## What is the context here?
The `docker.rake` Rakefile contains Rake tasks that are meant to be run
in the `discourse/discourse_test:release` Docker image. For example, we
have the `docker:test` Rake task that makes it easier to run the test
suite for a particular Discourse commit.
Why are we introducing a `docker:test:setup` Rake task?
While we have the `docker:test` Rake task, it is very limited in the
test commands that can be executed. It is very useful for automated
testing but not very useful for running tests in the development
environment. Therefore, we are introducing a `docker:test:setup` rake
task that can be used to set up the test environment for running tests.
The envisioned example usage is something like this:
```
docker run -d --name=discourse_test --entrypoint=/sbin/boot discourse/discourse_test:release
docker exec -u discourse:discourse discourse_test ruby script/docker_test.rb --no-tests
docker exec -u discourse:discourse discourse_test bundle exec rake docker:test:setup
docker exec -u discourse:discourse discourse_test bundle exec rspec <path to file>
```
Doing this because the same issue exists as did for chromedriver
fixed by TGX in X for minio. Need time to add support for parallel
tests in the minio_runner gem so this doesn't happen:
```
Failure/Error:
File.open(dest, "wb", s.stat.mode) do |f|
IO.copy_stream(s, f)
f.chmod(f.lstat.mode)
end
Errno::ETXTBSY:
Text file busy @ rb_sysopen - /github/home/.minio_runner/minio
./lib/freedom_patches/copy_file.rb:10:in `copy_file'
./vendor/bundle/ruby/3.2.0/gems/minio_runner-0.1.1/lib/minio_runner/binary_manager.rb:49:in `block in download_binary'
./vendor/bundle/ruby/3.2.0/gems/minio_runner-0.1.1/lib/minio_runner/network.rb:72:in `download'
./vendor/bundle/ruby/3.2.0/gems/minio_runner-0.1.1/lib/minio_runner/binary_manager.rb:48:in `download_binary'
./vendor/bundle/ruby/3.2.0/gems/minio_runner-0.1.1/lib/minio_runner/binary_manager.rb:29:in `install'
./vendor/bundle/ruby/3.2.0/gems/minio_runner-0.1.1/lib/minio_runner/binary_manager.rb:9:in `install'
./vendor/bundle/ruby/3.2.0/gems/minio_runner-0.1.1/lib/minio_runner.rb:62:in `install_binaries'
./vendor/bundle/ruby/3.2.0/gems/minio_runner-0.1.1/lib/minio_runner.rb:50:in `start'
./spec/support/system_helpers.rb:157:in `setup_s3_system_test'
```
`badge.save(["name", "description", "badge_type_id"])` api it was testing isn't a thing anymore.
Also: replaces `assert.expect(0)` with more useful assertions
We have a workaround so that currentUser/siteSettings/appEvents work properly on RestModel instances which are created without an owner. This is not ideal, but fixing this properly is not trivial. This commit improves the workaround to be more robust and support all service injections.
We have one site setting, `auto_silence_fast_typers_max_trust_level`, which expects a trust level. However, the type is set to integer, which makes it very hard for a layman to enter the correct thing.
This PR changes the type of the site setting to the `TrustLevelSetting` enum.
The use of these are interchangeable in the back-end, since `SiteSetting.auto_silence_fast_typers_max_trust_level` still returns the integer value with the enum.
Currently, if the review queue has both a flagged post and a flagged chat message, one of the two will have some of the labels of their actions replaced by those of the other. In other words, the labels are getting mixed up. For example, a flagged chat message might show up with an action labelled "Delete post".
This is happening because when using bundles, we are sending along the actions in a separate part of the response, so they can be shared by many reviewables. The bundles then index into this bag of actions by their ID, which is something generic describing the server action, e.g. "agree_and_delete".
The problem here is the same action can have different labels depending on the type of reviewable. Now that the bag of actions contains multiple actions with the same ID, which one is chosen is arbitrary. I.e. it doesn't distinguish based on the type of the reviewable.
This change adds an additional field to the actions, server_action, which now contains what used to be the ID. Meanwhile, the ID has been turned into a concatenation of the reviewable type and the server action, e.g. post-agree_and_delete.
This still provides the upside of denormalizing the actions while allowing for different reviewable types to have different labels and descriptions.
At first I thought I would prepend the reviewable type to the ID, but this doesn't work well because the ID is used on the server-side to determine which actions are possible, and these need to be shared between different reviewables. Hence the introduction of server_action, which now serves that purpose.
I also thought about changing the way that the bundle indexes into the bag of actions, but this is happening through some EmberJS mechanism, so we don't own that code.
This was causing the following notice to be printed out when running system specs:
```
I did no detect a custom `config/dev.yml` file, creating one for you where you can amend defaults.
```
(since 61571bee43)
This adds a new secure_uploads_pm_only site setting. When secure_uploads
is true with this setting, only uploads created in PMs will be marked
secure; no uploads in secure categories will be marked as secure, and
the login_required site setting has no bearing on upload security
either.
This is meant to be a stopgap solution to prevent secure uploads
in a single place (private messages) for sensitive admin data exports.
Ideally we would want a more comprehensive way of saying that certain
upload types get secured which is a hybrid/mixed mode secure uploads,
but for now this will do the trick.
Admins are always able to send PMs, so it doesn't make
sense that they shouldn't be able to convert topics just
because they aren't in personal_message_enabled_groups.
The 'discourse' script will now include all its related webpack chunks. That means that, if you have compiled JS assets, this spec started failing. This commit switches the specs to use a different js file, which does not have associated webpack chunks.
Previously we would respect it if the filter was `nil`, but if `default` was explicitly passed then it would ignore the category order settings. This explicit passing of `filter=default` happens for some types of navigations in the JS app.
This extends the fix from 92bc61b4be
We're seeing a large number of log noise from this endpoint due to malicious scanners that are trying to send clever params and seeing if they can break something.
This change simply rescues any NoMethodError during parameter parsing and re-raises a Discourse::InvalidParameters exception, which will be caught and render a 400.
This patch adds a new shortcut to allow archiving private messages. When
on a private message page, just type `a` to archive it. Typing `a` on an
already archived message will move it back to inbox.
Chat review queue flags were missing the context message above the actions.
This is probably because the (reasonably complex) logic was somewhat hard-coded to posts. After some investigation I concluded we can reuse this logic with some small amendments.
The theme tests we use for the smoke-test typically take 3-4 seconds to complete. This commit reduces the timeout from 10 minutes to 20 seconds, so that failures are detected more quickl