This adds these two new test cases:
context "when updating a mentioned user" do
it "updates the mention record" do
# and
context "when there are duplicate mentions" do
it "creates a single mention record per mention" do
Apart from that, this groups mention related tests into a context, renames one test, and moves setup of another test into the test case itself from the before block (to make it more clear, that test is the only one that uses that setup). See the PR's commit history.
This was failing quite often with the following error:
```
1) Emoji deny list when using composer should remove denied emojis from emoji picker
Failure/Error: find("#{COMPOSER_ID} .emoji-picker")
Capybara::ElementNotFound:
Unable to find css "#reply-control .emoji-picker"
```
This was because our `click_toolbar_button` call on the Composer
page object used a number for the position of the toolbar button,
which can be flaky since there are things that hide/show toolbar
buttons or change their position.
Each toolbar button in the composer has a CSS class, so it is
more reliable to use that instead. Also fixed an instance of
calling `has_X?` method directly instead of using the
`have_x` rspec matcher.
We are seeing issues with the composer not being able to close due to the addition of a error message when rescuing from `Draft::OutOfSequence`. This PR will revert to the original solution implemented prior to https://github.com/discourse/discourse/pull/21148 that just silently rescues from `Draft::OutOfSequence`
Steps to reproduce the bug:
1. Send a chat message
2. Edit the message and add a mention to it
3. The mentioned user won't receive a notification
This PR fixes the problem.
Also:
1. There's no need anymore to have a code for removing notifications in the `notify_edit` method, because a call to `@chat_message.update_mentions` in the first line of the `notify_edit` method does that job:
ff56f403a2/plugins/chat/lib/chat/notifier.rb (L90)
2. There's no need to load mention records from database, it's enough to pluck user ids
This PR adds the ability to destroy reviewables for a passed user via the API. This was not possible before as this action was reserved for reviewables for you created only.
If a user is an admin and calls the `#destroy` action from the API they are able to destroy a reviewable for a passed user. A user can be targeted by passed either their:
- username
- external_id (for SSO)
to the request.
In the case you attempt to destroy a non-personal reviewable and
- You are not an admin
- You do not access the `#destroy` action via the API
you will raise a `Discourse::InvalidAccess` (403) and will not succeed in destroying the reviewable.
Responding to negative behaviour tends to solicit more of the same. Common wisdom states: "don't feed the trolls".
This change codifies that advice by introducing a new nudge when hitting the reply button on a flagged post. It will be shown if either the current user, or two other users (configurable via a site setting) have flagged the post.
Followup to bd5c5c4b5f, a
bug was introduced there for any channel that did not have
threading enabled or sites with the experimental threading
disabled. When the user replied to another chat message,
since this is always a thread in the background, we weren't
sending any MessageBus messages to the main channel, since
the message was a thread reply.
However in the UI these messages still show in the main stream
of the channel if threading is turned off, so the UI was not
reacting to these things happening in the backend. The worst
issue was that new clients would not see new replies sent in
reply to other messages in the channel.
This reverts commit 768851920e.
This was causing issues with the local date popup, cutting off
the top of it, there is no way to overrule an overflow:hidden
on the parent. Not z-index related.
This is to help generate random channels and chat
messages for local dev. This was removed in 12a18d4d55
presumably because it was not worth refactoring at the
time.
I've only added these tasks:
- `rake chat:message:populate\[113,20\]` (channel_id, count)
- Generates the count of messages for a channel ID provided,
otherwise uses a random channel and 200 count.
- `rake chat:category_channel:populate`
- Creates a chat channel for a random category.
- `rake chat🧵populate\[132,5\]` (channel_id, message_count)
- Creates a thread with N messages in the specified channel,
and enables threading in that channel if necessary
This commit fixes the following scenario:
1. The user is searching for hashtags in chat, where the subcategory
type is not highest-ranked in priority order.
2. There can, but doesn't have to be, a higher-ranked matching chat
channel that has the same slug as the subcategory.
3. Since it is not the highest-ranked type, the subcategory, which
normally has a ref of parent:child, has its ref changed to
child::category, which does not work
This was happening because whenever a hashtag type was not highest
ranked, if _any_ other hashtag results conflicted slugs, we would
append the ::type suffix. Now, we only append this suffix if a
higher-ranked type conflicts with the hashtag, and we use the current ref
to build the new typed ref to preserve this parent:child format as well,
it's more accurate.
This PR adds the ability to destroy drafts for a passed user via the API. This was not possible before as this action was reserved for only your personal drafts.
If a user is an admin and calls the `#destroy` action from the API they are able to destroy a draft for a passed user. A user can be targeted by passed either their:
- username
- external_id (for SSO)
to the request.
In the case you attempt to destroy a non-personal draft and
- You are not an admin
- You do not access the `#destroy` action via the API
you will raise a `Discourse::InvalidAccess` (403) and will not succeed in destroying the draft.
It switches to a different command for detecting the current git branch because the old command always returned HEAD as branch when the git repository is on a detached head (e.g. tag). The new command doesn't return a branch when the repository is on a detached head, which allows us to fall back to the `version` variable that is stored in the git config since https://github.com/discourse/discourse_docker/pull/707. It contains the value of the `version` from `app.yml`.
It also includes a small change to specs, because our tests usually run on specific commits instead of a branch or tag, so Discourse.git_branch always returns "unknown". We can use the "unknown" branch for tests, so it makes sense to ignore it only in other envs.
It's backward compatible so still supports our 3.28 ember-source.
The visible change is finally getting rid of this message:
```
WARNING: Node v18.12.0 is not tested against Ember CLI on your platform. We recommend that you use the most-recent "Active LTS" version of Node.js. See https://git.io/v7S5n for details.
```
---
`@ember/string` dependency is added for future compatibility. See: https://github.com/ember-cli/ember-cli/pull/10125
---
`tests/helpers/index.js` is unused for now, but is a nice pattern. We could move some of our test setup into local `setupApplicationTest/setupRenderingTest/setupTest` helpers.
Co-authored-by: David Taylor <david@taylorhq.com>
This commit fixes an issue where if you pressed a format
shortcut (e.g. bold, italic, code) for the composer and
you had the thread panel open as well, the shortcut would
trigger in both composers, not just the one that was focused.
We currently don't have a nice UI to show unread messages for the thread,
and it will take some time to create one. For now, this commit makes it so
new messages inside a thread do not count towards a chat channel's unread
counts, and new messages sent in a thread do not update a user's `last_read_message_id`
for a channel.
In addition, this PR refactors the `Chat::ChannelFetcher` to use the `Chat::ChannelUnreadsQuery`
query class for consistency, and made said class able to return zeroed-out records
for channels the user is not a member of.
Finally, a small bug is fixed here where if a user's `last_read_message_id` for
a channel was a thread's OM ID, then the thread OM would not show in the
main channel stream for them until another reply to the channel was posted.
All supported browsers use `transitionend` event now, so this code is not necessary and makes it difficult to use that event in tests (you'd have to trigger all variants to cover the bases)
That function was used only in core (no hits in all-the*) in two places, so I think it's rather safe to just trash it without deprecating it first.
(History Corner – this helper was originally added in the initial commit of Discourse! 1839614bcc/app/assets/javascripts/discourse/components/transition_helper.js.coffee)
This fixes a 500 error that occurs when adding a tag to a category's
restricted tag list if the category's restricted tags already included a
synonym tag.
We've found these exceptions in logs:
Job exception: undefined method `destroy!' for nil:NilClass
/var/www/discourse/plugins/chat/lib/chat/notifier.rb:102:in `block in notify_edit'
/var/www/discourse/plugins/chat/lib/chat/notifier.rb💯in `each'
/var/www/discourse/plugins/chat/lib/chat/notifier.rb💯in `notify_edit'
/var/www/discourse/plugins/chat/app/jobs/regular/chat/send_message_notifications.rb:18:in `execute'
In the past, we were creating `chat_mention` records only for sending notifications, so every mention record had a related notification. It isn't the case anymore (since fa543cda). This PR fixes the problem by making sure the notification exists before trying to remove it. Also, we shouldn't be deleting a `chat_mention` record itself, only a notification, this PR fixes that too.
It's quite hard to reproduce this bug locally, I wasn't able to do so, the logic in this class is quite complicated, that's why I'm not adding a test. Also, when looking at this I realized that this method isn't in a fully correct state now, I suspect sometimes some notifications may not be delivered after someone edits a chat message and adds new mentions to it. I'm going to refactor and simplify the method in a subsequent PR.