It turns out that the idea of “sending” a notification is flawed. (What
happens if the notification subject is deleted shortly after? The
notified user would end up with a dud notification which would be
confusing. What about if a post is edited to mention an extra user? If
you sent out notifications, the users who’ve already been mentioned
would get a duplicate notification.)
Instead, I’ve introduced the idea of notification “syncing”. Whenever a
change is made to a piece of data (e.g. a post is created, edited, or
deleted), you make a common notification and “sync” it to a set of
users. The users who’ve received this notification before won’t get it
again. It will be sent out to new users, and hidden from users who’ve
received it before but are no longer recipients (e.g. users who’ve been
“unmentioned” in a post).
To keep track of this, we use the existing notifications database
table, with an added `is_deleted` column. The syncing/diffing is
handled all behind the scenes; the API is extremely simple (see
Core\Notifications\DiscussionRenamedNotification +
Core\Events\Handlers\DiscussionRenamedNotifier)
For now I’ve chucked it on Flarum\Core as a static method, but
ultimately I think we will need a ConfigRepository abstraction (whether
it replaces or sits underneath the Flarum\Core static method I’m not
sure).
Also starting to think about multisite scenarios, I think this is
important. The Forum model could actually end up with a database table
behind it, and each forum would have its own config settings? Haven’t
really thought about it too hard yet…
- Automatically serialise the attribute
- Apply Permissible grant callbacks
Need to consider splitting the $permission property into two arguments
(currently have to explode by ‘.’)