We use the user-info component in several places, and we want to show status on some of them. If you want status to appear, do this:
{{user-info showStatus=true}}
Currently we can’t add a case-sensitive watched word if another one
exists with a different case. For example, the existing watched word
`Meta` has been created and is case-sensitive. Now an admin tries to add
`metA` while marking it as case-sensitive too, this won’t work and the
word won’t be added.
This patch changes this behavior by allowing to add same words that have
different cases, so the example above will now work as expected.
We still check for uniqueness but case-sensitivy is now taken
into account. It means that if the watched word `meta` already exists
and is not case-sensitive then it will not be possible to add `Meta`
(case-sensitive or not) as `meta` already matches every possible
variations of this word.
Our internal implementation of #perform on jobs performs remapping.
This happens cause we do "exception aggregation".
Scheduled jobs run on every site in the multisite cluster, and we report
one error per site that failed. During this aggregation we reshape the
context from the original object shape returned by mini_scheduler
The new integration test ensures this interface will remain stable even if
decoupled parts of the code change shapes.
Co-authored-by: Alan Guo Xiang Tan <gxtan1990@gmail.com>
Prior to this commit, we had a default Glimmer component that was responsible for handling generic rendering of notifications in the user menu, and many notification types had a custom Glimmer component that inherited from the default component to customize how they were rendered. That implementation was less than ideal because it meant plugins would have to create Glimmer components to customize notification types added by them and that would make the surface area of the API too big.
This commit changes the implementation so there's only one Glimmer component for rendering notifications, and then notification types that need to be customized can create a regular JavaScript class - `renderDirector` in the code - that provides the Glimmer component with the content it should display. We also introduce an API for plugins to register a renderer for a notification type or override an existing one.
Some of the changes are partially extracted from https://github.com/discourse/discourse/pull/17379.
This will allow consumers to inject it using `topicTrackingState: service()` in preparation for the removal of implicit injections in Ember 4.0. `topic-tracking-state:main` is still available and will print a deprecation notice.
Ideally we would convert topic-tracking-state into a true service, rather than registering a model instance into the registry. However, inter-dependencies between service injections make this very difficult to achieve. We don't want to block Glimmer Component work, so this commit does the minimum for now.
When the route of the link is equal to the active route, we promote it
out of the "more..." links drawer and display it directly under the
community section. This commit fixes a bug where the secondary links in
the "more..." links drawer was not being marked as active.
Follow-up to e09fd7cde2
This commit extends the existing API bridge for supporting custom
general links in the old hamburger menu in Sidebar to support custom
footer links. Custom footer links can be added to the old hamburger
menu via the `api.decorateWidget("hamburger-menu:footerLinks")` API.
Footer links are added into the secondary section of the "More..." links
drawer in the Community section of the sidebar.
In the current hamburger menu dropdown, we have a link which allows users to toggle between mobile and desktop view on mobile and touch devices. This commit brings the same behaviour to sidebar.
Followup to d66115d918
* Makes sure the `actor_preferences` all initialize with an empty array instead of nil if there are no preferences e.g. the actor is not ignoring anyone
* If the actor has disabled all PMs make `actor_disallowing_pms?` always return true
* FIX: don't memoize site setting in guardian
Memoizing site settings can make tests more fragile and harder to debug
Co-authored-by: Jarek Radosz <jradosz@gmail.com>
This commit introduces several fine-grained methods
to UserCommScreener which can be used to show the actor
who they are ignoring/muting/blocking DMs from in order
to prevent them initiating conversation with those users
or to display relevant information in the UI to the
actor.
This will be used in a companion PR in discourse-chat,
and is a follow up to 74584ff3ca
Co-authored-by: Alan Guo Xiang Tan <gxtan1990@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Osama Sayegh <asooomaasoooma90@gmail.com>
Follow-up to ce9eec8606.
I did a last-minute refactoring before merging the commit above where I extracted the Message Bus publish call into a new method, but forgot to delete the publish call after adding a call to the new method.
Follow-up to ce9eec8606.
When the review-index route is entered, we listen to the `/reviewable_counts` (or `/reviewable_counts/<user_id>` when the new user menu is enabled) channel so we can listen for changes to reviewables and update the UI accordingly. However, we currently don't unsubscribe when leaving the route which means each time the route is entered, we setup a new listener causing the browser to do unnecessary work and potentially state leakage.
This will allow consumers to inject it using `site: service()` in preparation for the removal of implicit injections in Ember 4.0. `site:main` is still available and will print a deprecation notice.
Now that we have a "more..." links drawer, we can move some of the links
in footer into the links drawer. The footer itself does not have much
horizontal or vertical space for us to work with and hence limits the
amount of links which we can add to it.
Before this commit, links with routes that require multiple models were
incorrectly displayed as the active link in the
Sidebar::MoreSectionLinks component because we were only checking if the
routeName was active.