This commit also fixes the translation in /plugins/OpenID/actions/finishopenidlogin.php#L203-L204 (s/Syncronize/Synchronize)
Sync is a bad technical jargon and we should use Synch instead.
Synch is already used in other parts of GNU social as seen in plugins/TwitterBridge/classes/Twitter_synch_status.php
UI:
- "Delete" area is now "Actions" area
- Updated themes to better reflect the changes
Routes:
- index.php?action=finishsyncopenid => finishsyncopenid
Translations:
- Updated OpenID translation files
- Updated OpenID POT file
Versioning:
- Bump OpenID minor version
- Bump GS patch version
Why would have labeling the Synchronize button of Sync been of bad taste? - answered by XRevan86:
In "synchronise" "ch" is a digraph meaning /k/ (actually /x/ turned into /k/ in English but whatever).
So… not separate letters.
It's like "ph" in "alphabet", or "sh" in "sheep", or "ch" in "chop" -- "ch" can mean a whole variety of sounds.
Readme plugins
* Adds several plugin READMEs
They are pretty basic, but it's a start.
* Changes status.net/wiki URLs to git.gnu.io
The status.net wiki is dead.
See merge request !103
Lots of these changes mean that we're requiring certain values to
either by typed properly or return the expected value. If it doesn't
there should be a fatal exception thrown which we can followup in the
logs and won't go silently suppressed.
This is the beginning of getting notice URI info via WebFinger
*XrdActionLinks is renamed *WebFingerProfileLinks, check EVENTS.txt
in WebFinger plugin for new events.
New plugins:
* LRDD
LRDD implements client-side RFC6415 and RFC7033 resource descriptor
discovery procedures. I.e. LRDD, host-meta and WebFinger stuff.
OStatus and OpenID now depend on the LRDD plugin (XML_XRD).
* WebFinger
This plugin implements the server-side of RFC6415 and RFC7033. Note:
WebFinger technically doesn't handle XRD, but we serve both that and
JRD (JSON Resource Descriptor), depending on Accept header and one
ugly hack to check for old StatusNet installations.
WebFinger depends on LRDD.
We might make this even prettier by using Net_WebFinger, but it is not
currently RFC7033 compliant (no /.well-known/webfinger resource GETs).
Disabling the WebFinger plugin would effectively render your site non-
federated (which might be desired on a private site).
Disabling the LRDD plugin would make your site unable to do modern web
URI lookups (making life just a little bit harder).
lib/plugin.php now has a parent onAutoload function that finds most common
files that are used in plugins (actions, dataobjects, forms, libs etc.) if
they are put in the standardised directories ('actions', 'classes', 'forms',
'lib' and perhaps some others in the future).
Lots of the Memcached_DataObject classes stopped working when upgraded to
Managed_DataObject because they lacked schemaDef().
I have _hopefully_ made it so that all the references to the table uses
each class' schemaDef, rather than the more manual ColumnDef stuff. Not
all plugins have been tested thoroughly yet.
NOTE: This is applied with getKV calls instead of staticGet, as it was
important for PHP Strict Standards compliance to avoid calling the non-
static functions statically. (unfortunately DB and DB_DataObject still do
this within themselves...)
I used this hacky sed-command (run it from your GNU Social root, or change the first grep's path to where it actually lies) to do a rough fix on all ::staticGet calls and rename them to ::getKV
sed -i -s -e '/DataObject::staticGet/I!s/::staticGet/::getKV/Ig' $(grep -R ::staticGet `pwd`/* | grep -v -e '^extlib' | grep -v DataObject:: |grep -v "function staticGet"|cut -d: -f1 |sort |uniq)
If you're applying this, remember to change the Managed_DataObject and Memcached_DataObject function definitions of staticGet to getKV!
This might of course take some getting used to, or modification fo StatusNet plugins, but the result is that all the static calls (to staticGet) are now properly made without breaking PHP Strict Standards. Standards are there to be followed (and they caused some very bad confusion when used with get_called_class)
Reasonably any plugin or code that tests for the definition of 'GNUSOCIAL' or similar will take this change into consideration.
commit 7ef19ab918cc9805abb8d01e8220ae4ed63155d7
Author: Evan Prodromou <evan@status.net>
Date: Mon Jul 9 12:53:29 2012 -0400
Show link to facebook account on profile block
If you've logged in with Facebook, show a link to that account on the profile block.
commit b56967479c009d702150791944dbd80746ee3ba1
Author: Evan Prodromou <evan@status.net>
Date: Mon Jul 9 12:28:34 2012 -0400
Add profile link from profile block to Twitter account
Add a profile link to Twitter for accounts that are linked via Twitter login.
commit 181e441fd03c6034e737f6a3dae115557aa3e1aa
Author: Evan Prodromou <evan@status.net>
Date: Mon Jul 9 11:57:56 2012 -0400
OpenID shows other account links
commit ef7357883dad9e34af2746e1c6a41ea826d7c992
Author: Evan Prodromou <evan@status.net>
Date: Mon Jul 9 11:53:12 2012 -0400
Add a profile link for OpenIDs
OpenID plugin now adds a profile link for each OpenID on the account.
commit 093d26b95bc453686d24c42f5a8f4739cb338fd2
Author: Evan Prodromou <evan@status.net>
Date: Mon Jul 9 11:15:18 2012 -0400
Better array access
commit 49d47257efdcae2101b589a1f825872bdd70667c
Author: Evan Prodromou <evan@status.net>
Date: Mon Jul 9 10:57:16 2012 -0400
Show list of other accounts in profile block
We add a group of "rel-me" links to other user accounts on the Web.
This is mostly useful for when you've used OpenID, Twitter, or
Facebook login to associate a remote account.
There's an extension to the profileblock recipe to show the links as
little icons; there's a new hook in accountprofileblock to get such
links from plugins.
There's a modification to the base theme to show the icons correctly
(I think).
'admin' is a pretty common username that people try when installing;
it was blacklisted because all of our admin panels were at /admin/*,
which would conflict with the admin user's namespace.
Changed the location of all admin panels to /panel/*, blacklisted the
nickname 'panel', and allowed 'admin'. Tested with a fresh install;
seems to work great.
Changed it to leave the 'login' and 'register' actions in the system; we're already taking them over and redirecting them to the OpenID login page, so they won't be reached by accident; but now those redirects can be reached on purpose. ;)
Better long-term fix may be to allow some aliasing, so we can have common_local_url('login') actually send us straight to the OpenID login page instead of having to go through an intermediate redirect, but this'll do.
To enable the admin panel:
$config['admin']['panels'][] = 'openid';
Or to set them manually:
$config['openid']['trusted_provider'] = 'https://login.ubuntu.net/';
$config['openid']['required_team'] = 'my-project-cabal';
$config['site']['openidonly'] = true;
OpenID-only mode can still be set from addPlugin() parameters as well for backwards compatibility.
Note: if it's set there, that value will override the setting from the database or config.php.
Note that team restrictions are only really meaningful if a trusted provider is set; otherwise,
any OpenID server could report back that users are members of the given team.
Restrictions are checked only at OpenID authentication time and will not kick off people currently
with a session open; existing remembered logins may also survive these changes.
Using code for Launchpad team support provided by Canonical under AGPLv3, pulled from r27 of
WordPress teams integration plugin:
https://code.edge.launchpad.net/~canonical-isd-hackers/wordpress-teams-integration/trunk