Rework the upload process so that files are saved to Danbooru first
before the user starts tagging the upload.
The main user-visible change is that you have to select the file first
before you can start tagging it. Saving the file first lets us fix a
number of problems:
* We can check for dupes before the user tags the upload.
* We can perform dupe checks and show preview images for users not using the bookmarklet.
* We can show preview images without having to proxy images through Danbooru.
* We can show previews of videos and ugoira files.
* We can reliably show the filesize and resolution of the image.
* We can let the user save files to upload later.
* We can get rid of a lot of spaghetti code related to preprocessing
uploads. This was the cause of most weird "md5 confirmation doesn't
match md5" errors.
(Not all of these are implemented yet.)
Internally, uploading is now a two-step process: first we create an upload
object, then we create a post from the upload. This is how it works:
* The user goes to /uploads/new and chooses a file or pastes an URL into
the file upload component.
* The file upload component calls `POST /uploads` to create an upload.
* `POST /uploads` immediately returns a new upload object in the `pending` state.
* Danbooru starts processing the upload in a background job (downloading,
resizing, and transferring the image to the image servers).
* The file upload component polls `/uploads/$id.json`, checking the
upload `status` until it returns `completed` or `error`.
* When the upload status is `completed`, the user is redirected to /uploads/$id.
* On the /uploads/$id page, the user can tag the upload and submit it.
* The upload form calls `POST /posts` to create a new post from the upload.
* The user is redirected to the new post.
This is the data model:
* An upload represents a set of files uploaded to Danbooru by a user.
Uploaded files don't have to belong to a post. An upload has an
uploader, a status (pending, processing, completed, or error), a
source (unless uploading from a file), and a list of media assets
(image or video files).
* There is a has-and-belongs-to-many relationship between uploads and
media assets. An upload can have many media assets, and a media asset
can belong to multiple uploads. Uploads are joined to media assets
through a upload_media_assets table.
An upload could potentially have multiple media assets if it's a Pixiv
or Twitter gallery. This is not yet implemented (at the moment all
uploads have one media asset).
A media asset can belong to multiple uploads if multiple people try
to upload the same file, or if the same user tries to upload the same
file more than once.
New features:
* On the upload page, you can press Ctrl+V to paste an URL and immediately upload it.
* You can save files for upload later. Your saved files are at /uploads.
Fixes:
* Improved error messages when uploading invalid files, bad URLs, and
when forgetting the rating.
Bug: the uploads page showed a remote size of 146 bytes for Pixiv uploads.
Cause: we didn't spoof the Referer header when making the HEAD request
for the image, causing Pixiv to return a 403 error.
Also fix the case where the Content-Length header is absent.
* Move the source normalization logic out of the post model
and into individual sources' strategies.
* Rewrite normalization tests to be handled into each source's test,
and expand them significantly. Previously we were only testing
a very small subset of domains and variants.
* Fix up normalization for several sites.
* Normalize fav.me urls into normal deviantart urls.
Fix the moebooru strategy to fallback to returning the image url if we
can't find the preview url. Fixes iqdb lookups failing in some cases
because the strategy didn't return a valid url for preview_url.
* Normalize spaces to underscores when saving other names. Preserve case
since case can be significant.
* Fix WikiPage#other_names_include to search case-insensitively (note:
this prevents using the index).
* Fix sources to return the raw tags in `#tags` and the normalized tags
in `#normalized_tags`. The normalized tags are the tags that will be
matched against other names.
If the yande.re or konachan.com post has a source from a supported site,
for example Pixiv or Twitter, then delegate the artist and commentary
lookup to that substrategy.
Only do this for sources from recognized sites, not the null strategy.