Add a system for upgrading accounts using upgrade codes. Users purchase
an upgrade code off-site then redeem it on-site to upgrade their account
to Gold. Upgrade codes are randomly pre-generated and are one time use
only. Codes have enough randomness that guessing a code is infeasible.
* Rename the stripe_id column to transaction_id.
* Add a new payment_processor column to identity the processor used for
this transaction (and hence, which backend system the transaction_id is for).
The median username length is 8 characters. The 99% percentile is 18
characters. The 99.9% percentile is 24 characters. About 750 users have
a name more than 24 characters long.
This doesn't do anything about existing users with long usernames.
Note that this is the length in Unicode codepoints, not grapheme
clusters. Some Unicode characters and emoji may be a single glyph but
composed of multiple codepoints.
Allow uploading multiple files from your computer at once.
The maximum limit is 100 files at once. There is still a 50MB size limit
that applies to the whole upload. This limit is at the Nginx level.
The upload widget no longer shows a thumbnail preview of the uploaded
file. This is because there isn't room for it in a multi-file upload,
and because the next page will show a preview anyway after the files are
uploaded.
Direct file uploads are processed synchronously, so they may be slow.
API change: the `POST /uploads` endpoint now expects the param to be
`upload[files][]`, not `upload[file]`.
Mark old columns as ignored in preparation for dropping them. Make the
rating and tag_string nullable so they don't have to be set when
creating uploads and can be ignored too.
Perform the replacement in a before_create callback so that it runs in a
transaction and if it fails, the transaction will rollback and the
replacement record won't be created.
Doing the replacement in a transaction isn't great because, for one
thing, it could hold the transaction open a long time, which isn't good
for the database. And two, if the transaction rolls back, the database
changes will be undone, but if the replacement file has already been saved
to disk, then it won't be undone, which could result in a dangling file.
* Move replacement tests from test/unit/upload_service_test.rb to
test/functional/post_replacement_controller_test.rb
* Move UploadService::Replacer to PostReplacementProcessor.
* Fix a minor bug where if you used the API to replace a post with a file,
the replacement would fail unless you passed an empty string for the
replacement_url.
* Fix broken upload tests.
* Fix uploads to return an error if both a file and a source are given
at the same time, or if neither are given. Also fix the error message
in this case so that it doesn't include "base" at the start of the string.
* Fix uploads to percent-encode any Unicode characters in the source URL.
* Add a max filesize validation to media assets.
* Add ability to mark moderation reports as 'handled' or 'rejected'.
* Automatically mark reports as handled when the comment or forum post
is deleted.
* Send a dmail to the reporter when their report is handled.
* Don't show the report notice on comments or forum posts when all
reports against it have been handled or rejected.
* Add a fix script to mark all existing reports for deleted comments,
forum posts, or dmails as handled.
* Add a gap between thumbnails on mobile.
* Adjust CSS for scores and vote buttons.
* Include "Private favorites" as an incentive on the user upgrade page.
* Fix vote buttons not being visible beneath thumbnails on mobile.
* Fix the "Show scores" link not preserving the current page number.
* Fix vote buttons being unintentionally enabled for all thumbnails by default.
* Fix banned and restricted users being able to favorite posts by
tagging them with `fav:self`.
* Fix search engines being able to crawl /posts?view=score pages.
* Fix broken tests.
Make private favgroups a Gold-only option. This is for consistency with
private favorites and upvotes being Gold-only options.
Existing Members with private favgroups are allowed to keep them, as
long as they don't disable privacy. If they disable it, then they can't
re-enable it again without upgrading to Gold first.
* Allow Member-level users to vote.
* Don't allow Banned or Restricted users to create favorites any more.
Banned and Restricted users aren't allowed to upvote or favorite any
more to prevent sockpuppet accounts from upvoting even after they're
banned.
Fix it so that when a post is expunged, the media asset is also marked
as expunged. This way the files will be deleted, but the media asset
will still remain as a record of what was expunged. The media asset will
have the md5, width, height, file ext, and file size of the deleted file.
Add a md5 uniqueness constraint on media assets to prevent duplicate
assets from being created. This way we can guarantee that there is one
active media asset per uploaded file.
Also make it so that if two people are uploading the same file at the
same time, the file is processed only once.
Optimize counting the number of posts returned by fav:<name> and
pool:<name> searches. Use cached counts to avoid slow count(*) queries
for users with lots of favorites.
* Skip Nijie tests because they fail a lot due to Nijie rate limiting us.
* Skip ArtStation downloads tests because they sometimes return different file sizes.
* Fix random duplicate favgroup errors because favgroup names weren't random enough.
Automatically tag animated_gif and animated_png when a post is edited.
Add them back if the user tries to remove them from an animated post,
or remove them if the user tries to add them to a non-animated post.
Before we added these tags at upload time, but it was possible for users
to remove them after upload, or to incorrectly add them to non-animated
posts. They were added at upload time because we couldn't afford to open
the file and parse the metadata on every tag edit. Now that we save the
metadata in the database, we can do this.
This also makes it so you can't tag ugoira on non-ugoira files.
Known bug: it's possible to have an animated GIF where every frame is
identical. Post #3770975 is an example. This will be detected as an
animated GIF even though visually it doesn't appear to be animated.
Fixes#4041: Animated_gif tag not added to preprocessed uploads
Add a model for storing image and video metadata for uploaded files.
Metadata is extracted using ExifTool. You will need to install ExifTool
after this commit. ExifTool 12.22 is the minimum required version
because we use the `--binary` option, which was added in this release.
The MediaMetadata model is separate from the MediaAsset model because
some files contain tons of metadata, and most of it is non-essential.
The MediaAsset model represents an uploaded file and contains essential
metadata, like the file's size and type, while the MediaMetadata model
represents all the other non-essential metadata associated with a file.
Metadata is stored as a JSON column in the database.
ExifTool returns all the file's metadata, not just the EXIF metadata.
EXIF is one of several types of image metadata, hence why we call
it MediaMetadata instead of EXIFMetadata.
A MediaAsset represents an image or video file uploaded to Danbooru. It
stores the metadata associated with the image or video. This is to work
on decoupling files from posts so that images can be uploaded separately
from posts.
When a user tries to change their email, redirect them to the confirm
password page (like Github's sudo mode) instead of having them re-enter
their password on the change email page. This is the same thing we do
when a user updates their API keys. This way we have can use the same
confirm password authentication flow for everything that needs a
password.
Make it so that when a user removes their own vote, the vote is soft
deleted (the is_deleted flag is set) instead of hard deleted.
Changes:
* Add is_deleted flag to comment votes.
* Relax uniqueness constraint so you can have multiple deleted votes on
the same comment. You can still only have one active vote on the comment.
* Add `soft_delete` method to Deletable concern.
Changes:
* Change the `expires_at` field to `duration`.
* Make moderators choose from a fixed set of standard ban lengths,
instead of allowing arbitrary ban lengths.
* List `duration` in seconds in the /bans.json API.
* Dump bans to BigQuery.
Note that some old bans have a negative duration. This is because their
expiration date was before their creation date, which is because in 2013
bans were migrated to Danbooru 2 and the original ban creation dates
were lost.
Rework the rate limit implementation to make it more flexible:
* Allow setting different rate limits for different actions. Before we
had a single rate limit for all write actions. Now different
controller endpoints can have different limits.
* Allow actions to be rate limited by user ID, by IP address, or both.
Before actions were only limited by user ID, which meant non-logged-in
actions like creating new accounts or attempting to login couldn't be rate
limited. Also, because actions were limited by user ID only, you could
use multiple accounts with the same IP to get around limits.
Other changes:
* Remove the API Limit field from user profile pages.
* Remove the `remaining_api_limit` field from the `/profile.json` endpoint.
* Rename the `X-Api-Limit` header to `X-Rate-Limit` and change it from a
number to a JSON object containing all the rate limit info
(including the refill rate, the burst factor, the cost of the call,
and the current limits).
* Fix a potential race condition where, if you flooded requests fast
enough, you could exceed the rate limit. This was because we checked
and updated the rate limit in two separate steps, which was racy;
simultaneous requests could pass the check before the update happened.
The new code uses some tricky SQL to check and update multiple limits
in a single statement.
Add the ability to restrict API keys so that they can only be used with
certain IP addresses or certain API endpoints.
Restricting your key is useful to limit damage in case it gets leaked or
stolen. For example, if your key is on a remote server and it gets
hacked, or if you accidentally check-in your key to Github.
Restricting your key's API permissions is useful if a third-party app or
script wants your key, but you don't want to give full access to your
account.
If you're an app or userscript developer, and your app needs an API key
from the user, you should only request a key with the minimum
permissions needed by your app.
If you have a privileged account, and you have scripts running under
your account, you are highly encouraged to restrict your key to limit
damage in case your key gets leaked or stolen.
* Add an explanation of what an API key is and how to use it.
* Make it possible for the site owner to view all API keys.
* Remove the requirement to re-enter your password before you can view
your API key (to be reworked).
* Move the API key controller from maintenance/user/api_keys_controller.rb
to a top level controller.
Specify the default settings for new users inside the User model instead
of inside the database. This makes it easier to change defaults, and it
makes the code clearer.
Add tracking of certain important user actions. These events include:
* Logins
* Logouts
* Failed login attempts
* Account creations
* Account deletions
* Password reset requests
* Password changes
* Email address changes
This is similar to the mod actions log, except for account activity
related to a single user.
The information tracked includes the user, the event type (login,
logout, etc), the timestamp, the user's IP address, IP geolocation
information, the user's browser user agent, and the user's session ID
from their session cookie. This information is visible to mods only.
This is done with three models. The UserEvent model tracks the event
type (login, logout, password change, etc) and the user. The UserEvent
is tied to a UserSession, which contains the user's IP address and
browser metadata. Finally, the IpGeolocation model contains the
geolocation information for IPs, including the city, country, ISP, and
whether the IP is a proxy.
This tracking will be used for a few purposes:
* Letting users view their account history, to detect things like logins
from unrecognized IPs, failed logins attempts, password changes, etc.
* Rate limiting failed login attempts.
* Detecting sockpuppet accounts using their login history.
* Detecting unauthorized account sharing.
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.
* Remove the PostRegeneration model. Instead just use a mod action
to log when a post is regenerated.
* Change it so that IQDB is also updated when the image samples are
regenerated. This is necessary because when the images samples are
regenerated, the thumbnail may change, which means IQDB needs to be
updated too. This can happen when regenerating old images with
transparent backgrounds where the transparency was flattened to black
instead of white in the thumbnail.
* Only display one "Regenerate image" option in the post sidebar, to
regenerate both the images and IQDB. Regenerating IQDB only can be
done through the API. Having two options in the sidebar is too much
clutter, and it's too confusing for Mods who don't know the difference
between an IQDB-only regeneration and a full image regeneration.
* Add a confirm prompt to the "Regenerate image" link.
Add a model to store the status of user upgrades.
* Store the upgrade purchaser and the upgrade receiver (these are
different for a gifted upgrade, the same for a self upgrade).
* Store the upgrade type: gold, platinum, or gold-to-platinum upgrades.
* Store the upgrade status:
** pending: User is still on the Stripe checkout page, no payment
received yet.
** processing: User has completed checkout, but the checkout status in
Stripe is still 'unpaid'.
** complete: We've received notification from Stripe that the payment
has gone through and the user has been upgraded.
* Store the Stripe checkout ID, to cross-reference the upgrade record on
Danbooru with the checkout record on Stripe.
This is the upgrade flow:
* When the user clicks the upgrade button on the upgrade page, we call
POST /user_upgrades and create a pending UserUpgrade.
* We redirect the user to the checkout page on Stripe.
* When the user completes checkout on Stripe, Stripe sends us a webhook
notification at POST /webhooks/receive.
* When we receive the webhook, we check the payment status, and if it's
paid we mark the UserUpgrade as complete and upgrade the user.
* After Stripe sees that we have successfully processed the webhook,
they redirect the user to the /user_upgrades/:id page, where we show
the user their upgrade receipt.
Add a new Owner user level for the site owner. Highly sensitive
operations like manually changing the passwords of other users will be
restricted to the site owner.
Remove the ability to skip secondary validations when creating a BUR.
The only skippable validation that still existed was the requirement
that both tags in an implication must have wiki pages. It's now
mandatory to write wiki pages for tags before you can request an
implication. This doesn't apply to empty tags.
Replace references to the `is_resolved` field with the `status` field.
Post flags were marked as resolved when a post was approved (but not
when the post was deleted because it went unapproved). The status field
supercedes the resolved field.
* 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.
* Move image thumbnail generation code to MediaFile::Image.
* Move video thumbnail generation code to MediaFile::Video.
* Move ugoira->webm conversion code to MediaFile::Ugoira.
This separates thumbnail generation from the upload process so that it's
possible to generate thumbnails outside of uploads.