This is a try to simplify logic around dismiss new topics to have one solution to work in all places - dismiss all-new, dismiss new in a specific category or even in a specific tag.
This encompasses a lot of work done over the last year, much of which
has already been merged into master. This is the final set of changes
required to get Ember CLI running locally for development.
From here on it will be bug fixes / enhancements.
Co-authored-by: Jarek Radosz <jradosz@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: romanrizzi <rizziromanalejandro@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Jarek Radosz <jradosz@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: romanrizzi <rizziromanalejandro@gmail.com>
A more general, lower-level change in addition to #11950.
Most code paths already check if SSO is enabled or if local logins are disabled before trying to create an email invite.
This is a safety net to ensure no invalid invites sneak by.
Also includes:
FIX: Don't allow to bulk invite when SSO is on (or when local logins are disabled)
This mirrors can_invite_to_forum? and other email invite code paths.
To prevent opaque cache files, now all the CDN files will be requested in 'cors' mode if the cdn_cors_enabled global setting is enabled. Before enabling the setting, should enable the cors in the CDN server by adding the response header `access-control-allow-origin: *` or `access-control-allow-origin: https://discourse.example.com.`
And other external file requests other than CDN will not be cached if the response type is opaque.
Disabling shared drafts used to leave topics in an inconsistent state
where they were not displayed as shared drafts and thus there was no
way of publishing them. Moreover, they were accessible just to users
who have permissions to create shared drafts.
This commit adds another permission check that is used for most
operations and the old can_create_shared_draft? remains used just when
creating a new shared draft.
Adds a new column/setting to groups, allow_unknown_sender_topic_replies, which is default false. When enabled, this scenario is allowed via IMAP:
* OP sends an email to the support email address which is synced to a group inbox via IMAP, creating a group topic
* Group user replies to the group topic
* An email notification is sent to the OP of the topic via GroupSMTPMailer
* The OP has several email accounts and the reply is sent to all of them, or they forward their reply to another email account
* The OP replies from a different email address than the OP (gloria@gmail.com instead of gloria@hey.com for example)
* The a new staged user is created, the new reply is accepted and added to the topic, and the staged user is added to the topic allowed users
Without allow_unknown_sender_topic_replies enabled the new reply creates an entirely new topic (because the email address it is sent from is not previously part of the topic email chain).
This PR adds security_last_changed_at and security_last_changed_reason to uploads. This has been done to make it easier to track down why an upload's secure column has changed and when. This necessitated a refactor of the UploadSecurity class to provide reasons why the upload security would have changed.
As well as this, a source is now provided from the location which called for the upload's security status to be updated as they are several (e.g. post creator, topic security updater, rake tasks, manual change).
A simplified version of the logic used in the function before my fix is as follow:
```ruby
result = []
things = [0,1,2,3]
max_values = 2
every = (things.size.to_f / max_values).ceil
things.each_with_index do |t, index|
next unless (t % every) === 0
result << t
end
p result # [0, 2]
# 3 doesn’t get included
```
The problem is that if you get unlucky two times you won't get last tuple(s) and might get a very erroneous date.
Double unlucky:
- last tuple index % computed every !== 0 and you don't get the last tuple
- the last tuple is related to a post with a very different date than the previous tuples (on year difference in our case)
Improvements to make console access to IncomingEmail more pleasant, and stopping certain IMAP logs from landing in the DB because they just create too much noise,
This should make it easier to track down how the incoming email was created, which is one of four locations:
The POP3 poller (which picks up reply via email replies)
The admin email controller #handle_mail (which is where hosted mail is sent)
The IMAP sync tool
The group SMTP mailer, which sends emails when replying to IMAP topics, pre-emptively creating IncomingEmail records to avoid double syncing
It returned a 429 error code with a 'Retry-After' header if a
RateLimiter::LimitExceeded was raised and unhandled, but the header was
missing if the request was limited in the 'RequestTracker' middleware.
Admins can now edit translations in different languages without having to change their locale. We display a warning when there's a fallback language set.
Transient errors in migration are ignored, silently corrupting
data, and the migration is incomplete and misses many sources of
uploads, which will lead to an incorrect expectation of independence
from the remote object storage after announcing that the migration
was successful, regardles of whether transient errors permanently
corrupted the data.
Remove this migration until such time as it is re-written to
follow the same pattern has the migration to s3, moving the
core logic out of the task.
This PR fixes a race condition with the IMAP notification code. In the `Email::Receiver` we call the `NewPostManager` to create the post and enqueue jobs and sends alerts via `PostAlerter`. However, if the post alerter reaches the `notify_pm_users` and the `group_notifying_via_smtp` method _before_ the incoming email is updated with the post and topic, we unnecessarily send a notification to the person who just posted. The result of this is that the IMAP syncer re-imports the email sent to the user about their own post, which looks like this in the group inbox:
To fix this, we skip the jobs enqueued by `NewPostManager` and only enqueue them with `PostJobsEnqueuer` manually _after_ the incoming email record has been updated with the post and topic.
Other improvements:
* Moved code to calculate email addresses from `IncomingEmail` records into the topic, with a group passed in, for easier testing and debugging. It is not the responsibility of the post alerter to figure this stuff out.
* Add shortcut methods on `IncomingEmail` to split or provide an empty array for to and cc addresses to avoid repetition.
Feature for `Must Approve Users` setup. When a user is rejected, a staff member can optionally set a reason for audit purposes. In addition, feedback email can be sent to the user.
Meta: https://meta.discourse.org/t/account-rejection-email/103112/8
This PR adds functionality for the IMAP sync code to detect if a UID that is missing from the mail group mailbox is in the Spam/Junk folder for the mail account, and if so delete the associated Discourse topic. This is identical to what we do for emails that are moved for Trash.
If an email is missing but not in Spam or Trash, then we mark the incoming email record with imap_missing: true. This may be used in future to further filter or identify these emails, and perhaps go hunting for them in the email account in bulk.
Note: This adds some code duplication because the trash and spam email detection and handling is very similar. I intend to do more refactors/improvements to the IMAP sync code in time because there is a lot of room for improvement.
Splits the `ToggleTopicClosed` job into two distinct `OpenTopic` and `CloseTopic` jobs to make the code clearer. The old job cannot be deleted yet because of outstanding sidekiq schedules, so a todo has been added to do so later this year.
Also replaced mentions of `topic_status_update` with `topic_timer` in some files, because the `topic_status_update` model is obsolete and replaced by topic timer.
Added some shortcut methods for checking if a topic is open/whether a user can change an open topic.
If the sliding window size is N seconds, then a moment at the Nth second
should be considered as the moment outside of the sliding window.
Otherwise, if the sliding window is already full, at the Nth second,
a new call wouldn't be allowed, but a time to wait before the next call
would be equal to zero, which is confusing.
In other words, the end of the time range shouldn't be included in the
sliding window.
Let's say we start at the second 0, and the sliding window size is 10
seconds. In the current version of rate limiter, this sliding window will
be considered as a time range [0, 10] (including the end of the range),
which actually is 11 seconds in length.
After this fix, the time range will be considered as [0, 10)
(excluding the end of the range), which is exactly 10 seconds in length.
It was a problem because during this operation only the first frame
is kept. This commit removes the alternative solution to check if a GIF
image is animated.
* DEV: TopicTrackingState calls should happen in the background
It was observed that calling TopicTrackingState on popular topics could result in a large number of calls to redis, resulting in slow response times when posting replies.
These calls should be moved to a background job.
* DEV: PostUpdateTopicTrackingState should execute on default queue