This change adds `target` to the set of attributes allowed by the
HTML sanitizer which is applied to the description of a user_field.
The rationale for this change:
* If one puts a link (<a>...</a>) in the description of a user_field
that is present and/or required at sign-up, the expectation is that
a prospective new user will click on that link during sign-up.
* Without an appropriate `target` attribute on the link, the new page
will be loaded in the same window/tab as the sign-up form, but this
will obliterate any fields that the user had already filled-out on
the form. (E.g., hitting the back-button will return to an
empty form.)
* Such UX behavior is incredibly aggravating to new users.
This change allows an admin to add a `target` attribute to links, to
instruct the browser to open them in a different window/tab, leaving
a sign-up form intact.
Links to category settings were created using the category name. If the name was a single word, the link would be valid (regardless of capitalization).
For example, if the category was named `Awesome`
`/c/Awesome/edit/settings`
is a valid URL as that is a case-insensitive match for the category slug of `awesome`.
However, if the category had a space in it, the URL would be
`/c/Awesome%20Name/edit/settings`
which does not match the slug of `awesome-name`.
This change uses the category slug, rather than the name, which is the expected behaviour (see `Category.find_by_slug_path`).
This commit does a couple of things:
1. Changes the limit of tags to include a subject for a
notification email to the `max_tags_per_topic` setting
instead of the arbitrary 3 limit
2. Adds both an X-Discourse-Tags and X-Discourse-Category
custom header to outbound emails containing the tags
and category from the subject, so people on mail clients
that allow advanced filtering (i.e. not Gmail) can filter
mail by tags and category, which is useful for mailing
list mode users
c.f. https://meta.discourse.org/t/headers-for-email-notifications-so-that-gmail-users-can-filter-on-tags/249982/17
We previously used post creator's guardian permissions which will raise an error if the reviewer added a staff-only (restricted) tag.
Co-authored-by: Natalie Tay <natalie.tay@discourse.org>
Having this set to ALL pollutes the JS system spec
logs with a bunch of unnecessary noise like this:
> "PresenceChannel '/chat-user/core/1' dropped message (received 315, expecting 246), resyncing..."
Or:
> "DEPRECATION: The \u003Cdiscourse@component:plugin-connector::ember1112>#save computed property was just overridden. This removes the computed property and replaces it with a plain value, and has been deprecated.
Now, we will only log errors. To configure this set
the `SELENIUM_BROWSER_LOG_LEVEL` env var.
Our working theory is that system tests on Github run on much less
powerful hardware as compared to running the tests on our work machines.
Hopefully, increasing the wait time now will help reduce some flakes
that we're seeing on Github.
This commit fixes an issue where the chat message bookmarks
did not respect the user's `bookmark_auto_delete_preference`
which they select in their user preference page.
Also, it changes the default for that value to "keep bookmark and clear reminder"
rather than "never", which ends up leaving a lot of expired bookmark
reminders around which are a pain to clean up.
When sending emails out via group SMTP, if we
are sending them to non-staged users we want
to mask those emails with BCC, just so we don't
expose them to anyone we shouldn't. Staged users
are ones that have likely only interacted with
support via email, and will likely include other
people who were CC'd on the original email to the
group.
Co-authored-by: Martin Brennan <martin@discourse.org>
Using a shared channel means that every user receives an update to the 'last_id' when *any* other user is logged out. If many users are being programmatically logged out at the same time, this can cause a very large number of message-bus polls.
This commit switches to use a user-specific channel, which means that each user has its own 'last id' which will only increment when they are logged out
This commit changes the default return value of `Auth::ManagedAuthenticator#primary_email_verified?` to false. We're changing the default to force developers to think about email verification when building a new authentication method. All existing authenticators (in core and official plugins) have been updated to explicitly define the `primary_email_verified?` method in their subclass of `Auth::ManagedAuthenticator` (example commit 65f57a4d05).
Internal topic: t/82084.
It should fix flakeys we have due to using_session. This commit is also fixing tests which were failing constantly with treadsafe enabled.
A test has also bene skipped as the issue couldn't be found so far.
More info: https://github.com/teamcapybara/capybara#threadsafe-mode
# Context
When a topic is reviewable by a group we give those group moderators some admin abilities including the ability to delete a topic.
# Problem
There are two main problems:
1. Currently when a group moderator deletes a topic they are redirected to root (not the same for staff)
2. Viewing the categories deleted topics (`c/foo/1/?status=deleted`) does not display the deleted topic to the group moderator (not the same for staff).
# Fix
If the `deleted_by` user is part a group that matches the `reviewable_by_group` on a topic then don't redirect. This is the default interaction for staff to give them the ability to do things like restore the topic in case it was accidentally deleted.
To render the deleted topics as expected for the group moderator I am utilizing [the guardian scope of `guardian.can_see_deleted_topics?` for said category](https://github.com/discourse/discourse/pull/19618/files#diff-288e61b8bacdb29d9c2e05b42da6837b0036dcf1867332d977ca7c5e74a44297R802-R803)
We show live user status on mentions starting from a76d864. But status didn’t appear on the post that appears on the bottom of the topic just after a user posted it (status appeared only after page reloading). This adds status to just posted posts.
Previously, browser logs would be printed to STDOUT halfway through the test run. This commit changes the behaviour so that the logs are included in the failure summary along with other rspec failure information.
There is an issue where chat message processing breaks due to
unhandles `SocketError` exceptions originating in the SSRF check,
specifically in `FinalDestination::Resolver`.
This change gives `FinalDestination::SSRFDetector` a new error class
to wrap the `SocketError` in, and haves the `RetrieveTitle` class
handle that error gracefully.
Currently the `turbo:spec` task will fail when encountering system
tests as Capypara tries to use the same port for each process.
This simple change uses the same strategy as for databases, by just
incrementing the port number by `TEST_ENV_NUMBER` for each process.
A few specs in `dashboard_controller_spec.rb` set some state in redis but don't clean it up afterwards which causes other specs to fail when they're ran after `dashboard_controller_spec.rb`.
Related commit: 18467d4.
We are all in on system specs, so this commit moves all the chat quoting acceptance tests (some of which have been skipped for a while) into system specs.
Honestly seems like it's being in some weird loop for
discourse/hashtag_autocomplete_spec.rb for this:
```ruby
within topic_page.post_by_number(2) do
cooked_hashtags = page.all(".hashtag-cooked", count: 2)
expect(cooked_hashtags[0]["outerHTML"]).to eq(<<~HTML.chomp)
<a class=\"hashtag-cooked\" href=\"#{category.url}\" data-type=\"category\" data-slug=\"cool-cat\"><svg class=\"fa d-icon d-icon-folder svg-icon svg-node\"><use href=\"#folder\"></use></svg><span>Cool Category</span></a>
HTML
expect(cooked_hashtags[1]["outerHTML"]).to eq(<<~HTML.chomp)
<a class=\"hashtag-cooked\" href=\"#{tag.url}\" data-type=\"tag\" data-slug=\"cooltag\"><svg class=\"fa d-icon d-icon-tag svg-icon svg-node\"><use href=\"#tag\"></use></svg><span>cooltag</span></a>
HTML
end
```
I see this many times in the full logs with `SELENIUM_VERBOSE_DRIVER_LOGS=1`:
```
COMMAND FindElements {
"using": "css selector",
"value": "#post_2"
}
Followed by:
COMMAND FindChildElements {
"id": "26dfe542-659b-46cc-ac8c-a6c2d9cbdf0a",
"using": "css selector",
"value": ".hashtag-cooked"
}
```
Over and over and over, there are 58 such occurrences. I am beginning to
think `within` is just poison that should be avoided.
Featured topics are eventually serialized by `ListableTopicSerializer`
which calls `Topic#image_url` which requires us to preload
`Topic#topic_thumbnails`.
Previously, calling `sign_in` would cause the browser to be redirected to `/`, and would cause the Ember app to boot. We would then call `visit()`, causing the app to boot for a second time.
This commit adds a `redirect=false` option to the `/session/username/become` route. This avoids the unnecessary boot of the app, and leads to significantly faster system spec run times.
In local testing, this takes the full system-spec suite for chat from ~6min to ~4min.
At the time of writing, this is how the `TopicPosterSerializer` looks
like:
```
class TopicPosterSerializer < ApplicationSerializer
attributes :extras, :description
has_one :user, serializer: PosterSerializer
has_one :primary_group, serializer: PrimaryGroupSerializer
has_one :flair_group, serializer: FlairGroupSerializer
end
```
Within `PosterSerializer`, the `primary_group` and `flair_group`
association is requested on the `user` object. However, the associations
have not been loaded on the `user` object at this point leading to the
N+1 queries problem. One may wonder
why the associations have not been loaded when the `TopicPosterSerializer`
has `has_one :primary_group` and `has_one :flair_group`. It turns out that `TopicPoster`
is just a struct containing the `user`, `primary_group` and
`flair_group` objects. The `primary_group` and `flair_group`
ActiveRecord objects are loaded seperately in `UserLookup` and not preloaded when querying for
the users. This is done for performance reason so that we are able to
load the `primary_group` and `flair_group` records in a single query
without duplication.
We were adding to the resolver's work queue before setting up the `@lookup` and `@parent` information. That could lead to the lookup being performed on the wrong (or `nil`) hostname. This also lead to some flakiness in specs.
This test occasionally fails in CI. I haven't been able to reproduce the issue locally. This logging will print some extra information when the assertion fails.
We were using the `for_input: true` param when calling
DiscourseTagging, which is really meant for selecting tags
in the UI, which often need a parent tag selected first
before the child tags in tag group will show. We just
want to show all tags regardless of grouping in hashtag
search.`
It was redefining rather than including them. It was causing this warning:
```
WARNING: Shared example group suspension of active user possible was defined without a block and will have no effect. Please define a block or remove the definition
```
* DEV: Fix png optimization test flakyness
Update fixture with oxipng 7
This test broke when the pngoptimizer got better so the pre-optimized png in the fixtures was compressed further on upload creation, breaking the expected size.
We generally do not return muted child categories to the user
if they have muted the parent category, this commit respects that
rule for CategoryHashtagDataSource