Circles are the conceptual opposite of lists. A list is a subdivision
of your follows, a circle is a subdivision of your followers. Posting
to a circle means making content available to only some of your
followers. Circles have been internally supported in Mastodon for
the purposes of federation since #8950, this adds the REST API
necessary for making use of them in Mastodon itsef.
- Rate limit login attempts by target account
- Rate limit password resets and e-mail re-confirmations by target account
- Rate limit sign-up/login attempts, password resets, and e-mail re-confirmations by IP like before
Also:
- Fix locks not being removed when jobs go to the dead job queue
- Add UI for managing locks to the Sidekiq dashboard
- Remove unused Sidekiq workers
Fix#13349
* Add announcements
Fix#11006
* Add reactions to announcements
* Add admin UI for announcements
* Add unit tests
* Fix issues
- Add `with_dismissed` param to announcements API
- Fix end date not being formatted when time range is given
- Fix announcement delete causing reactions to send streaming updates
- Fix announcements container growing too wide and mascot too small
- Fix `all_day` being settable when no time range is given
- Change text "Update" to "Announcement"
* Fix scheduler unpublishing announcements before they are due
* Fix filter params not being passed to announcements filter
* Fix wrong grouping in Twitter valid_url regex
* Add support for xmpp URIs
Fixes#9776
The difficult part is autolinking, because Twitter-text's extractor does
some pretty ad-hoc stuff to find things that “look like” URLs, and XMPP
URIs do not really match the assumptions of that lib, so it doesn't sound
wise to try to shoehorn it into the existing regex.
This is why I used a specific regex (very close, although slightly more
permissive than the RFC), and a specific scan function (a simplified version
of the generalized one from Twitter).
* Remove leading “xmpp:” from auto-linked text
When authenticating via OAuth, the resource owner password grant
strategy is allowed by Mastodon, but (without this PR), it does not
attempt to authenticate against LDAP or PAM. As a result, LDAP or PAM
authenticated users cannot sign in to Mastodon with their
email/password credentials via OAuth (for instance, for native/mobile
app users).
This PR fleshes out the authentication strategy supplied to doorkeeper
in its initializer by looking up the user with LDAP and/or PAM when
devise is configured to use LDAP/PAM backends. It attempts to follow the
same logic as the Auth::SessionsController for handling email/password
credentials.
Note #1: Since this pull request affects an initializer, it's unclear
how to add test automation.
Note #2: The PAM authentication path has not been manually tested. It
was added for completeness sake, and it is hoped that it can be manually
tested before merging.
* Add backend support for bookmarks
Bookmarks behave like favourites, except they aren't shared with other
users and do not have an associated counter.
* Add spec for bookmark endpoints
* Add front-end support for bookmarks
* Introduce OAuth scopes for bookmarks
* Add bookmarks to archive takeout
* Fix migration
* Coding style fixes
* Fix rebase issue
* Update bookmarked_statuses to latest UI changes
* Update bookmark actions to properly reflect status changes in state
* Add bookmarks item to single-column layout
* Make active bookmarks red
Change the behaviour of remotable concern. Previously, it would skip
downloading an attachment if the stored remote URL is identical to
the new one. Now it would not be skipped if the attachment is not
actually currently stored by Paperclip.
The default limit of 10 retries with exponential backoff meant
that if the S3 server was timing out, you would be stuck with it
for much, much longer than the 5 second read timeout we expect.
The uploading happens within a database transaction, which means
a failing S3 server could negatively affect database performance
It's possible that after commit callbacks were not firing when
exceptions occurred in the process. Also, the default Sidekiq
strategy does not push indexing jobs immediately, which is not
necessary and could be part of the issue too.
* Add nodeinfo endpoint
* dont commit stuff from my local dev
* consistant naming since we implimented 2.1 schema
* Add some additional node info stuff
* Add nodeinfo endpoint
* dont commit stuff from my local dev
* consistant naming since we implimented 2.1 schema
* expanding this to include federation info
* codeclimate feedback
* CC feedback
* using activeserializers seems like a good idea...
* get rid of draft 2.1 version
* Reimplement 2.1, also fix metaData -> metadata
* Fix metaData -> metadata here too
* Fix nodeinfo 2.1 tests
* Implement cache for monthly user aggregate
* Useless
* Remove ostatus from the list of supported protocols
* Fix nodeinfo's open_registration reading obsolete setting variable
* Only serialize domain blocks with user-facing limitations
* Do not needlessly list noop severity in nodeinfo
* Only serialize domain blocks info in nodeinfo when they are set to be displayed to everyone
* Enable caching for nodeinfo endpoints
* Fix rendering nodeinfo
* CodeClimate fixes
* Please CodeClimate
* Change InstancePresenter#active_user_count_months for clarity
* Refactor NodeInfoSerializer#metadata
* Remove nodeinfo 2.1 support as the schema doesn't exist
* Clean-up