Using a shared channel with per-message permissions means that every client is updated with the channel's 'last_id', even if there are no messages available to them. Per-user channel names avoid this problem - the last_id will only be incremented when there is a message for the given user.
Added in c2013865d7,
this migration was supposed to only turn off the hashtag
setting for existing sites (since that was the old default)
but its doing it for new ones too because we run all migrations
on new sites.
Instead, we should only run this if the first migration was
only just created, meaning its a new site.
1. "What Goes Up Must Come Down" – if you subscribe to message bus, make sure you also unsubscribe
2. When you unsubscribe - remove only your subscription, not **all** subscriptions on given channel
Attempt #2. The first attempt tried to extend a core `@bound` method in new-user-narrative plugin which did not work. I reworked that plugin in the meantime. This new PR also cleans up message bus subscriptions in now core-merged chat plugin.
1. Originally the feature did "Scroll to new posts when user is near bottom of PM" (74e1889924)
2. Then that feature was limited to "Only scroll to posts that are not your own in PMs." (4a26561927)
3. It was limited further to "Only scroll PMs on new message" (eaf7746ec9)
4. And later to "only scroll to bottom for discobot" (267d129f38)
5. And the code was relegated to new-user-narrative plugin (48b7696dbc)
I don't think it's worth it to keep this scrolling code just for this very small specific case.
This did potentially confict with other post scrolling code, and also using `modifyClass` is something we'd like to avoid.
1. "What Goes Up Must Come Down" – if you subscribe to message bus, make sure you also unsubscribe
2. When you unsubscribe - remove only your subscription, not **all** subscriptions on given channel
Debouncing inline anonymous functions does not work.
This fixes all instances of that error by extracting the function or using the new `@debounce(delay)` decorator
This will allow consumers to inject it using `siteSettings: service()` in preparation for the removal of implicit injections in Ember 4.0. `site-settings:main` is still available and will print a deprecation notice.
These incorrect paths were causing the regular jobs to be loaded in a `Jobs::Jobs` module in development mode, which would cause various weird issues.
https://meta.discourse.org/t/228155
This commit migrates all bookmarks to be polymorphic (using the
bookmarkable_id and bookmarkable_type) columns. It also deletes
all the old code guarded behind the use_polymorphic_bookmarks setting
and changes that setting to true for all sites and by default for
the sake of plugins.
No data is deleted in the migrations, the old post_id and for_topic
columns for bookmarks will be dropped later on.
We have not used anything related to bookmarks for PostAction
or UserAction records since 2020, bookmarks are their own thing
now. Deleting all this is just cleaning up old cruft.
A bit of a mixed bag, this addresses several edge areas of bookmarks and makes them compatible with polymorphic bookmarks (hidden behind the `use_polymorphic_bookmarks` site setting). The main ones are:
* ExportUserArchive compatibility
* SyncTopicUserBookmarked job compatibility
* Sending different notifications for the bookmark reminders based on the bookmarkable type
* Import scripts compatibility
* BookmarkReminderNotificationHandler compatibility
This PR also refactors the `register_bookmarkable` API so it accepts a class descended from a `BaseBookmarkable` class instead. This was done because we kept having to add more and more lambdas/properties inline and it was very messy, so a factory pattern is cleaner. The classes can be tested independently as well.
Some later PRs will address some other areas like the discourse narrative bot, advanced search, reports, and the .ics endpoint for bookmarks.
It's very easy to forget to add `require 'rails_helper'` at the top of every core/plugin spec file, and omissions can cause some very confusing/sporadic errors.
By setting this flag in `.rspec`, we can remove the need for `require 'rails_helper'` entirely.