Comments have three states: visible, hidden, and invisible. Visible
comments are always shown. Hidden comments are not shown until the user
clicks 'Show all comments'. Invisible comments are never shown to the
user. Deleted comments are treated as hidden for moderators and
invisible for normal users. Thresholded comments are treated as hidden
for all users.
Certain parts of comment rendering triggered sql queries that we didn't
really need to do. Rework things to avoid this.
* Preload comment creators in order to display commenter names with link_to_user.
* Preload comment votes in order to display "undo vote" links. Only preload
votes for members since anonymous users can't vote and don't have "undo
vote" links.
* Rework various conditionals to do the filtering in Ruby so that we
avoid issuing any extra queries in sql.
* Avoid issuing any queries at all when the post doesn't have any
comments (when last_commented_at is blank).
Changes:
* Drop Users.id_to_name.
* Don't cache Users.name_to_id.
* Replace calls to name_to_id with find_by_name when possible.
* Don't autodefine creator_name in belongs_to_creator.
* Don't autodefine updater_name in belongs_to_updater.
* Instead manually define creator_name / updater_name only on models that need
to return these fields in the api.
id_to_name was cached to reduce the impact of N+1 query patterns in
certain places, especially in api responses that return creator_name /
updater_name fields. But it still meant we were doing N calls to
memcache. Using `includes` to prefetch users avoids this N+1 pattern.
name_to_id had no need be cached, it was never used in any performance-
sensitive contexts.
Avoiding caching also avoids the need to keep these caches consistent.
In rails 5, belongs_to associations automatically validate that the
associated item is present, meaning that we don't need to validate these
things manually any more.
Refactor various post_tag_match methods to use subqueries instead of joins.
This simplifies things inside PostQueryBuilder, since now we can assume
we're always dealing with a Post relation, rather than some other table
joined with the posts table.
* Allow using ApplicationRecord#attribute_matches to search text attributes,
and standardize models on using this instead of duplicating code.
* Remove restrictions that limited wildcard searches to Builders only in various places.
* Restore behavior of thresholded comments being greyed out (lost in 6fa0ae2cf).
* Set the `below-threshold` class for thresholded comments in the html instead of in javascript.
* Remove `include_below_threshold` param; it was always true when clicking "Show all comments".
* Use ApplicationRecord#attribute_matches to handle boolean attributes
consistently in search methods.
* Add support for searching various boolean attributes that previously
weren't supported.
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>
add diffs
* Allow every controller to take the `search[id]` param.
* Parse the `search[id]` param the same way that the `id:<N>` metatag is
parsed. So `search[id]=1,2,3`, `search[id]=<42`, `search[id]=1..10`, for
example, are all accepted.
The template looks like this:
Subject:
#{creator_name} mentioned you in a comment on post ##{post_id}
Body:
@#{creator_name} mentioned you in a \"comment\":/posts/#{post_id}#comment-#{id} on post ##{post_id}:
[quote]
#{DText.excerpt(body, "@"+user_name)}
[/quote]
* Add 'post as moderator' option to comment form. This creates a so-called sticky comment.
* Downvotes have no effect on stickied comments; they're always visible, regardless of comment thresholds.
* Only mods may sticky comments.
* Mods may sticky comments by other users.