A follow up PR should investigate why `proposal-logical-assignment-operators` is not getting used here (test file?) but this should be enough to get things running.
* DEV: Sanitize HTML admin inputs
This PR adds on-save HTML sanitization for:
Client site settings
translation overrides
badges descriptions
user fields descriptions
I used Rails's SafeListSanitizer, which [accepts the following HTML tags and attributes](018cf54073/lib/rails/html/sanitizer.rb (L108))
* Make sure that the sanitization logic doesn't corrupt settings with special characters
I was previously relying on `this.isDestroying` returning `true` during `willDestroyElement`. This was an incorrect assumption.
This commit refactors the logic into an explicit `cleanup` function, and also adds some cleanup for empty keys in the `subscribedProxy` array
The flow goes from:
- getting current user object
- creating a POJO using some of the current user keys
- passing this POJO around, which end up being used in message bus
- the processing fn associated ens up doing User.create on this object will both create a User object, but also inject store in it, store is holding a reference to currentUser Object and...
BOOM, we have an object holding a reference to the same object, which JSON.stringify used in prepareBody of pretender doesn't like.
This PR doesn't change any behavior, but just removes code that wasn't in use. This is a pretty dangerous place to change, since it gets called during user's registration. At the same time the refactoring is very straightforward, it's clear that this code wasn't doing any work (it still needs to be double-checked during review though). Also, the test coverage of UserNameSuggester is good.
* PERF: Remove JOIN on categories for PM search
JOIN on categories is not needed when searchin in private messages as
PMs are not categorized.
* DEV: Use == for string comparison
* PERF: Optimize query for allowed topic groups
There was a query that checked for all topics a user or their groups
were allowed to see. This used UNION between topic_allowed_users and
topic_allowed_groups which was very inefficient. That was replaced with
a OR condition that checks in either tables more efficiently.
This commit adds uploadHandler support to composer uploads using
uppy. The only things we have that are using this are discourse-brightcove and
discourse-video, which both pop modal windows to handle the file upload and
completely leave out all the composer-type flows. This implementation simply
follows the existing one, where if a single file is uploaded and there
is a matching upload handler we take control away from uppy and hand
it off to the upload handler.
Trying to get this kind of thing working within uppy would require a few
changes because they have no way to restrict uploaders to certain file types
and with the way their uploaders are run it doesn't look like it would be easy
to add this either, so I don't think this is worth the work unless at some
point in the future we plan to have more upload handler integrations.
I also fixed an issue with `cleanUpComposerUploadHandler` which is used
in tests to reset the state of `uploadHandlers` in the composer. This
was doing `uploadHandlers = []` to clear that array, but that creates
a brand new array so anything else referencing the original array will
lose that reference. Better to set `uploadHandlers.length = 0` to
clear it. This was breaking the tests I added to see if upload handlers
were working.
We were previously showing the "n new or updated topics" alert on
category routes like `/c/category-slug/ID/none` on every new/unread
topic update. This PR looks up the category by ID, which should be more
precise.
By default, Rails only includes the Vary:Accept header in responses when the Accept: header is included in the request. This means that proxies/browsers may cache a response to a request with a missing Accept header, and then later serve that cached version for a request which **does** supply the Accept header. This can lead to some very unexpected behavior in browsers.
This commit adds the Vary:Accept header for all requests, even if the Accept header is not present in the request. If a format parameter (e.g. `.json` suffix) is included in the path, then the Accept header is still omitted. (The format parameter takes precedence over any Accept: header, so the response is no longer varies based on the Accept header)