With the current repo setup, line-endings will automatically be
converted to and from CRLF when someone is working on Windows. This is
how we want it to work, but since the line-endings are CRLF while
they're working, these checks will always throw a ton of errors. We can
safely just disable them, since everything should be fine and handled
properly already.
Vagrant on Windows has issues with creating symlinks inside shared
folders - it requires a permission that isn't granted to a user by
default. This can be fixed by changing security policies, but for our
purposes we don't need the symlinks anyway, and can run the tools
manually like this, instead of using the .bin/ symlinks.
This may need some more specific file-type definitions added, but let's
try with the absolute minimal version first, which just relies on git to
detect which files are text or binary.
Without setting any defaults, it seems to give 1024MB of memory and 2
CPUs. That low of memory can (and does) result in the VM swapping itself
to death when doing some things. I'm going to set a reasonable amount in
the Vagrantfile, and update the docs to explain how to raise/lower it if
necessary (and recommend a minimum).
Previously the "web API" exceptions were being based on the matched
route, but that would cause issues such as trying to move a topic to a
non-existent group. That's a PATCH request on a topic, so it would
display an error of "Topic not found" instead of "Group not found".
This moves the logic into the root factories and displays the message
attached to the HTTPNotFound exception when one is returned, which
should work more properly.
If an AJAX request ends up hitting some sort of error that hasn't been
handled properly in the code yet, it often gets a full HTML page back as
a response, instead of just a text error message. Previously, this would
end up with Intercooler putting the full text of the HTML into the error
element, which is really ugly and confusing.
Now, it will just put an "Unknown error" message, and the actual error
should still end up getting reported to me through Sentry to be able to
investigate.
This causes an internal server occasionally from people trying to see if
there's a topic with ID 0 (often via tild.es/0), so this will just
return a 404 instead.
Previously, this was showing a title of "Topics in ~" in embeds and
such, due to using the same title/description as group topic listings,
but without a group name.
This adds settings into pyproject.toml for the isort tool to match up
with the styles I've generally been using, and then applies it to the
whole project (by running "isort -rc").
Most of these changes are very minor, but it's good to fix the few
inconsistencies that were around.
prospector 1.1.6.4 is currently broken - it updates to a new version of
pylint that it isn't compatible with. The relevant issue is here:
https://github.com/PyCQA/prospector/issues/335
Previously tild.es urls would proxy_pass through to the views inside the
Pyramid app, but this caused strange behavior in some cases. For
example, anything that caused a 404 response would end up in a broken
page that still appeared to be on the tild.es domain, but would be an
HTML-only page coming from the app, since the CSS and JS would not be
available.
This method is still a bit weird in some ways (now you'll end up on a
404 page at https://tildes.net/shortener/... instead), but I think it's
an improvement overall.
Some links can get through to this point without a hostname, which will
cause some of the transformers to crash. We'll just skip everything if
there's no hostname, and it will end up getting rejected afterwards
anyway.
Having this set to "auto" may be contributing to the layout shift while
the page is loading, since it doesn't know the size until the content is
loaded.
Chrome is showing a brief flash of the page rearranging while loading,
where it initially has the sidebar hidden but then it "pops in" and
moves the page to the left. I believe this is due to the HTML ordering
(the sidebar is after the main content) combined with it being hidden by
default, which prevents it from being included in the layout while the
main content is still being loaded.
This should hopefully resolve it, but may need some more changes still.
Previously the description (used for embeds / link previews) was always
"Tildes - a non-profit community site", so this will display how many
comments are in a discussion when people are linking to one.
Previously, the default time period for topic listings under the
Activity sort (which is the overall default) was set to 3 days. Part of
the purpose of this was to stop long-lived, off-topic threads from
sitting at the top of the site indefinitely. However, now that the
Activity sort is adjusted to have a way to consider these threads
"uninteresting" and prevent them from bumping, that's no longer
necessary.
We can try Activity/"all time" as the default sorting again, and should
be able to resolve any issues through using the "uninteresting"
judgments instead of trying to use the shorter time period to hide it.
This file is NPM's equivalent of requirements.txt, and should be
included to make sure that everyone is using the exact same versions of
all NPM packages, which will prevent weird inconsistencies between the
JS/SCSS linting.
This changes the "activity" topic-sorting method to look for
"interesting" activity instead of everything, and adds a new "All
activity" method that retains the previous behavior.
Currently, "interesting activity" excludes any comments that have active
Noise, Offtopic, or Malice labels, or any of their children. These
checks are also done based on labeling activity, so for example if
someone posts a new comment it will bump the thread initially, but if
that comment is then labeled as Noise, the thread will "un-bump" and go
back to its previous position in the Activity sort.
There were also some other minor changes made to appearance to support
adding another sorting option, such as shortening the displayed names on
the "tabs", like showing "Votes" instead of "Most votes". This probably
needs some further work, but is okay for now.
I haven't gone through the base stylelint rules yet, but this was from a
full look through all of the stylelint-scss ones, enabling all of the
ones that suit the SCSS style and doing the necessary fixups to the
code. Not many fixes were necessary, most was related to redundant "& >"
selectors that I didn't realize were unnecessary.
This won't affect requests for static files or anything except ones that
get proxied to the app.
The current configuration is based on IP, and allows a rate of 4/sec,
with an additional burst of 5 above the limit permitted, and burst
requests allowed to go through immediately (nodelay). For more info:
https://www.nginx.com/blog/rate-limiting-nginx/
With the gigantic node_modules directory, Black suddenly started taking
over 15 seconds to run (compared to less than a second before). This
gets it to skip the node_modules directory, as well as a few other ones.