Add a polymorphic `subject` field that records the subject of the mod
action. The subject is the post, user, comment, artist, etc the mod
action is for.
* The subject for the user ban and unban actions is the user, not the ban itself.
* The subject for the user feedback update and deletion actions is the user,
not the feedback itself.
* The subject for the post undeletion action is the post, not the approval itself.
* The subject for the move favorites action is the source post where the
favorites were moved from, not the destination post where the favorites
were moved to.
* The subject for the post permanent delete action is nil, because the
post itself is hard deleted.
* When a post is permanently deleted, all mod actions related to the
post are deleted as well.
* Add a global /post_events page that shows the history of all approvals,
disapprovals, flags, appeals, and replacements on a single page.
* Redesign the /posts/:id/events page to show all approval, disapproval,
flag, appeal, and replacement events for a single post (before it only
showed approvals, flags, and appeals).
* Remove the replacement history link from the post show page. Replacements
are now included in the post events page (closes#4948: Highlighed replacements).
* Add /post_approvals/:id and /post_replacements/:id routes (these are
used by the "Details" link on the post events page).
Make the following fields visible in API responses:
* ip_bans.ip_addr
* ip_geolocations.ip_addr
* ip_geolocations.network
* users.last_ip_addr (mod only)
* user_sessions.ip_addr
* api_keys.last_ip_address
* api_keys.permitted_ip_addresses
Before IP addresses were globally hidden in API responses because IPs were
present in a lot of tables and we didn't want to accidentally leak them.
Now that we've gotten rid of IPs from most tables, it's safe to unhide them.
Fix searching post disapprovals by user to use the new `visible_for_search`
mechanism. This fixes it so you can do subsearches on the user field, like this:
* https://danbooru.donmai.us/post_disapprovals?search[user][level]=32 (find disapprovals by Builder-level approvers)
Fix exception when viewing old post versions that contain null values in the
added_tags field: https://danbooru.donmai.us/post_versions?search[id]=1319677
There are 82 post versions with nulls in the added_tags fields and 26
with nulls in the removed_tags field.
Fix the search `flagger:evazion user:evazion` not returning the user's own self-flagged uploads.
Followup to a6e0872ce.
Fixes#4690: user profile 'flags' count links to /post_flags with different search criteria
* Remove the /comment/search page. Instead put the comment search form
on the same page as the search results, so you don't have to go back
and forth to update your search.
* Add an "Edited?" search option, for finding comments that have been edited.
* Add options for sorting by oldest comments and lowest scoring comments.
* Let the user see their own username when viewing their own deleted comments.
* Don't hide the creator_id field from the comment creator in the API.
* Hide the score, do_not_bump_post, and is_sticky fields for deleted
comments in the HTML and in the API, unless the user is a moderator.
* Hide the "..." popup menu on deleted comments, unless the user is a moderator.
This is so that when a user looks at their own comment history, their
name isn't hidden from them on their own deleted comments. This may confuse
users however into thinking their name is still visible to other users.
* Fix it so non-moderators can't search deleted comments using the
`updater`, `body`, `score`, `do_not_bump_post`, or `is_sticky` fields.
Searching for these fields will exclude deleted comments.
* Fix it so non-moderators can search for their own deleted comments using the
`creator` field, but not for deleted comments belonging to other users.
* Fix it so that if a regular user searches `commenter:<username>`, they
can only see posts with undeleted comments by that user. If a moderator or
the commenter themselves searches `commenter:<username>`, they can see all
posts the user has commented on, including posts with deleted comments.
* Fix it so the comment count on user profiles only counts visible
comments. Regular users can only see the number of undeleted comments
a user has, while moderators and the commenter themselves can see the
total number of comments.
Known issue:
* It's still possible to order deleted comments by score, which can let
you infer the score of deleted comments.
Switch `/artist_commentaries?search[text_matches]` to do a full-text
search instead of a substring search. This is more consistent with text
search in other places.
The previous commit changed it so that `/pools?search[name_matches]`
does a full-text search. So for example, `search[name_matches]=smiling`
will now match pool names containing any of the words "smiling",
"smile", "smiles", or "smiled".
This commit adds a `/pools?search[name_contains]` param that does what
`name_matches` did before, and switches to it in search forms. So for
example, `search[name_contains]=smiling` will only match pool names
containing the exact substring "smiling".
This change is so that `<field>_matches` works consistently across the
site, and so that it's possible to search pool names by either an exact
substring match, or by a looser natural language match.
This is a minor breaking API change. API users can replace
`/pools?search[name_matches]` with `/pools?search[name_contains]` to get
the same behavior as before. The same applies to /favorite_groups.
Standardize it so that all fields of type `text` are searchable with
`search[<field>_matches]`.
Before, the `<field>_matches` param was handled manually and some fields
were left out or handled inconsistently. Now it applies to all columns
of type `text`.
This does a full-text search on the field, so for example, searching
`/artist_commentaries?search[translated_description_matches]=smiling`
will match translated commentaries containing either the word "smiling",
"smiles", "smiled", or "smile".
Note that this only applies to columns defined as type `text`, not to
columns defined as `character varying`. The difference is that `text` is
used for fields containing free-form natural language, such as comments,
notes, forum posts, wiki pages, pool descriptions, etc, while `character
varying` is used for short strings not containing free-form language,
such as tag names, wiki page titles, urls, status fields, etc.
API changes:
* Add the `search[original_title_matches]`, `search[original_description_matches]`,
`search[translated_title_matches]`, `search[translated_description_matches]` params
to /artist_commentaries and /artist_commentary_versions.
* Remove the `search[name_matches]` and `search[group_name_matches]` params from /artist_versions.
* Remove the `search[title_matches]` param from /wiki_page_versions.
* Change the `search[name_matches]` param on /pools, /favorite_groups, and /pool_versions
to do a full-text search instead of a substring match.
Fix a bug where, when a mod searched for their own flags, they couldn't
see their own self-flagged uploads.
Fix a bug where, when a mod viewed their own flags, they couldn't see
the flagger name for their own self-flagged uploads.
This also makes it so you can do things like `/post_flags?search[creator][level]=20`
to search flags by user level.
Add a `visible_for_search` method to ApplicationPolicy that lets us
define which fields a user is allowed to search for.
For example, when a normal user searches for post flags by flagger name,
they're only allowed to see their own flags, not flags by other users.
But when a mod searches for flags by flagger name, they're allowed to
see all flags, except for flags on their own uploads.
This framework lets us define these rules in the `visible_for_search`
method in the model's policy class, rather than as special cases in the
`search` method of each model.
Move the `search_attributes` helper methods inside the Searchable
concern into a SearchContext helper class. This is so we don't have to
pass `params` and `current_user` down through a bunch of different
helper methods, and so that these private helper methods don't pollute
the object's namespace.
Fix various columns to be either `character varying` or `text`,
depending on what kind of text is stored in the column. `text` is used
for columns that contain free-form natural language, like pool and forum
topic titles, while `character varying` is used for short strings that
don't contain free-form text, like URLs and status fields.
Both types are treated the same by Postgres; the only difference is how
we treat them in Rails. In edit forms, `text` fields use multi-line
textboxes, while `character varying` fields use single-line inputs. And
during search, we allow `text` fields to be searched using full-text
search, but not `character varying` fields.
Don't allow GET requests to pass the request params in the body instead
of in the URL. While Rails can handle GET params passed in the body, it
goes against spec and it may cause problems if the response is a redirect
and the client doesn't send the body params when following the redirect.
This may be a breaking change for broken API clients who were sending
GET params in the body instead of in the URL. This can happen when people
use HTTP libraries incorrectly.
Add a fix script to delete all accounts with invalid usernames. Also
change it so the owner-level user can delete accounts belonging to other
users.
Users who have logged in in the last year and who have a valid email
address will be given a one week warning. After that all accounts with
invalid names will be deleted. Anyone who has visited the site in the
last 6 months will have already seen a warning page that their name must
be changed to keep using the site.
Fix mod actions to use the same message format everywhere.
Before mod actions were formatted in various inconsistent ways:
* "deleted post #1234"
* "comment #1234 updated by <user>"
* "<user> updated forum #1234"
* "<user> level changed Member -> Builder"
Now all mod actions consistently use this format:
* "deleted post #1234"
* "updated comment #1234"
* "updated forum #1234"
* "promoted <user> from Member to Builder"
This way mod actions are formatted consistently with other actions on
the /user_actions page, where everything is written as "<user> did X".
Also add a fix script to fix existing mod actions.
Allow approvers to bypass the rule that you can't flag a post again if
it was flagged less than 3 days ago. This rule was intended to prevent
flag warring among regular users, which hopefully shouldn't be a problem
among approvers. It was also useless because approvers could always
just directly delete the post even if they couldn't flag it.
Allowing approvers to reflag posts allows them to reinstate flags that
were accidentally approved.
Remove the `CurrentUser.ip_addr` global variable and replace it with
`request.remote_ip`. Before we had to track the current user's IP in a
global variable so that when we edited a post for example, we could pass
down the user's IP to the model and save it in the post_versions table.
Now that we now longer save IPs in version tables, we don't need a global
variable to get access to the current user's IP outside of controllers.
Remove the /ip_addresses page. This page allowed moderators to search
users by IP, and to see recent activity tied to an IP. However, it was
limited to IPs tied to uploads, comments, dmails, artist edits, note
edits, and wiki edits.
Remove this page because it was limited in scope and because there are
better ways of doing what it did. The /user_events page is better at
catching sockpuppets because it tracks IPs for every login, not just for
certain types of edits. And the /user_actions page is better at
monitoring user activity because it shows all activity associated with
an account, not just for certain types of edits.
Removing this allows us to drop IP addresses from all tables besides the
user_events table. This is good because these IPs are no longer necessary
for any purpose, and because storing them forever is a liability.
Make all forum post votes visible to everyone.
When forum votes were first introduced, it was technically possible to
vote on any forum post, including on posts in mod-only threads.
Accordingly, forum post votes were only visible if the forum post itself
was visible. However, there doesn't actually exist any votes on private
forum posts, and trying to filter them out makes the /user_actions page
much slower, so just make them visible to everyone.
Allow moderators to see all events on the /user_events page. Before only
admins could see when a user changed their email, changed their
password, or had a failed login attempt. Now moderators can see these
events too.
Filtering these events out made the /user_actions page slower, and it
wasn't really necessary since merely knowing that a user changed their
email or password isn't that much more sensitive than knowing when they
logged in or out.
Add a /user_actions page. This page shows you a global timeline of
(almost) all activity on the site, including uploads, comments, votes,
edits, forum posts, and so on.
The main things it doesn't include are post edits, pool edits, and
favorites (posts and pools live in a separate database, and favorites
don't have the timestamps we need for ordering).
This page is useful for moderation purposes because it lets you see a
history of almost all of a user's activity on a single page.
Currently this page is mod-only. In the future it will be open to all
users, so you can view the history of your own site activity, or the
activity of others.
Remove the IP address search option from the /moderator/dashboard page.
This was an obsolete way of searching for sockpuppet accounts by IP.
The /user_events page should be used instead.
Unlike other models, notes had a special rule where if you deleted or
undeleted a note, it would always create a new version instead of
merging it into the previous version. Remove this rule since it didn't
have a purpose and it was inconsistent with other versioned models.
Fix a nil reference exception in the sidebar when a wiki page doesn't
belong to a tag.
Also hide the options sidebar on the new wiki page since none of the
options are relevant when creating a new wiki.