Twitter removed OpenGraph tags from their pages. We can no longer
extract all the information (for example, the quoted tweet) we need
to render Oneboxes without using their API.
- Sets `https://www.mixcloud.com` as a `requires_iframe_origins` to allow the iframe content to be displayed
- Attempts to render something approximating the Mixcloud content in the preview pane of the Composer, rather than just displaying a large version of the artwork associated with the link
* FIX: Fix a bug that is accessing the values in a hash wrongly and write tests
I decided to write tests in order to be confident in my refactor that's in the next commit.
Meanwhile I have discovered a potential bug. The `title_attr` key was accessed as a string,
but all the keys are actually symbols so it was never evaluated to be true.
irb(main):025:0> d = {key: 'value'}
=> {:key=>"value"}
irb(main):026:0> d['key']
=> nil
irb(main):027:0> d[:key]
=> "value"
* DEV: Extract methods for readability
I will be adding a new method following the conventions in place for adding a new normalizer. And this will make the readability of the `raw` block even more difficult; so I am extracting self contained private methods beforehand.
* FEATURE: Parse JSON-LD and introduce Movie object
JSON LD data is very easily transferable to Ruby objects because they contain types. If these types are mapped to Ruby objects, it is also better to make all the parsed data very explicit and easily extendable.
JSON-LD has many more standardized item types, with a full list here: https://schema.org/docs/full.html
However in order to decrease the scope, I only adapted the movie type.
* DEV: Change inheritance between normalizers
Normalizers are not supposed to have an inheritance relationships amongst each other. They are all normalizers, but all normalizing separate protocols. This is why I chose to extract a parent class and relieve Open Graph off that responsibility. Removing the parent class altogether could also a possibility, but I am keeping the scope limited to having a more accurate representation of the normalizers while making it easier to add a new one.
* Lint changes
* Bring back the Oembed OpenGraph inheritance
There is one test that caught that this inheritance was necessary. I still think modelling wise this inheritance shouldn't exist, but this can be tackled separately.
* Return empty hash if the json received is invalid
Before this change if there was a parsing error with JSON it would throw an exception. The goal of this commit is to rescue that exception and then log a warning. I chose to use Discourse's logger wrapper `warn_exception` to have the backtrace and not just used Rails logger. I considered raising an `InvalidParameters` error however if the JSON here is invalid it should not block showing of the Onebox, so logging is enough.
* Prep to support more JSONLD schema types with case
* Extract mustache template object created from JSONLD
Currently we’re reopening the `Sanitize::Config` class (which is part of
the `sanitize` gem) to put our custom config for Onebox in it. This is
unnecessary as we can simply create a dedicated module to hold our
custom configuration.
Some product pages on Amazon are using a new HTML structure, meaning the previous Onebox engine was unable to gather the price and/or description. This change should allow these pages to be Oneboxed.
This allows text editors to use correct syntax coloring for the heredoc sections.
Heredoc tag names we use:
languages: SQL, JS, RUBY, LUA, HTML, CSS, SCSS, SH, HBS, XML, YAML/YML, MF, ICS
other: MD, TEXT/TXT, RAW, EMAIL
In an earlier PR, we decided that we only want to block a domain if
the blocked domain in the SiteSetting is the final destination (/t/59305). That
PR used `FinalDestination#get`. `resolve` however is used several places
but blocks domains along the redirect chain when certain options are provided.
This commit changes the default options for `resolve` to not do that. Existing
users of `FinalDestination#resolve` are
- `Oneboxer#external_onebox`
- our onebox helper `fetch_html_doc`, which is used in amazon, standard embed
and youtube
- these folks already go through `Oneboxer#external_onebox` which already
blocks correctly
If the SiteSetting `allowed_onebox_iframes` contains a value of `*`, it will use the values of `all_iframe_origins` during the Oneboxing process. If `all_iframe_origins` itself contains a value of `*`, `origins_to_regexes` will try to return a "catch-all" regex.
Other code assumes `origins_to_regexes`will return an array, so this change ensures the `*` case will return an array containing only the catch-all regex.
1. `html_doc.css('.Box.md')` always returns a truthy value (e.g. `[]`) so the second branch of the if-elsif never ran
2. `node&.css('text()')` was invalid code that would raise an error
3. Matching on h3 elements is no longer correct with the current html structure returned by GitHub
When attempting to Onebox a page if there is no `meta property="og:description"` tag but there is a `meta name="description"` tag, Onebox should try to use that value.
We are no longer able to display the image returned by Instagram directly within a Discourse site (either in the composer, or within a cooked post within a topic), so:
- Display an image placeholder in the composer preview
- A cooked post should use an iframe to display the Instagram 'embed' content
Sections with unreserverd characters will appear url-encoded and need to
be unescaped before using it.
Wikipedia generates 2 different spans in this case in the same page, one
with an id resulting of replacing the % symbols with . and the other with
the decoded version of the string. For example, for /wiki/foo#A%C3%A1A it
will generate:
<span id="A.C3.A1A"></span>
<span id="AáA">AáA</span>
Unescaping the `m_url_hash_name` should work in all cases to target the
proper section span.
* FEATURE: Onebox can match engines based on the content_type
`FinalDestination` now returns the `content_type` of a resolved URL.
`Oneboxer` passes this value to `Onebox` itself. Onebox engines can now specify a `matches_content_type` regex of content_types that the engine can handle, regardless of the URL.
`ImageOnebox` will match URLs with a content type of `image/png`, `jpg`, `gif`, `bmp`, `tif`, etc.
This will allow images that exist at a URL without a file type extension to be correctly rendered, assuming a valid `content_type` is returned.
By default, Twitter will return the URL for the avatar image of the tweet poster as the `og:image` value.
However, if the `user_generated` attribute is true, we should not use this as the avatar URL as this will be an URL of an image in the tweet itself (e.g., an image belonging to a tweeted news story).
* FIX: Quoting Oneboxed content should exclude formatting
When a post is quoted that includes Oneboxed content, we should not include the formatting generated by the Onebox. Rather, we should attempt to collapse the link referenced by the Onebox to a single line text link.
* DEV: fix tests
IMDb movie links were being rendered as posters. This was because
IMDb was sending `og:type` as `image` randomly in some cases. To
fix this we'll now default all IMDb links as article type. This will
ensure that the IMDb onebox link includes all the information instead
of showing just a poster without any context.
* FIX: return an empty result if response from Amazon is missing attributes
Check we have the basic attributes requires to construct a Onebox for Amazon.
This is an attempt to handle scenarios where we receive a valid 200-status response from an Amazon request that does not include the data we’re expecting.
* Update lib/onebox/engine/amazon_onebox.rb
Co-authored-by: Régis Hanol <regis@hanol.fr>
Co-authored-by: Régis Hanol <regis@hanol.fr>