This commit introduces the necessary gems and config, but adds all our ruby code directories to the `--ignore-files` list.
Future commits will apply syntax_tree to parts of the codebase, removing the ignore patterns as we go
* FIX: Ensure we have a patched version of CGI gem
Per https://github.com/ruby/cgi/pull/29 the current shipped version of
the CGI gem doesn't allow for leading dots in domain names, which breaks
setting cookies like `.example.com`.
* Update Gemfile
Co-authored-by: Jarek Radosz <jradosz@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Jarek Radosz <jradosz@gmail.com>
* Allow taking table prefix from env var
* FIX: remove unused column references
The columns `filedata` and `extension` are not present in a v4.2.4
database, and they aren't used in the method anyways.
* FIX: report progress for tables without imported_id
* FIX: effectively check for AR validation errors
NOTE: other migration scripts also have this problem; see /t/58202
* FIX: properly count Posts when importing attachments
* FIX: improve logging
* Remove leftover comment
* FIX: show progress when exporting Permalink file
* PERF: stream Permalink file
The current way results in tons of memory usage; write once per line instead
* Document fixes needed
* WIP - deduplicate category names
* Ignore non alphanumeric chars for grouping
* FIX: properly deduplicate user emails by merging accounts
* FIX: don't merge empty UserEmails
* Improve logging
* Merge users AFTER fixing primary key sequences
* Parallelize user merging
* Save duplicated users structure for debugging purposes
* Add progress logging for the (multiple hour) user merging step
We now use Ember CLI (core/plugins) and DiscourseJSProcessor (themes) for all Ember and template compilation. This commit removes the remnants of the legacy Sprockets-based Ember compilation system.
Sprockets, and its DiscourseJSProcess-based Babel transformations, is still in use for a few assets. Ideally that will be removed/replaced in the near future.
`Faraday` is very commonly used in official and third-party plugins, and we will likely be increasing our use of it in core. This commit adds it as a direct dependency and adds the official faraday-retry gem which is very commonly used (e.g. by Octokit).
This commit introduces rails system tests run with chromedriver, selenium,
and headless chrome to our testing toolbox.
We use the `webdrivers` gem and `selenium-webdriver` which is what
the latest Rails uses so the tests run locally and in CI out of the box.
You can use `SELENIUM_VERBOSE_DRIVER_LOGS=1` to show extra
verbose logs of what selenium is doing to communicate with the system
tests.
By default JS logs are verbose so errors from JS are shown when
running system tests, you can disable this with
`SELENIUM_DISABLE_VERBOSE_JS_LOGS=1`
You can use `SELENIUM_HEADLESS=0` to run the system
tests inside a chrome browser instead of headless, which can be useful to debug things
and see what the spec sees. See note above about `bin/ember-cli` to avoid
surprises.
I have modified `bin/turbo_rspec` to exclude `spec/system` by default,
support for parallel system specs is a little shaky right now and we don't
want them slowing down the turbo by default either.
### PageObjects and System Tests
To make querying and inspecting parts of the page easier
and more reusable inbetween system tests, we are using the
concept of [PageObjects](https://www.selenium.dev/documentation/test_practices/encouraged/page_object_models/) in
our system tests. A "Page" here is generally corresponds to
an overarching ember route, e.g. "Topic" for `/t/324345/some-topic`,
and this contains logic for querying components within the topic
such as "Posts".
I have also split "Modals" into their own entity. Further down the
line we may want to explore creating independent "Component"
contexts.
Capybara DSL should be included in each PageObject class,
reference for this can be found at https://rubydoc.info/github/teamcapybara/capybara/master#the-dsl
For system tests, since they are so slow, we want to focus on
the "happy path" and not do every different possible context
and branch check using them. They are meant to be overarching
tests that check a number of things are correct using the full stack
from JS and ember to rails to ruby and then the database.
### CI Setup
Whenever a system spec fails, a screenshot
is taken and a build artifact is produced _after the entire CI run is complete_,
which can be downloaded from the Actions UI in the repo.
Most importantly, a step to build the Ember app using Ember CLI
is needed, otherwise the JS assets cannot be found by capybara:
```
- name: Build Ember CLI
run: bin/ember-cli --build
```
A new `--build` argument has been added to `bin/ember-cli` for this
case, which is not needed locally if you already have the discourse
rails server running via `bin/ember-cli -u` since the whole server is built and
set up by default.
Co-authored-by: David Taylor <david@taylorhq.com>
Following the Rails 7 upgrade, the `DISCOURSE_SMTP_ENABLE_START_TLS`
setting doesn’t work anymore. This is because Rails upgraded the
`net-smtp` gem to the 0.3.1 version which enables `starttls` by default.
The `mail` gem doesn’t support this new behavior yet and doesn’t know
how to disable TLS. This should be fixed in an upcoming release.
Meanwhile applying this patch allows us to get back the previous
behavior which is expected by many.
Latest redis interoduces a block form of multi / pipelined, this was incorrectly
passed through and not namespaced.
Fix also updates logster, we held off on upgrading it due to missing functions
This reverts commit 01107e418e.
We have seen some random occurrences of corrupted assets, and think it may be related to the sprockets 4 update. Reverting for investigation
The main difference is that Sprockets 4.0 no longer tries to compile everything by default. This is good for us, because we can remove all our custom 'exclusion' logic which was working around the old sprockets 3.0 behavior.
The other big change is that lambdas can no longer be added to the `config.assets.precompile` array. Instead, we can do the necessary globs ourselves, and add the desired files manually.
A small patch is required to make ember-rails compatible. Since we plan to remove this dependency in the near future, I do not intend to upstream this change.
I have compared the `bin/rake assets:precompile` output before and after this change, and verified that all files are present.
The main difference is that Sprockets 4.0 no longer tries to compile everything by default. This is good for us, because we can remove all our custom 'exclusion' logic which was working around the old sprockets 3.0 behavior.
The other big change is that lambdas can no longer be added to the `config.assets.precompile` array. Instead, we can do the necessary globs ourselves, and add the desired files manually.
A small patch is required to make ember-rails compatible. Since we plan to remove this dependency in the near future, I do not intend to upstream this change.
I have compared the `bin/rake assets:precompile` output before and after this change, and verified that all files are present.
This reverts commit f5cf647e57.
The gem breaks usage of Rails URL helpers when used outside views and
controllers, for example in
88ecb83382/app/models/upload.rb (L239-L242)
the `upload_short_path` method call fails with an undefined method
exception when this gem is enabled.
The lazy route initialization cuts down boot time of rails.
On my local system it cuts out 200ms of boot time taking me from 3.2 to 3 seconds.
This is not a radically enormous amount of time, but paper cuts add up, and a faster boot in dev will make everyone happy.
TBD if we want to also include this in production.
Gem is heavily maintained by @amatsuda, last commit 3 days ago.
`bin/rake annotate` is an alias of `bin/annotate --models`
`bin/rake annotate:clean` generates annotations by using a temporary, freshly migrated database. This should help us to produce more consistent annotations, even if development databases have been polluted by plugin migrations.
A GitHub actions task is also added which generates annotations on a clean database, and raises an error if they differ from the committed annotations.
* Move onebox gem in core library
* Update template file path
* Remove warning for onebox gem caching
* Remove onebox version file
* Remove onebox gem
* Add sanitize gem
* Require onebox library in lazy-yt plugin
* Remove onebox web specific code
This code was used in standalone onebox Sinatra application
* Merge Discourse specific AllowlistedGenericOnebox engine in core
* Fix onebox engine filenames to match class name casing
* Move onebox specs from gem into core
* DEV: Rename `response` helper to `onebox_response`
Fixes a naming collision.
* Require rails_helper
* Don't use `before/after(:all)`
* Whitespace
* Remove fakeweb
* Remove poor unit tests
* DEV: Re-add fakeweb, plugins are using it
* Move onebox helpers
* Stub Instagram API
* FIX: Follow additional redirect status codes (#476)
Don’t throw errors if we encounter 303, 307 or 308 HTTP status codes in responses
* Remove an empty file
* DEV: Update the license file
Using the copy from https://choosealicense.com/licenses/gpl-2.0/#
Hopefully this will enable GitHub to show the license UI?
* DEV: Update embedded copyrights
* DEV: Add Onebox copyright notice
* DEV: Add MIT license, convert COPYRIGHT.txt to md
* DEV: Remove an incorrect copyright claim
Co-authored-by: Jarek Radosz <jradosz@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: jbrw <jamie@goatforce5.org>
The main image_optim gem now includes the timeout feature
that we had in our fork. So it is now safe to switch off of our fork and
back to the image_optim gem.
This is the link to the commit in the image_optim repo that adds the
timeout option:
ec3767dde0
One difference with the new timeout implementation is that image_optim
now handles the timeout exceptions instead of bubbling them up:
1ed0328587/lib/image_optim.rb (L128-L129)
```
rescue Errors::TimeoutExceeded
handler.result
```
So a timeout will just return `nil`, which is the same response if it
couldn't optimize an image. I don't think we were really watching for
or doing anything about these timeout warnings in our logs so I think
this is an okay change to have and we will have less warnings in our
logs now too.
Rails 6.1.3.1 deprecates a few API and has some internal changes that break our tests suite, so this commit fixes all the deprecations and errors and now Discourse should be fully compatible with Rails 6.1.3.1. We also have a new release of the rails_failover gem that's compatible with Rails 6.1.3.1.
To add an extra layer of security, we sanitize settings before shipping them to the client. We don't sanitize those that have the "html" type.
The CookedPostProcessor already uses Loofah for sanitization, so I chose to also use it for this. I added it to our gemfile since we installed it as a transitive dependency.
Version 2.8 brings some changes to how address fields are handled and
this commits updates that and should also include a fix which handles
encoded attachment filenames.
The fork contains a bugfix to correctly decode mail attachments.