Note:
```
def foo(bar: 1)
end
foo({bar: 2})
# raises a deprecation, instead use:
foo(**{bar: 2})
```
Additionally when matching regexes always use strings. It does not make
sense to match a non string to a regex.
I could not replicate the failure locally, but it was consistently
failing on CI with:
```
Assertion Failed: it should escape watched words
Expected: <img src="x">, Actual: <img src="x">
```
This commit removes an extra space that was added originally, but I
don't think it is really needed after double checking how it displays in
the UI. The `x` icon and the word have sufficient spacing between them.
If we need to we can tweak it in css instead.
Follow up to: bb31e7f5b6
This commit fixes this failing test:
`Assertion Failed: it should escape watched words`
Now that we have a handlebars template we can us it for escaping because
it does that for us.
This is another refactoring in the multi-step process to remove all uses
of our custom Render Buffer.
Previous commit: 2673cad142 in this
series.
This commit affects the display of watched words on the admin watched
word page. It is just a refactor and does not change any functionality.
We already cache failed onebox URL requests client-side, we now want to cache this on the server-side for extra protection. failed onebox previews will be cached for 1 hour, and any more requests for that URL will fail with a 404 status. Forcing a rebake via the Rebake HTML action will delete the failed URL cache (like how the oneboxer preview cache is deleted).
When uploading a file to a theme component, and that file is existing and has already been marked as secure, we now automatically mark the file as secure: false, change the ACL, and log the action as the user (also rebake the posts for the upload)
If a user has more than 60 active sessions, the oldest sessions will be terminated automatically. This protects performance when logging in and when loading the list of recently used devices.
This affects login_required sites which use SSO or have only one authenticator enabled. Previously, logging out would redirect to the homepage, which would then redirect to the identity provider. Now, users will be redirected to the Discourse login page. This avoids the confusing situation where a user appears to remain logged in after clicking logout.
Sites which have explicitly defined a logout_redirect url are not affected by this change.
For context, see https://meta.discourse.org/t/134138/2
This is a bottom up rewrite of Discourse cache to support faster performance
and a limited surface area.
ActiveSupport::Cache::Store accepts many options we do not use, this partial
implementation only picks the bits out that we do use and want to support.
Additionally params are named which avoids typos such as "expires_at" vs "expires_in"
This also moves a few spots in Discourse to use Discourse.cache over setex
Performance of setex and Discourse.cache.write is similar.
Discourse.cache is a more consistent method to use and offers clean fallback
if you are skipping redis
This is part of a larger change that both optimizes Discoruse.cache and omits
use of setex on $redis in favor of consistently using discourse cache
Bench does reveal that use of Rails.cache and Discourse.cache is 1.25x slower
than redis.setex / get so a re-implementation will follow prior to porting
This commit mostly get rid of the later() call and encapsulate all pie chart display logic inside discourse-poll-pie-canvas widget instead of sharing it between discourse-poll-pie-chart and discourse-poll-pie-canvas
This is another refactoring in the multi-step process to remove all uses
of our custom Render Buffer.
Previous commit: e0199e8094 in this
series.
This commit affects the table header sorting on the user directory page.
It is just a refactor and should not change any functionality.
* UX: adds hover effect on lightboxed images
This commits also adds two scss functions:
- is-light-color-scheme()
- is-dark-color-scheme()
This hover effect won't be added on dark color schemes, as images already standout nicely on dark backgrounds.
Co-Authored-By: David Taylor <david@taylorhq.com>
This commit corresponds to d84c34ad which applies the same changes to
the server-side. This changes the category routes, except for the routes
that contain tags.
This amends our API so we provide it with the draft key when saving a post
this means post creator can clean up the draft consistently even if we are
doing fancy stuff like replying to a new topic or new pm or whatever.
There will be some followup work to clean it up so client never calls destroy
on draft during normal operation and the #create/#update endpoints takes care of it
every time
PG 12 changes internals in a subtle way, time jitter is noticed in a few new
spots (which is normal) and default ordering is a bit different which is meant
to be random anyway.
This is another refactoring in the multi-step process to remove all uses
of our custom Render Buffer.
Previous commit: d0ad5ecc6d in this
series.
This commit affects the table header sorting on the admin directory page.
It is just a refactor and should not change any functionality.
If current value is nil we should use `&.` combined with `dig` to protect diff from erroring
It is happening when for example theme is delete (new value is empty)
* DEV: Remove buffered rendering from group-index-toggle
This is the first step in a refactor to remove all uses of our Buffered
Renderer:
01e2d5a670/app/assets/javascripts/discourse-common/lib/buffered-render.js.es6 (L3)
This commit affects the header sorting on the group member and the group
requests pages. It is a refactor only with no change in functionality.
When we receive a list of categories, we should store them so that we
are able to query them in the browser without a page refresh.
This removes a previous fix for the same issue that was much less
general.
In `post_creator`, the ACL update is only necessary when uploads need to be secured.
This should fix a regression with S3 clones that do not support updating ACLs.
This commit attempts to fix two issues that affect quoted images.
The first issue is observed while loading. The 'position: absolute' CSS
property makes 'width' and 'height' behave differently. Instead of using
the known image size, this makes it use the computed width and height of
the image, which should be the right size, as shown to the user.
The second issue is caused by 'object-fit: cover' property which trimmed
the left and right sides of wide pictures to make them fit inside the
quote.