Refactor controllers so that endpoint rate limits are declared locally,
with the endpoint, instead of globally, in a single method in ApplicationController.
This way an endpoint's rate limit is declared in the same file as the
endpoint itself.
This is so we can add fine-grained rate limits for certain GET requests.
Before rate limits were only for non-GET requests.
Changes:
* Make it so you can click or hover over a post's favorite count to see
the list of public favorites.
* Remove the "Show »" button next to the favorite count.
* Make the favorites list visible to all users. Before favorites were
only visible to Gold users.
* Make the /favorites page show the list of all public favorites,
instead of redirecting to the current user's favorites.
* Add /posts/:id/favorites endpoint.
* Add /users/:id/favorites endpoint.
This is for several reasons:
* To make viewing favorites work the same way as viewing upvotes.
* To make posts load faster for Gold users. Before, we loaded all the
favorites when viewing a post, even when the user didn't look at them.
This made pageloads slower for posts that had hundreds or thousands of
favorites. Now we only load the favlist if the user hovers over the favcount.
* To make the favorite list visible to all users. Before, it wasn't
visible to non-Gold users, because of the performance issue listed above.
* To make it more obvious that favorites are public by default. Before,
since regular users could only see the favcount, they may have
mistakenly believed other users couldn't see their favorites.
Stop updating the fav_string attribute on posts. The column still exists
on the table, but is no longer used or updated.
Like the pool_string in 7d503f08, the fav_string was used in the past to
facilitate `fav:X` searches. Posts had a hidden fav_string column that
contained a list of every user who favorited the post. These were
treated like fake hidden tags on the post so that a search for `fav:X`
was treated like a tag search.
The fav_string attribute has been unused for search purposes for a while
now. It was only kept because of technicalities that required
departitioning the favorites table first (340e1008e) before it could be
removed. Basically, removing favorites with `@favorite.destroy` was
slow because Rails always deletes object by ID, but we didn't have an
index on favorites.id, and we couldn't easily add one until the
favorites table was departitioned.
Fixes#4652. See https://github.com/danbooru/danbooru/issues/4652#issuecomment-754993802
for more discussion of issues caused by the fav_string (in short: write
amplification, post table bloat, and favorite inconsistency problems).
* Tie rate limits to both the user's ID and their IP address.
* Make each endpoint have separate rate limits. This means that, for
example, your post edit rate limit is separate from your post vote
rate limit. Before all write actions had a shared rate limit.
* Make all write endpoints have rate limits. Before some endpoints, such
as voting, favoriting, commenting, or forum posting, weren't subject
to rate limits.
* Add stricter rate limits for some endpoints:
** 1 per 5 minutes for creating new accounts.
** 1 per minute for login attempts, changing your email address, or
for creating mod reports.
** 1 per minute for sending dmails, creating comments, creating forum
posts, or creating forum topics.
** 1 per second for voting, favoriting, or disapproving posts.
** These rate limits all have burst factors high enough that they
shouldn't affect normal, non-automated users.
* Raise the default write rate limit for Gold users from 2 per second to
4 per second, for all other actions not listed above.
* Raise the default burst factor to 200 for all other actions not listed
above. Before it was 10 for Members, 30 for Gold, and 60 for Platinum.
Add a Restricted user level. Restricted users are level 10, below
Members. New users start out as Restricted if they sign up from a proxy
or an IP recently used by another user.
Restricted users can't update or edit any public content on the site
until they verify their email address, at which point they're promoted
to Member. Restricted users are only allowed to do personal actions
like keep favorites, keep favgroups and saved searches, mark dmails as
read or deleted, or mark forum posts as read.
The restricted state already existed before, the only change here is
that now it's an actual user level instead of a hidden state. Before it
was based on two hidden flags on the user, the `requires_verification`
flag (set when a user signs up from a proxy, etc), and the `is_verified`
flag (set after the user verifies their email). Making it a user level
means that now the Restricted status will be shown publicly.
Introducing a new level below Member means that we have to change every
`is_member?` check to `!is_anonymous` for every place where we used
`is_member?` to check that the current user is logged in.
Make /favorites redirect to a ordfav:<user> search instead of having a
separate view just for favorites. This duplicated a lot of code for no
good reason.
Bug: if you faved a post, then opened another page in a separate tab,
then the "You have favorited this post" flash message would appear in
the separate tab.
Fixes regression in bcaee199.
Fail loudly if we forget to whitelist a param instead of silently
ignoring it.
misc models: convert to strong params.
artist commentaries: convert to strong params.
* Disallow changing or setting post_id to a nonexistent post.
artists: convert to strong params.
* Disallow setting `is_banned` in create/update actions. Changing it
this way instead of with the ban/unban actions would leave the artist in
a partially banned state.
bans: convert to strong params.
* Disallow changing the user_id after the ban has been created.
comments: convert to strong params.
favorite groups: convert to strong params.
news updates: convert to strong params.
post appeals: convert to strong params.
post flags: convert to strong params.
* Disallow users from setting the `is_deleted` / `is_resolved` flags.
ip bans: convert to strong params.
user feedbacks: convert to strong params.
* Disallow users from setting `disable_dmail_notification` when creating feedbacks.
* Disallow changing the user_id after the feedback has been created.
notes: convert to strong params.
wiki pages: convert to strong params.
* Also fix non-Builders being able to delete wiki pages.
saved searches: convert to strong params.
pools: convert to strong params.
* Disallow setting `post_count` or `is_deleted` in create/update actions.
janitor trials: convert to strong params.
post disapprovals: convert to strong params.
* Factor out quick-mod bar to shared partial.
* Fix quick-mod bar to use `Post#is_approvable?` to determine visibility
of Approve button.
dmail filters: convert to strong params.
password resets: convert to strong params.
user name change requests: convert to strong params.
posts: convert to strong params.
users: convert to strong params.
* Disallow setting password_hash, last_logged_in_at, last_forum_read_at,
has_mail, and dmail_filter_attributes[user_id].
* Remove initialize_default_image_size (dead code).
uploads: convert to strong params.
* Remove `initialize_status` because status already defaults to pending
in the database.
tag aliases/implications: convert to strong params.
tags: convert to strong params.
forum posts: convert to strong params.
* Disallow changing the topic_id after creating the post.
* Disallow setting is_deleted (destroy/undelete actions should be used instead).
* Remove is_sticky / is_locked (nonexistent attributes).
forum topics: convert to strong params.
* merges https://github.com/evazion/danbooru/tree/wip-rails-5.1
* lock pg gem to 0.21 (1.0.0 is incompatible with rails 5.1.4)
* switch to factorybot and change all references
Co-authored-by: r888888888 <r888888888@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: evazion <noizave@gmail.com>
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