discourse/spec/models/user_summary_spec.rb

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# frozen_string_literal: true
RSpec.describe UserSummary do
it "produces secure summaries" do
topic = create_post.topic
user = topic.user
_reply = create_post(user: topic.user, topic: topic)
summary = UserSummary.new(user, Guardian.new)
expect(summary.topics.length).to eq(1)
expect(summary.replies.length).to eq(1)
expect(summary.top_categories.length).to eq(1)
expect(summary.top_categories.first[:topic_count]).to eq(1)
expect(summary.top_categories.first[:post_count]).to eq(1)
topic.update_columns(deleted_at: Time.now)
expect(summary.topics.length).to eq(0)
expect(summary.replies.length).to eq(0)
expect(summary.top_categories.length).to eq(0)
topic.update_columns(deleted_at: nil, visible: false)
expect(summary.topics.length).to eq(0)
expect(summary.replies.length).to eq(0)
expect(summary.top_categories.length).to eq(0)
category = Fabricate(:category)
topic.update_columns(category_id: category.id, deleted_at: nil, visible: true)
category.set_permissions(staff: :full)
category.save
expect(summary.topics.length).to eq(0)
expect(summary.replies.length).to eq(0)
expect(summary.top_categories.length).to eq(0)
end
it "is robust enough to handle bad data" do
UserActionManager.enable
liked_post = create_post
user = Fabricate(:user)
PostActionCreator.like(user, liked_post)
users = UserSummary.new(user, Guardian.new).most_liked_users
expect(users.map(&:id)).to eq([liked_post.user_id])
# really we should not be corrupting stuff like this
# but in production dbs this can happens sometimes I guess
liked_post.user.delete
users = UserSummary.new(user, Guardian.new).most_liked_users
expect(users).to eq([])
end
it "includes ordered top categories" do
u = Fabricate(:user)
UserSummary::MAX_SUMMARY_RESULTS.times do
c = Fabricate(:category)
t = Fabricate(:topic, category: c, user: u)
Fabricate(:post, user: u, topic: t)
end
top_category = Fabricate(:category)
t = Fabricate(:topic, category: top_category, user: u)
Fabricate(:post, user: u, topic: t)
Fabricate(:post, user: u, topic: t)
summary = UserSummary.new(u, Guardian.new)
expect(summary.top_categories.length).to eq(UserSummary::MAX_SUMMARY_RESULTS)
expect(summary.top_categories.first[:id]).to eq(top_category.id)
end
it "excludes moderator action posts" do
topic = create_post.topic
user = topic.user
create_post(user: user, topic: topic)
Fabricate(:small_action, topic: topic, user: user)
summary = UserSummary.new(user, Guardian.new)
expect(summary.topics.length).to eq(1)
expect(summary.replies.length).to eq(1)
expect(summary.top_categories.length).to eq(1)
expect(summary.top_categories.first[:topic_count]).to eq(1)
expect(summary.top_categories.first[:post_count]).to eq(1)
end
PERF: Improve performance of `most_replied_to_users` (#26373) This PR improves the performance of the `most_replied_to_users` method on the `UserSummary` model. ### Old Query ```ruby post_query .joins( "JOIN posts replies ON posts.topic_id = replies.topic_id AND posts.reply_to_post_number = replies.post_number", ) # We are removing replies by @user, but we can simplify this by getting the using the user_id on the posts. .where("replies.user_id <> ?", @user.id) .group("replies.user_id") .order("COUNT(*) DESC") .limit(MAX_SUMMARY_RESULTS) .pluck("replies.user_id, COUNT(*)") .each { |r| replied_users[r[0]] = r[1] } ``` ### Old Query with corrections ```ruby post_query .joins( "JOIN posts replies ON posts.topic_id = replies.topic_id AND replies.reply_to_post_number = posts.post_number", ) # Remove replies by @user but instead look on loaded posts (we do this so we don't count self replies) .where("replies.user_id <> posts.user_id") .group("replies.user_id") .order("COUNT(*) DESC") .limit(MAX_SUMMARY_RESULTS) .pluck("replies.user_id, COUNT(*)") .each { |r| replied_users[r[0]] = r[1] } ``` ### New Query ```ruby post_query .joins( "JOIN posts replies ON posts.topic_id = replies.topic_id AND posts.reply_to_post_number = replies.post_number", ) # Only include regular posts in our joins, this makes sure we don't have the bloat of loading private messages .joins( "JOIN topics ON replies.topic_id = topics.id AND topics.archetype <> 'private_message'", ) # Only include visible post types, so exclude posts like whispers, etc .joins( "AND replies.post_type IN (#{Topic.visible_post_types(@user, include_moderator_actions: false).join(",")})", ) .where("replies.user_id <> posts.user_id") .group("replies.user_id") .order("COUNT(*) DESC") .limit(MAX_SUMMARY_RESULTS) .pluck("replies.user_id, COUNT(*)") .each { |r| replied_users[r[0]] = r[1] } ``` # Conclusion `most_replied_to_users` was untested, so I introduced a test for the logic, and have confirmed that it passes on both the new query **AND** the old query. Thank you @danielwaterworth for the debugging assistance.
2024-04-03 15:20:54 -05:00
it "returns the most replied to users" do
topic1 = create_post.topic
topic1_post = create_post(topic: topic1)
topic1_reply =
create_post(topic: topic1, reply_to_post_number: topic1_post.post_number, user: topic1.user)
# Create a second topic by the same user as topic1
topic2 = create_post(user: topic1.user).topic
topic2_post = create_post(topic: topic2)
topic2_reply =
create_post(topic: topic2, reply_to_post_number: topic2_post.post_number, user: topic2.user)
# Don't include replies to whispers
topic3 = create_post(user: topic1.user).topic
topic3_post = create_post(topic: topic3, post_type: Post.types[:whisper])
topic3_reply =
create_post(topic: topic3, reply_to_post_number: topic3_post.post_number, user: topic3.user)
# Don't include replies to private messages
replied_to_user = Fabricate(:user)
topic4 =
create_post(
user: topic1.user,
archetype: Archetype.private_message,
target_usernames: [replied_to_user.username],
).topic
topic4_post = create_post(topic: topic4, user: replied_to_user)
topic4_reply =
create_post(topic: topic4, reply_to_post_number: topic4_post.post_number, user: topic4.user)
user_summary = UserSummary.new(topic1.user, Guardian.new(topic1.user))
most_replied_to_users = user_summary.most_replied_to_users
counts =
most_replied_to_users
.index_by { |user_with_count| user_with_count[:id] }
.transform_values { |c| c[:count] }
expect(counts).to eq({ topic1_post.user_id => 1, topic2_post.user_id => 1 })
end
end