The propagated promise failure from model() caused the router to reject future route transitions, even though it correctly routed to the last-resort 404 page.
Co-authored-by: Jeff Wong <awole20@gmail.com>
* FIX: show/hide ignored users preferences
based on the current user trust level and the appropriate site setting.
* Allow us to await the `updateCurrentUser` call
Co-authored-by: Robin Ward <robin.ward@gmail.com>
If a user could not set tags because they had a trust level lower than
min_trust_level_to_tag_topics site setting, the "Create Topic" button
from a tag page would still show up and be enabled. Clicking it caused
the composer model to silently have the tags set.
Instead we use the inline `hbs` helper. Note in the non-Ember CLI
version this will not actually inline compile, but it will still work
for all our tests.
`setPermissionsGroups` would initialize an empty permissions object whenever new groups were added to the Tag Group. This meant that if you selected the `visible` permission and then added groups to the Tag Group, the `visible` permission would be obliterated and the Tag Group would be treated as though it was `private`.
This makes it much easier to check the staff action logs for a specific site setting. A small history icon will appear when hovering over a site setting name. On click, you will be taken to the pre-filtered staff action log for the site setting.
* FEATURE - allow category group moderators to delete topics
* Allow individual posts to be deleted
* DEV - refactor for new `can_moderate_topic?` method
Ensures the newly created category record gives the current user permission to create a new topic and sets her notification level to the default (regular).
Using arrow functions changes `this` context, which is undesired in tests, e.g. it makes it impossible to setup things like pretender (`this.server`) in `beforeEach` hooks.
Ember guides always use classic functions in examples (e.g. https://guides.emberjs.com/release/testing/test-types/), and that's what it uses in its own test suite, as do various addons and ember apps.
It was also already used in Discourse where `this` was required. Moving forward, it will be needed in more places as we migrate toward ember-cli.
(I might later add a custom rule to eslint-discourse-ember to enforce this)
In newer Embers jQuery is removed. There is a `find` but it only returns
one element and not a jQuery selector. This patch migrates our code to a
new helper `queryAll` which allows us to remove the global.
Before deleting a topic that has a high number of views (default of 5000), the user will be prompted with a confirmation popup. This works for all delete buttons on the topic located in: topic-timeline, topic-admin-menu, topic-footer-buttons, and post-menu if the post's ID is 1.
The delete button will be disabled while deletion is in progress, to prevent any unwanted behavior.
A site setting is also available to change the minimum amount of views required to display the confirmation popup.
All kudos are going to @RickyC0626. I only rebased with master and added few qunit tests to ensure that this feature works as expected.
Original PR: #10459
* Move new/edit category modals to its own page
* Fix JS tests
* Minor fixes to new-category UI
* Add mobile toggle
* Use global pretender endpoint so plugins can benefit too
* Alignment fix
* Minor review fixes
* Styling refactor
* Move some SCSS out of the modal
This gets us closer to how newer Ember versions want to do things, but
with a bit of Discourse flair.
`acceptance` now takes a function as a parameter, and tests need to be
declared in that new function context.
A new helper, `needs`, is passed as a parameter. You can use it to set
up the test the way you want.
* FEATURE: add penalty options for take action
Add the ability to silence or suspend users from the "take action"
button when moderators are flagging posts. This allows for a more streamlined
active moderation workflow, when moderating against a topic directly.