::FIFTEEN_MEGABYTES.
This was part of a private API and should not have been used.
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.
Previously, we were storing custom svg sprite paths in the cache. This is a problem because sprites in themes get stored as uploads, and the returned paths were files in the temporary download cache which could sometimes be cleaned up, resulting in a broken cache.
I previously tried to fix this by skipping the missing files and clearing the cache, but that didn't work out well with CDNs. This PR stores the contents of the files in the custom_svg_sprites cache to avoid the problem of missing temp files.
Also, plugin custom icons are only included if the plugin is enabled.
In #12841, we started setting the ReviewableQueuedPost's target and topic after approving it instead of storing them in the payload. As a result, the reviewable_counts query started to include queued posts.
When a category is set to require approval, every post has an associated reviewable. Pointing that each post has an associated queued post is not necessary in this case, so I added a WHERE clause to skip them.
Having a large number of post-deploy migrations running out-of-numerical-sequence with pre-deploy migrations can be problematic. For example, if we have the sequence
- db/migrate/2017... - add column
- db/post_migrate/2018... - drop the column
- db/migrate/2021... - add the same column again
It will work fine in numerical order. But if you run the pre-deploy migrations **followed by** the post-deploy migrations, you will not get the same result.
Our post-deploy system is designed to allow for seamless upgrades of Discourse. However, it is reasonable for us to only support this totally seamless experience for a limited period of time. This commit moves all post_deploy migrations which are more than 1 year old (i.e. more than 2 major Discourse versions ago) into the regular pre-deploy migrations directory. This limits the impact of any edge cases caused by out-of-numerical-sequence migrations.