After running the Discourse merge script, it was pretty evident it held up well after all these years ;)
Made a few fixes:
Included an environment variable for DB_PASS as likely the password will need to be changed if running the import in an official Docker container (recommended)
Set a hard order for imported categories, otherwise sometimes they'd be imported in a weird order making things unpredictable for parent/child category imports
Fixed a couple of instances where we added unique indexes (such as on category slugs)
Set up upload regex to handle AWS URLs better
Fixed the script to work with frozen string literals
This commit adds an additional find_user_by_email hook to ManagedAuthenticator so that GitHub login can continue to support secondary email addresses
The github_user_infos table will be dropped in a follow-up commit.
This is the last core authenticator to be migrated to ManagedAuthenticator 🎉
Adjustments to the base:
1. PG connection doesn't require host - it was broken on import droplet
2. Drop `topic_reply_count` - it was removed here - https://github.com/discourse/discourse/blob/master/db/post_migrate/20200513185052_drop_topic_reply_count.rb
3. Error with `backtrace.join("\n")` -> `e.backtrace.join("\n")`
4. Correctly link the user and avatar to quote block
Adjustments to vanilla:
1. Top-level Vanilla categories are valid categories
2. Posts have `format` column which should be used to decide if the format is HTML or Markdown
3. Remove no UTF8 characters
4. Remove not supported HTML elements like `font` `span` `sub` `u`
- Stream the queries that load the imported_ids
- Use an array instead of a hash for keeping the mapping between imported_ids and new ids
- Ensure we always treat the imported_ids as integers instead of strings
We have the `# frozen_string_literal: true` comment on all our
files. This means all string literals are frozen. There is no need
to call #freeze on any literals.
For files with `# frozen_string_literal: true`
```
puts %w{a b}[0].frozen?
=> true
puts "hi".frozen?
=> true
puts "a #{1} b".frozen?
=> true
puts ("a " + "b").frozen?
=> false
puts (-("a " + "b")).frozen?
=> true
```
For more details see: https://samsaffron.com/archive/2018/02/16/reducing-string-duplication-in-ruby
This is not used in core or official plugins, and has been printing a deprecation notice since v2.3.0beta4. All OpenID 2.0 code and dependencies have been dropped. The user_open_ids table remains for now, in case anyone has missed the deprecation notice, and needs to migrate their data.
Context at https://meta.discourse.org/t/-/113249
We like to stay as close as possible to latest with rubocop cause the cops
get better.
This update required some code changes, specifically the default is to avoid
explicit returns where implicit is done
Also this renames a few rules
This reduces chances of errors where consumers of strings mutate inputs
and reduces memory usage of the app.
Test suite passes now, but there may be some stuff left, so we will run
a few sites on a branch prior to merging
Changes to functionality
- Removed syncing of user metadata including gender, location etc.
These are no longer available to standard Facebook applications.
- Removed the remote 'revoke' functionality. No other providers have
it, and it does not appear to be standard practice in other apps.
- The 'facebook_no_email' event is no longer logged. The system can
cope fine with a missing email address.
Data is migrated to the new user_associated_accounts table.
facebook_user_infos can be dropped once we are confident the data has
been migrated successfully.
- By default, behaviour is not changed: tags are made lowercase upon creation and edit.
- If force_lowercase_tags is disabled, then mixed case tags are allowed.
- Tags must remain case-insensitively unique. This is enforced by ActiveRecord and Postgres.
- A migration is added to provide a `UNIQUE` index on `lower(name)`. Migration includes a safety to correct any current tags that do not meet the criteria.
- A `where_name` scope is added to `models/tag.rb`, to allow easy case-insensitive lookups. This is used instead of `Tag.where(name: "blah")`.
- URLs remain lowercase. Mixed case URLs are functional, but have the lowercase equivalent as the canonical.