Same URI passed between follow request and follow, since they are
the same thing in ActivityPub. Local URIs are generated during
creation using UUIDs and are passed to serializers.
* No need to re-require sidekiq plugins, they are required via Gemfile
* Add derailed_benchmarks tool, no need to require TTY gems in Gemfile
* Replace ruby-oembed with FetchOEmbedService
Reduce startup by 45382 allocated objects
* Remove preloaded JSON-LD in favour of caching HTTP responses
Reduce boot RAM by about 6 MiB
* Fix tests
* Fix test suite by stubbing out JSON-LD contexts
* Add equals_or_includes_any? helper in JsonLdHelper
* Support arrays in JSON-LD type fields for actors/tags/objects.
* Spec for resolving accounts with extension types
* Style tweaks for codeclimate
* Use table for statuses in report
* Display reported account and reporter in the same table
* Split accounts and general report info into two tables again
* Redesign report statuses table, notes, merge notes and action log
* Remove unused translations
* Fix code style issue
* Fix code style issue
* Fix code style issue
* Added a timeline for Direct statuses
* Lists all Direct statuses you've sent and received
* Displayed in Getting Started
* Streaming server support for direct TL
* Changes to match other timelines in 2.0
Commit 519119f657 missed a change for
stream entry page. Instead of duplicating the change, redirect to account
status page. It would also help crawlers (of search engines, for example)
to understand a stream entry URL and its corresponding status URL points
to the same page.
* Add bio fields
- Fix#3211
- Fix#232
- Fix#121
* Display bio fields in web UI
* Fix output of links and missing fields
* Federate bio fields over ActivityPub as PropertyValue
* Improve how the fields are stored, add to Edit profile form
* Add rel=me to links in fields
Fix#121
Sidekiq sometimes throws errors for users that have more pinned items
than the allowed by the local instance. It should only validate the
number of pins for local accounts.
This also limits the statuses returned by API, but pagination is not
implemented in Web API yet. I still expect it brings user experience
better than making a user wait to fetch all ancestor statuses and flooding
the column with them.
* Admin: Show unconfirmed email address on account page
* Admin: Allow staff to change user email addresses
* ActionLog: On change_email, log current email address and new unconfirmed email address
Conflicts:
app/serializers/initial_state_serializer.rb
The glitch flavour isn't yet pulling custom emoji data on its own (see
https://github.com/tootsuite/mastodon/pull/7047). Once that gets into
the glitch flavour, we can eliminate the custom_emojis load.
* Enable updating additional account information from user preferences via rest api
Resolves#6553
* Pacify rubocop
* Decoerce incoming settings in UserSettingsDecorator
* Create user preferences hash directly from incoming credentials instead of going through ActionController::Parameters
* Clean up user preferences update
* Use ActiveModel::Type::Boolean instead of manually checking stringified number equivalence
Previously these returns 302 redirects instead of 403s, which meant posting links to admin pages in slack caused them to unfurl, rather than stay as a link. Additionally, require_admin! doesn't appear to be actively used, on require_staff!
* Implement Assignment of Reports (#6967)
* Change translation of admin.report.comment.label to "Report Comment" for clarity
As we'll soon add the ability for reports to have comments on them, this clarification makes sense.
* Implement notes for Reports
This enables moderators to leave comments about a report whilst they work on it
* Fix display of report moderation notes
* Allow reports to be reopened / marked as unresolved
* Redirect to reports listing upon resolution of report
* Implement "resolve with note" functionality
* Add inverse relationship for report notes
* Remove additional database querying when loading report notes
* Fix tests for reports
* Fix localisations for report notes / reports
to_s method of HTTP::Response keeps blocking while it receives the whole
content, no matter how it is big. This means it may waste time to receive
unacceptably large files. It may also consume memory and disk in the
process. This solves the inefficency by checking response length while
receiving.