The default full build of OpenLayers.js is 943kb as of 2.10; this gzips down to a couple hundred kb
but is still rather nasty, plus loading it off a remote host could slow things down.
Using a local copy let us cut down the size significantly by discarding unused features, and further
minification with yui-compressor shaves a bit more off. Cuts down to about 1/5 the size of the
original.
Also threw in a bundled & minified copy of the Mapstraction classes plus our usermap.js,
which covers the common case of using the default OpenLayers provider. This cuts out three
additional script loads, two of which weren't getting launched until after the mxn.js main
file got loaded.
Included Makefile will recreate the OpenLayers.js using the statusnet.cfg strip configuration file
and yui-compressor to do some extra minification at the end. Requires fetching the OpenLayers
source download and dropping it in:
http://openlayers.org/download/OpenLayers-2.10.tar.gz
$config['twitter']['ignore_errors'] = true;
A longer-term solution is to patch up the indirect retry handling to count retries better, or delay for later retry sensibly.
If a cache entry is dependent on the code that's running, upgrading
(or enabling/disabling plugins) can generate hard-to-track
inconsistencies.
This change adds a close-to-unique fingerprint of the running code to
some cache keys, so that if the fingerprint changes, the old values
are ignored and new values are used.
If the automated uniqueness fails, an administrator can add an extra
config value, $config['site']['build'], that's thrown into the key also.
If a cache entry is dependent on the code that's running, upgrading
(or enabling/disabling plugins) can generate hard-to-track
inconsistencies.
This change adds a close-to-unique fingerprint of the running code to
some cache keys, so that if the fingerprint changes, the old values
are ignored and new values are used.
If the automated uniqueness fails, an administrator can add an extra
config value, $config['site']['build'], that's thrown into the key also.
Because I changed Notice::asAtomEntry() to use Notice::asActivity(),
all the events that happened in that function have been removed. I
removed the documentation for those events, and added documentation
for the new events.
We had two ways to generate an activity entry from a notice; one through
Notice::asAtomEntry() and one through Notice::asActivity() and
Activity::asString(). The code paths had already diverged somewhat. I
took the conditions that were in Notice::asAtomEntry() and made sure
they were replicated in the other two functions. Then, I rewrote
Notice::asAtomEntry() to use the other two functions instead.
This change passes the ActivityGenerationTests unit tests, but there
may be some other stuff that's not getting covered.
common_shorten_links() can only access the web session's logged-in user, so never properly took user options into effect for posting via XMPP, API, mail, etc.
Adds an optional $user parameter on common_shorten_links(), and a $user->shortenLinks() as a clearer interface for that.
Tweaked some lower-level functions so $user gets passed down -- making the $notice_id param previously there for saving URLs at notice save time generalized a little.
Note also ticket #2919: there's a lot of duplicate code calling the shortening, checking the length, and reporting near-identical error messages. These should be consolidated to aid in code and translation maintenance.
Now, when you first come up the checkbox will most likely be off and the button to create an address is grayed out.
Checking the box enables use of the 'new' button to generate an email address -- it's left disabled until you check the box, so you can't accidentally trip it.
Actually adding the address now enables the post-by-mail option, as well, thus ensuring that it's saved. WARNING: OTHER CHANGES ON THE FORM WILL STILL BE LOST.
Removing the address now disables the post-by-mail option, so it's not sitting around confusingly enabled but useless.
You can still disable the checkbox manually without removing the address, in case you want to keep it for later.
It's also still possible to actually save it in the state where the option is enabled, but there's no configured address, but that shouldn't happen too often. Possibly that should be prevented outright though.
Separating the two forms (one to create a local account, the other to attach the OpenID to an existing account) gets them working -- enter activates the appropriate default button.