Restores the category text/foreground color field that was removed in
#32015.
We are also retaining the auto text color selection that was introduced
and applying on background color change rather than when the form is
saved. The text color algorithm has been changed from color brightness
to use color difference instead, which appears to be more reliable.
Algorithm for color difference:
https://www.w3.org/TR/AERT/#color-contrast
---------
Co-authored-by: Joffrey JAFFEUX <j.jaffeux@gmail.com>
Both rake tasks do not account for secure uploads so they should be
considered broken. Since there is no longer a need for these rake tasks,
we are removing them instead of spending time to fix them.
The code being removed here was added 7 years ago and is stale at this
point. We don't even know if it is safe to run since no tests have been
written for it. Therefore, it is safer for us to remove it than to spend
time reviewing it.
Likes given / likes received on user admin page were empty because of
this missing data. Also, a background job cleared the like stats from
`user_stats` table after some time because of this missing data.
We are no longer using any of the transpilation/bundling features of
Sprockets. We only use it to serve assets in development, and then
collect & fingerprint them in production. This commit switches us to use
the more modern "Propshaft" gem for that functionality.
Propshaft is much simpler than Sprockets. Instead of taking a
combination of paths + "precompile" list, Propshaft simply assumes all
files in the configured directory are required in production. Previously
we had some base paths configured quite high in the directory structure,
and then only precompiled selected assets within the directory. That's
no longer possible, so this commit refactors those places (mostly
plugin-related) to use dedicated directories under
`app/assets/generated/`.
Another difference is that Propshaft applies asset digests in
development as well as production. This is great for caching & dev/prod
consistency, but does mean some small changes were required in tests.
We previously had some freedom-patches applied to Sprockets. Some of
those had to be ported across to Propshaft. We now have three patches:
1. Skip adding digest hashes to webpack-generated chunks (which are
already digested, and referred to from other js files)
2. Avoid raising errors for missing assets in test mode. We don't always
compile assets before running basic RSpec tests.
3. Maintain relative paths for sourcemap URLs, so that files don't need
to be recompiled depending on their CDN path
Significant refactors are made to the `assets.rake` and `s3.rake` tasks,
which rely on implementation details of Sprockets/Propshaft.
Previously all locale bundles would be built & compressed during
assets:precompile. For most sites, only one of these languages was
actually used, so this is fairly wasteful.
This commit moves the main locale bundle into the
ExtraLocalesController, which has recently undergone many improvements
to make it more efficient. This allows locale files to be bundled "just
in time" when they're first accessed.
Now that brotli level=6 is enabled for these assets in our nginx config,
this change should have no impact on the locale bundle size.
- Load moment and moment-timezone-with-data via webpack import instead
of including copies in every locale file
- Fetch static files from node_modules instead of `vendor/`
This cuts the size of locale-specific JS files in half, since they no
longer include moment itself.
Building the Discourse JS app is very resource-intensive. This commit
introduces an `assemble_ember_build` script which will check the
existing content of the `dist/` directory and re-use the core build if
possible. Plugins will always be rebuilt.
For now, this functionality is only useful for multi-stage (i.e.
non-standard) Discourse deployments. But in future, this script may be
extended to pull the contents of the `dist/` directory from a remote
location.
New configure fonts section was added. Because now we have two sections
completed (logos and fonts), new /branding page was introduced and old
/logo and /font pages was removed.
When text size is changed, modal is displayed to ask if preferences of
existing users should be retrospectively updated.
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/f6b0c92a-117f-4064-bd76-30fa05acc6d3
---------
Co-authored-by: Ella <ella.estigoy@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Alan Guo Xiang Tan <gxtan1990@gmail.com>
Recent testing has shown that this config requires significantly less
memory for a successful build, which should improve the situation for
people running Discourse on low-memory servers.
Co-authored-by: Alan Guo Xiang Tan <gxtan1990@gmail.com>
Some site settings support backfilling if the user specified it. This works fine for singular site settings sent to the SiteSettingsController#update endpoint, but with bulk save we need to support this for a list of settings as well.
This change alters the params format for SiteSetting::Update.
It also moves the backfill logic into the service.
This PR adds a destroy:posts rake task that can be used to hard-delete a list of posts. Useful for dealing with large amounts of spam that has been soft deleted and needs to go.
Notes:
Works on both non-deleted and soft-deleted posts. (We might want to change this to work on only soft-deleted posts?)
Works exclusively on post IDs. We can't mix topic and post IDs as they might clash, and we have no way of resolving that ambiguity.
Accepts either a rake-style array of IDs or, more conveniently, you can pipe the argument in through STDIN.
Added a confirmation step since it's a fairly destructive operation.
Currently, after creating an API key, there is no way in the UI to see what scope the key has. To do this we need to first store the selected scope mode when creating a new key.
In this PR we:
- Convert scope_mode from a transient attribute to a database backed enum.
- Ship the possible values through the javascript:update_constants rake task instead of hard coding in front-end.
In follow-up PRs we will:
- Backfill existing API keys based on their associated api_key_scopes records.
- Start showing the scope mode in the UI.
This commit moves most of emoji logic into the discourse-emojis gem:
https://github.com/discourse/discourse-emojis/
Most notably:
- images are now symlinked from the gem
- the gem provides path to the json files
Search aliases have also been made asynchronous and memoized. When you
will search for an emoji we will now load the aliases and store the list
for future use.
---------
Co-authored-by: David Taylor <david@taylorhq.com>
Followup e26a1175d7c33746bddbc858ad89e68cc14beefe
Adds extra functionality and tests for the admin search modal.
* Show third level plugin config pages in search, e.g. AI Usage
* Remember last used search filters
* Allow navigating search results with keyboard, using tab or up/down
and enter to go to result
* Add a placeholder beneath search input to tell the admin what to do
* Add a full page search at `/admin/search` which can be reached from
pressing Enter on the search input
* Add specs for modal and full page search
* Change admin sidebar filter "no results found" to point to full page
search
* Add keyboard shortcut help to modal for admin search
This totally separate SCSS and i18n compilation pipelines only existed
so that we could run `ember exam` in CI without starting Rails.
Now that our CI has such heavy caching of Ruby dependencies and database
migrations, the speed benefit of this is not worth the cost of
maintaining these separate pipelines.
Therefore, this commit removes that system, and updates CI to use
`bin/rake qunit:test`. That will start up a Rails server and proxy
stylesheet/locale requests to it. This strategy was already used for our
theme and plugin qunit test runs.
This is a follow up to a9eefd1b4849573452581c113cfcbdd4420fb3c2.
### Reviewer notes
This rake task is quite annoying to test so I don't think the time
trying to figure out how to test it is worth it. This does not sit in a
critical path anyway so I think the lack of tests here is OK.
This change adds a new `type_source` field to the `Reviewable` model, indicating whether the Reviewable type was registered by `core`, a plugin, or an `unknown` source.
When a plugin that registered a Reviewable type is disabled, this allows us to tell the user which plugin they need to re-enable to handle any orphan reviewable items.
This commit contains a couple of improvements for this
rake task.
* We no longer limit the uploads to only ones with Post
upload references, it doesn't matter what the secure uploads
are linked to, they should all be un-secured
* We now only get distinct uploads from the initial query,
multiple upload references on the same upload caused
double ups and confusing counts for the task
* We now also disable the secure_uploads_pm_only site
setting at the same time
Rake allows env variables to specified in arguments, so we need to use
the list of top_level_tasks which excludes those env
Followup to c8718a64dd7a26165efe91706ce5507e6999044a.
By design, db:create initializes the Rails app with SKIP_DB=true. That
means that SiteSettings get set up with the LocalProcessProvider instead
of the DBProvider. In other words: any calls to site settings will
return the default, rather then the actual value in the database.
Running db:migrate in the same rake invocation means that rails will not
be re-initialized, and so skip_db will remain true. Site settings
accessed during migrations and fixtures will therefore return incorrect
values.
One example of this is that running bin/rake db:create db:migrate
repeatedly in a development environment will cause the FAQ topic to be
seeded repeatedly, because the seed logic does not have access to the
site setting which stores the already-seeded topic id.
This commit will automatically re-exec the Rake command if any tasks are
specified after `db:create`
This commit updates the `uploads:sync_s3_acls` rake task to accept a
`sync` argument that would run the rake task in a synchronous manner
so that the outcome of running the rake task can easily be determined.
This reverts commit b9f8a77d9ba5222bbf55172092f0b235b92d1c85.
Reverting while we work on adding error handling. At the moment,
failures are logged, but the process still exits with status=0.
This commit converts the `AdminReport` component, which is quite
high complexity, to gjs. After this initial round, ideally this
component would be broken up into smaller components because it is
getting quite big now.
Also in this commit:
* Add an option to display the report description in a tooltip, which
was
the main way the description was shown until recently. We want to use
this on the dashboard view mostly.
* Move admin report "mode" definitions to the server-side Report model,
inside a `Report::MODES` constant, collecting the modes defined in
various
places in the UI into one place
* Refactor report code to refer to mode definitions
* Add a `REPORT_MODES` constant in JS via javascript.rake and refactor
JS to refer to the modes
* Delete old admin report components that are no longer used
(trust-level-counts, counts, per-day-counts) which were replaced
by admin-report-counters a while ago
* Add a new `registerReportModeComponent` plugin API, some plugins
introduce their own modes (like AI's `emotion`) and components and
we need a way to render them
This is a revert of 92793c5b73871ba84b024c2ce50055a0776f1ba6.
Following on from discussions after the previous commit, it became evident that it was only a small step towards solving the larger problem of finding site settings in a reliable fashion across multiple languages.
This is going to take more thought and discussion, and since the changes introduced in the previous commit are effectively non functional without additional work, I'm going to revert it for now.
This commit introduces a new rake task that can be used in situations where a community receives a large number of flags/reports and needs a quick way to handle all of those pending reports. Usage instructions are included in the rake task source code.
Internal topic: t/145475.
The chat emoji picker is renamed emoji-picker, and the old emoji-picker is removed.
This commit doesn't attempt to fully rework a new emoji-picker but instead tries to migrate everything to one picker (the chat one) and add small changes.
Other notable changes:
- all the favorite emojis code has been mixed into one service which is able to store one state per context, favorites emojis will be stored for all topics, and for each chat channel. Meaning that if you always use a specific emoji in a channel, it will only show as favorite emoji in this channel.
- a lot of static code has been removed which should improve initial load perf of discourse. Initially this code was around to improve the performance of the emoji picker rendering.
- the emojis are now stored, once the full list has been loaded, if you close and reopen the picker it won't have to load them again.
List of components:
- `<EmojiPicker />` will render a button which will open a dropdown
- `<EmojiPickerContent />` represents the content of the dropdown alone, it's useful when you want to render a picker from an action which is not the default picker button
- `<EmojiPickerDetached />` just a simple wrapper over `<EmojiPickerContent />` to make it easier to use it with `this.menu.show(...)`
---------
Co-authored-by: Renato Atilio <renatoat@gmail.com>
Adds a new reviewables:populate rake task that works in a similar fashion to the existing *:populate rake tasks. The rake task creates pending reviewable of all core types, with possibility for plugins to extend the task to populate their own reviewable types.
This commit replaces the `full_name_required` setting with a new `full_name_requirement` setting to allow more flexibility with the name field in the signup form. The new setting has 2 options, "Required at signup" and "Optional at signup", which are equivalent to the true/false possibilities of the old setting, and a third option "Hidden at signup" that hides the name field from the signup form, making it effectively optional too.
New sites will have the "Hidden at signup" option as the default option, and existing site will continue to use the option that maps to their current configuration.
Internal topic: t/136746.
We can't delete the file from disk as some of the assets are still
served by the app instead of going through the S3 bucket. It is a bug we
need to fix but it also means this ENV is unsafe now. Just drop the env
until we ensure all assets requested by the app are requested from the
S3 bucket directly.
The `max_compress?` logic is totally broken at least when used for
brotli compression because we are only seeing 4 assets subjected to the
max compression level in production. Instead of fixing the broken logic,
we should just drop this unnecessary complexity cause things are easier
to reason about when we only have one compression level to deal with
across all assets.
Now that we run the `upload` method in different threads, we need to
synchronize writes to `STDOUT` which we can do so by using a `Logger`.
Follow-up to 49e835395966fbddb9ad2988961d8375e501151f