This PR removes the user reminder topic timers, because that system has been supplanted and improved by bookmark reminders. The option is removed from the UI and all existing user reminder topic timers are migrated to bookmark reminders.
Migration does this:
* Get all topic_timers with status_type 5 (reminders)
* Gets all bookmarks where the user ID and topic ID match
* Loops through the found topic timers
* If there is no bookmark for the OP of the topic, then we just create a bookmark with a reminder
* If there is a bookmark for the OP of the topic and it does **not** have a reminder set, then just
update it with the topic timer reminder
* If there is a bookmark for the OP of the topic with a reminder then just discard the topic timer
* Cancels all outstanding user reminder topic timers
* **Trashes (not deletes) all user reminder topic timers**
Notes:
* For now I have left the user reminder topic timer job class in place; this is so the jobs can be cancelled in the migration. It and the specs will be deleted in the next PR.
* At a later date I will write a migration to delete all trashed user topic timers. They are not deleted here in case there are data issues and they need to be recovered.
* A future PR will change the UI of the topic timer modal to make it look more like the bookmark modal.
After restoring a backup it takes up to 48 hours for uploads stored on S3 to appear in the S3 inventory. This change prevents alerts about missing uploads by preventing the EnsureS3UploadsExistence job from running in the first 48 hours after a restore. During the restore it deletes the count of missing uploads from the PluginStore, so that an alert isn't triggered by an old number.
It is possible that a user could exist without an email, if so we should
not enqueue a job to download their gravatar.
This commit resolves this error that can occur:
```
Job exception: undefined method `email' for nil:NilClass
/var/www/discourse/app/models/user.rb:1204:in `email'
/var/www/discourse/app/jobs/regular/update_gravatar.rb:12:in `execute'
```
This commit also fixes the original spec which actually was wrong. The
job never enqueued in the original spec and so the gravatar was never
actually updated and the test was checking if the two values were the
same, but they were both null and never updated, so of course they were
the same!
A new test has also been added to make sure the gravatar job isn't
enqueued when a user's email is missing.
* FEATURE: Use predictable filenames inside the user archive export
* FEATURE: Include badges in user archive export
* FEATURE: Add user_visits table to the user archive export
This is in preparation for improvements to the user archive export data.
Some refactors happened along the way, including calling the different _export methods 'components' of the zip file.
Additionally, make the test for post export much more comprehensive.
Copy sources:
app/jobs/regular/export_csv_file.rb
spec/jobs/export_csv_file_spec.rb
With the addition of `PostSearchData#private_message`, a partial
index consisting of only search data from regular posts can be created.
The partial index helps to speed up searches on large sites since PG
will not have to do an index scan on the entire search data index which
has shown to be a bottle neck.
Convert all IMAP logging to write to a database table for easier inspection. These logs are cleaned up daily if they are > 5 days old.
Logs can easily be watched in dev by setting DISCOURSE_DEV_LOG_LEVEL=\"debug\" and running tail -f development.log | grep IMAP
When a tab is open but left unattended for a while, the red, green, and blue
pills tend to go out of sync.
So whevener we open the notifications menu, we sync up the notification count
(eg. blue and green pills) with the server.
However, the reviewable count (eg. the red pill) is not a notification and
is located in the hamburger menu. This commit adds a new route on the server
side to retrieve the reviewable count for the current user and a ping
(refreshReviewableCount) from the client side to sync the reviewable count
whenever they open the hamburger menu.
REFACTOR: I also refactored the hamburger-menu widget code to prevent repetitive uses
of "this.".
PERF: I improved the performance of the 'notify_reviewable' job by doing only 1 query
to the database to retrieve all the pending reviewables and then tallying based on the
various rights.
Previously we would unconditionally keep all images downloaded via pull_hotlinked_images, even if they are later removed from the post. This commit removes that logic, and relies on the existing link_post_uploads process to pick up the downloaded images in `cooked`. Specs are added to ensure this is working correctly for regular hotlinked images, and for oneboxes.
This commit should cause no functional change
- Split into functions to avoid deep nesting
- Register custom field type, and remove manual json parse/serialize
- Recover from deleted upload records
Also adds a test to ensure pull_hotlinked_images redownloads secure images only once
* FEATURE: notify admins about old credentials
Security and API keys should be renewed periodically.
This additional notification should help admins keep their Discourse safe and secure.
* DEV: new S3 backup layout
Currently, with $S3_BACKUP_BUCKET of "bucket/backups", multisite backups
end up in "bucket/backups/backups/dbname/" and single-site will be in
"bucket/backups/".
Both _should_ be in "bucket/backups/dbname/"
- remove MULTISITE_PREFIX,
- always include dbname,
- method to move to the new prefix
- job to call the method
* SPEC: add tests for `VacateLegacyPrefixBackups` onceoff job.
Co-authored-by: Vinoth Kannan <vinothkannan@vinkas.com>
When running jobs in tests, we use `Jobs.run_immediately!`. This means that jobs are run synchronously when they are enqueued. Jobs sometimes enqueue other jobs, which are also executed synchronously. This means that the outermost job will block until the inner jobs have finished executing. In some cases (e.g. process_post with hotlinked images) this can lead to a deadlock.
This commit changes the behavior slightly. Now we will never run jobs inside other jobs. Instead, we will queue them up and run them sequentially in the order they were enqueued. As a whole, they are still executed synchronously. Consider the example
```ruby
class Jobs::InnerJob < Jobs::Base
def execute(args)
puts "Running inner job"
end
end
class Jobs::OuterJob < Jobs::Base
def execute(args)
puts "Starting outer job"
Jobs.enqueue(:inner_job)
puts "Finished outer job"
end
end
Jobs.enqueue(:outer_job)
puts "All jobs complete"
```
The old behavior would result in:
```
Starting outer job
Running inner job
Finished outer job
All jobs complete
```
The new behavior will result in:
```
Starting outer job
Finished outer job
Running inner job
All jobs complete
```
It might happen that some User records have no associated primary emails.
In which case we don't ever want to send them a digest.
Also added a new "user_email_no_email" skipped email log to ensure these cases
are properly handled and surfaced.