The old flag limits were:
* 1 flag per day for regular members.
* 10 flags per day for Gold users.
* Unlimited flags for approvers.
The new flag limits are:
* 10 flags in the modqueue at once for regular users.
* Unlimited flags for approvers.
* Unlimited flags for users with a high enough flag success rate. If you
have at least 30 flags in the last 3 months, and you have at least a
70% flag success rate, then you get unlimited flags.
10 flags at once means you can have up to 10 flagged posts in the
modqueue at the same time. Because flags stay in the modqueue for 3
days, this means you can flag on average 10 posts every 3 days, or just
over 3 posts per day.
* Include appealed posts in the modqueue.
* Add `status` field to appeals. Appeals start out as `pending`, then
become `rejected` if the post isn't approved within three days. If the
post is approved, the appeal's status becomes `succeeded`.
* Add `status` field to flags. Flags start out as `pending` then become
`rejected` if the post is approved within three days. If the post
isn't approved, the flag's status becomes `succeeded`.
* Leave behind a "Unapproved in three days" dummy flag when an appeal
goes unapproved, just like when a pending post is unapproved.
* Only allow deleted posts to be appealed. Don't allow flagged posts to be appealed.
* Add `status:appealed` metatag. `status:appealed` is separate from `status:pending`.
* Include appealed posts in `status:modqueue`. Search `status:modqueue order:modqueue`
to view the modqueue as a normal search.
* Retroactively set old flags and appeals as succeeded or rejected. This
may not be correct for posts that were appealed or flagged multiple
times. This is difficult to set correctly because we don't have
approval records for old posts, so we can't tell the actual outcome of
old flags and appeals.
* Deprecate the `is_resolved` field on post flags. A resolved flag is a
flag that isn't pending.
* Known bug: appealed posts have a black border instead of a blue
border. Checking whether a post has been appealed would require either
an extra query on the posts/index page, or an is_appealed flag on
posts, neither of which are very desirable.
* Known bug: you can't use `status:appealed` in blacklists, for the same
reason as above.
The belongs_to_creator macro was used to initialize the creator_id field
to the CurrentUser. This made tests complicated because it meant you had
to create and set the current user every time you wanted to create an
object, when lead to the current user being set over and over again. It
also meant you had to constantly be aware of what the CurrentUser was in
many different contexts, which was often confusing. Setting creators
explicitly simplifies everything greatly.
Remove restrictions against flagging too many posts by the same
uploader. This had problems with preventing legitimate flags in some
cases, particularly with old legacy content. This will be policed
manually instead.
Don't track IP addresses for post appeals, post flags, tag aliases, tag
implications, or user feedbacks. These things are already tightly
limited. We don't need IPs from them to detect sockpuppets.
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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