Should fix issue #3027: twitter user avatars not getting imported.
Due to the change in URI, all twitter users that had been previously seen were getting new profile entries, which tried to save the same avatar. This would fail as Avatar.url has a unique index.
Note: now anything new seen in the last couple days in production will still potentially conflict.
Shows the messages to a private group in a list. New classes for
showing a group private message and list of group private messages.
New actions for showing a stream of group private messages and a
single group private message.
In order to apply to PHP's POST processing, the MAX_FILE_SIZE field must appear *before* the file upload field. They were incorrectly placed after, where they had no effect on POST processing.
There's a new menu layout in this version of the software. It was
implemented as a plugin in 0.9.x to avoid clashes with existing themes,
but we're going to break that compatibility in this version, so we're just going for it.
This change involved moving all the changes in NewMenuPlugin into the
default code that was calling it. In addition, since
accountsettingsaction and connectsettingsaction differed only by menu,
I removed them, changed all references to them to the settingsmenu, and moved
the combined nav to its own class.
Let's put that episode behind us.
The CSS shim that was loaded by NewMenuPlugin for certain themes and certain actions
was removed.
'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.
Original fixes in c169dcb5221cf3dd452c291bf97374bb459cc5b9; didn't get merged in 39cad55711 because the code had been broken out to another file, but manual merge went smooth.
These affect twitterstatusfetcher.php on all 32-bit installs and some 64-bit installs (depending on whether the version of the JSON library reads the large numbers as long or double internally). 64-bit bug is harder to see as it tends to manifest as off-by-one due to losing a bit of precision off the end.
Note that the current version of the infinitescroll jquery plugin fixes this, but I'm not updating to it because the code's been altered from the upstream version, apparently to stop it from actually working as infinite scroll. WTF? :)
Note that these tests won't pass on master branch yet as the join/leave don't work, and there's a bug in Activity parsing which prevents interop between new feeds and old remote subscribers (both fixed in this branch).
Given a notice in the local system, we package it up as an Atom entry and MagicSig it up.
We run the magicenv verification on it locally to make sure our own functions can decode it.
Optionally with --verify we can send to Tuomas Koski's verification test service (not sure if this is working 100%)
If given --slap= with a target Salmon endpoint, we'll sent it on and see if it liked it. (Note that StatusNet will reject if there's not a relevant mention, but will report acceptance for dupes so you can use a message that's already been delivered as a test.)
Added StartRegistrationTry/EndRegistrationTry calls into those three, and moved the actual recording hook to EndUserRegister which is guaranteed to be called from User::register (so we don't need to worry about other auth methods forgetting to call the other UI-code hooks).
We were passing DOM nodes directly into the queues for the final bookmark import stage; unfortunately these don't actually survive serialization.
Moved the extraction of properties from the HTML up to the first-stage handler, so now we don't have to worry about moving DOM nodes from one handler to the next. Instead passing an associative array of properties, which is fed into the Bookmark::saveNew by the per-bookmark handler.
delicious bookmark exports use the godawful HTML bookmark file format that ancient versions of Netscape used (and has thus been the common import/export format for bookmarks since the dark ages of the web :)
This arranges bookmark entries as an HTML definition list, using a lot of implied close tags (leaving off the </dt> and </dd>).
DOMDocument->loadHTML() uses libxml2's HTML mode, which generally does ok with muddling through things but apparently is really, really bad about handling those implied close tags.
Sequences of adjacent <dt> elements (eg bookmark without a description, followed by another bookmark "<dt><dt>"), end up interpreted as nested ("<dt><dt></dt></dt>") instead of as siblings ("<dt></dt><dt></dt>").
The first round of code tried to resolve the nesting inline, but ended up a bit funky in places.
I've replaced this with a standalone run through the data to re-order the elements, based on our knowing that <dt> and <dd> cannot directly contain one another; once that's done, our main logic loop can be a bit cleaner. I'm not 100% sure it's doing nested sublists correctly, but these don't seem to show up in delicious export (and even if they do, with the way we flatten the input it shouldn't make a difference).
Also fixed a clearer edge case where some bookmarks didn't get imported when missing descriptions.
I was trying to generate URIs for Bookmarks based on (profile, crc32(url), created).
I failed at that. CRC32s are unsigned ints, and our schema code didn't like that.
On top of that, my code to encode and restore created timestamps was problematic.
So, I switched back to using a meaningless unique ID for Bookmarks.
One way to do this would be to use an auto-incrementing integer ID. However, we've been
kind of crabbed out a few times for exposing auto-incrementing integer IDs as URIs, so
I thought maybe using a random UUID would be a better way to do it.
So, this patch sets random UUIDs for URIs of bookmarks.