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.
This is long overdue. We had a lot of (not linted) code to initialize
our test suite as part of the Ruby `test_helper.js` bundle.
This refactor moves that out to a `setup-tests` module, which imports
all the modules properly, rather than using `require`.
It also removes the global `server` variable which some tests were using
for pretender. Those tests are fixed, and in the case of widget tests,
support for a `pretend()` was added, which mimics our acceptance tests.
One problematic test was removed, which overwrites `/posts` - this could
break tons of other tests depending on order.
The prefixing logic is moved into a `prefixProtocol` function in lib:url.
This commit also renames an incorrectly named test and uses https as default instead of http, in 2020 it's reasonable to think we most likely want https and not http. User can still specify http if required.
This commit is also moving one test to a component test.
A followup to this commit would be to ensure every dropdowns are using a regex instead of the normalize/lowercase system we have now.
We used many global functions to handle tests when they should be
imported like other libraries in our application. This also gets us
closer to the way Ember CLI prefers our tests to be laid out.
This is where they should be as far as ember is concerned. Note this is
a huge commit and we should be really careful everything continues to
work properly.