We support a low-level construct called "inline checks", which you can use to register a problem ad-hoc from within application code.
Problems registered by inline checks never show up in the admin dashboard, this is because when loading the dashboard, we run all realtime checks and look for problems. Because of an oversight, we considered inline checks to be "realtime", causing them to be run and clear their problem status.
To fix this, we don't consider inline checks to be realtime, to prevent them from running when loading the admin dashboard.
Followup to f70a65ea02
1. Update a second regex in `routeTo` to avoid stripping domain/protocol from middle of string
2. Update `URL.handleURL` to strip double-slashes in paths, before calling the ember router. This mimics what Ember does on initial page-load
Additional tests are added for both
This change is mainly a refactor of the desktop notifications service to improve readability and have standardised values for tracking state for current user in regards to the Notification API and Push API.
Also improves readability when handling push notification jobs, especially in scenarios where the push_notification_time_window_mins site setting is set to 0, which will allow sending push notifications instantly.
To achieve this, a new notifications service is set up with an `isInDoNotDisturb` tracked property. While a user is in do-not-disturb mode, it runs a regular timer until do-not-disturb is over.
We were writing theme-transpiler JS files to the filesystem on a per-process basis, and then immediately reading them back in. Plus, there was no cleanup mechanism, so the tmp directory would grow indefinitely.
This commit refactors things so that the `build.js` script outputs the theme-transpiler source to stdout. That way, we can read it directly into the process, and then into mini-racer, without needing to go via the filesystem. No cleanup required!
In production, the theme-transpiler is still cached in a file during `assets:precompile`
In the formkit conversion in 2ca06ba236
we missed setting a type for the UppyImageUploader for badges. Also,
we were not passing down the `image_url` as form data, so when we used
`data.image` for that field the badge was not updating in the UI after
page loads and the image URL was not loading for preview.
Co-authored-by: Joffrey JAFFEUX <j.jaffeux@gmail.com>
This commit introduces the `behaviorTransformer` API to safely override behaviors defined in Discourse.
Two new plugin APIs are introduced:
- `addBehaviorTransformerName` which allows plugins and theme-components to add a new valid transformer name if they want to provide overridable behaviors;
- `registerBehaviorTransformer` to register a transformer to override behaviors.
It also introduces the function `applyBehaviorTransformer` which can be imported from `discourse/lib/transformer`. This is used to mark a callback containing the desired behavior as overridable and applies the transformer logic.
How does it work?
## Marking a behavior as overridable:
To mark a behavior as overridable, in Discourse core, first the transformer name must be added to `app/assets/javascripts/discourse/app/lib/transformer/registry.js`. For plugins and theme-components, use the plugin API `addBehaviorTransformerName` instead.
Then, in your component or class, use the function `applyBehaviorTransformer` to mark the Behavior as overridable and handle the logic:
- example:
```js
...
@action
loadMore() {
applyBehaviorTransformer(
"discovery-topic-list-load-more",
() => {
this.documentTitle.updateContextCount(0);
return this.model
.loadMore()
.then(({ moreTopicsUrl, newTopics } = {}) => {
if (
newTopics &&
newTopics.length &&
this.bulkSelectHelper?.bulkSelectEnabled
) {
this.bulkSelectHelper.addTopics(newTopics);
}
if (moreTopicsUrl && $(window).height() >= $(document).height()) {
this.send("loadMore");
}
});
},
{ model: this.model }
);
},
...
```
## Overriding a behavior in plugins or themes
To override a behavior in plugins, themes, or TCs use the plugin API `registerBehaviorTransformer`:
- Example:
```js
withPluginApi("1.35.0", (api) => {
api.registerBehaviorTransformer("example-transformer", ({ context, next }) => {
console.log('we can introduce new behavior here instead', context);
next(); // call next to execute the expected behavior
});
});
```
Ember's legacy mixin system does not support native-class syntax, so we have to use the non-decorator syntaxes for `action()` and `computed()`.
Eventually, we will need to refactor things to remove these mixins... but today is not that day.
When creating a shared draft, we're recording topic view stats on the draft and then pass those on when the draft is published, conflating the actual view count.
This fixes that by not registering topic views if the topic is a shared draft.
When `SiteSetting.review_every_post` is true and the category `require_topic_approval` system creates two reviewable items.
1. Firstly, because the category needs approval, the `ReviewableQueuePost` record` is created - at this stage, no topic is created.
2. Admin is approving the review. The topic and first post are created.
3. Because `review_every_post` is true `queue_for_review_if_possible` callback is evaluated and `ReviewablePost` is created.
4. Then `ReviewableQueuePost` is linked to the newly generated topic and post.
At the beginning, we were thinking about hooking to those guards:
```
def self.queue_for_review_if_possible(post, created_or_edited_by)
return unless SiteSetting.review_every_post
return if post.post_type != Post.types[:regular] || post.topic.private_message?
return if Reviewable.pending.where(target: post).exists?
...
```
And add something like
```
return if Reviewable.approved.where(target: post).exists?
```
However, because the callback happens in point 3. before the `ReviewableQueuePost` is linked to the `Topic`, it was not possible.
Therefore, when `ReviewableQueuePost` is creating a `Topic`, a new option called `:reviewed_queued_post` is passed to `PostCreator` to avoid creating a second `Reviewable`.
Currently, descriptions for flag types aren’t interpolated, returning
`%{base_path}` in their string, for example. This breaks the navigation
on the sites.
The behavior changed probably because of an upgrade of Ruby, as two
hashes were passed to `I18n.t` (`vars` and `default`) without using the
splat operator.
Similar to https://github.com/discourse/discourse/pull/28061, merging topics with many posts can exceed the 30 seconds timeout that Unicorn workers are limited to, so we should move the operation into a background thread to get around this limit.
Internal topic: t/133710.
* SECURITY: Update default allowed iframes list
Change the default iframe url list to all include 3 slashes.
* SECURITY: limit group tag's name length
Limit the size of a group tag's name to 100 characters.
Internal ref - t/130059
* SECURITY: Improve sanitization of SVGs in Onebox
---------
Co-authored-by: Blake Erickson <o.blakeerickson@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Régis Hanol <regis@hanol.fr>
Co-authored-by: David Taylor <david@taylorhq.com>
Followup 4aea12fdcb
In certain config areas (like About) we want to be able
to fetch specific site settings by name. In this case,
sometimes we need to be able to fetch hidden settings,
in cases where a config area is still experimental.
Splitting out a different endpoint for this purpose
allows us to be stricter with what we return for config
areas without affecting the main site settings UI, revealing
hidden settings before they are ready.
`addCommunitySectionLink` API function accepts secondary argument to determine if the link should be added to the primary or secondary (more) section. There was a bug and all links were mounted in the secondary section.
We have a dedicated admin page (`/admin/customize/email_templates`) that lets admins customize all emails that Discourse sends to users. The way this page works is that it lists all translations strings that are used for emails, and the list of translation strings is currently hardcoded and hasn't been updated in years. We've had a number of new emails that Discourse sends, so we should add those templates to the list to let admins easily customize those templates.
Meta topic: https://meta.discourse.org/t/3-2-x-still-ignores-some-custom-email-templates/308203.
In this case, there is no 'nearPost' param in the URL. Instead, the server preloads a post-stream with whichever page of posts is requested. We can check for that situation using `postStream.firstPostPresent`.
Also updates the widget-header version to fetch a value from the service on initial render, instead of relying on the observer triggering.
Followup to bdec564d14
Currently, if MF definitions are missing (typically because there’s a
compilation error), `I18n.messageFormat` will try to access
`I18n._mfMessages.hasMessage` resulting in a crash that will in turn
crash Ember.
This patch addresses the issue by using the optional chaining operator
making the `I18n.messageFormat` method return a "Missing Key" message.
MF strings won’t be rendered properly, but the site will stay usable.
* FIX: Ensure JsLocaleHelper to obly outputs up-to-date translations
The old implementation forgot to filter out deprecated
translations, causing these translations to incorrectly override the new
locale in the frontend.
This commit fills in the forgotten where clause, filtering only the
up-to-date part.
Related meta topic: https://meta.discourse.org/t/outdated-translation-replacement-causing-missing-translation/314352
By default, the swc minifier seems to unwrap 'unneeded' IIFE. That means it was undoing the 'bugfix' transformation we have for class fields in Safari 15. Disabling the 'inline' and 'reduce_funcs' options seems to stop this behavior.