Users and administrators can set how long an URL can be before it's
shortened, and how long a notice can be before all its URLs are
shortened. They can also turn off shortening altogether.
Squashed commit of the following:
commit d136b39011
Author: Evan Prodromou <evan@status.net>
Date: Mon Apr 26 02:39:00 2010 -0400
use site and user settings to determine when to shorten URLs
commit 1e1c851ff3
Author: Evan Prodromou <evan@status.net>
Date: Mon Apr 26 02:38:40 2010 -0400
add a method to force shortening URLs
commit 4d29ca0b91
Author: Evan Prodromou <evan@status.net>
Date: Mon Apr 26 02:37:41 2010 -0400
static method for getting best URL shortening service
commit a9c6a3bace
Author: Evan Prodromou <evan@status.net>
Date: Mon Apr 26 02:37:11 2010 -0400
allow 0 in numeric entries in othersettings
commit 767ff2f7ec
Author: Evan Prodromou <evan@status.net>
Date: Mon Apr 26 02:36:46 2010 -0400
allow 0 or blank string in inputs
commit 1e21af42a6
Author: Evan Prodromou <evan@status.net>
Date: Mon Apr 26 02:01:11 2010 -0400
add more URL-shortening options to othersettings
commit 869a6be0f5
Author: Evan Prodromou <evan@status.net>
Date: Sat Apr 24 14:22:51 2010 -0400
move url shortener superclass to lib from plugin
commit 9c0c9863d5
Author: Evan Prodromou <evan@status.net>
Date: Sat Apr 24 14:20:28 2010 -0400
documentation and whitespace on UrlShortenerPlugin
commit 7a1dd5798f
Author: Evan Prodromou <evan@status.net>
Date: Sat Apr 24 14:05:46 2010 -0400
add defaults for URL shortening
commit d259c37ad2
Author: Evan Prodromou <evan@status.net>
Date: Sat Apr 24 13:40:10 2010 -0400
Add User_urlshortener_prefs
Add a table for URL shortener prefs, a corresponding class, and the
correct mumbo-jumbo in statusnet.ini to make everything work.
Conflicts:
actions/imsettings.php
lib/jabber.php
Made a quick attempt to merge the new JID validation into the XmppPlugin, have not had a chance to test that version live yet.
Should also move over the test cases.
Should help with dupes that come in when inbox distrib jobs die and get restarted, etc.
Conflicts:
classes/Inbox.php
Looks like this was implemented on master recently and not copied up to testing. Merging to my version on testing as I've added some doc comments and extracted a couple functions for future ease of use.
to (profile_id, id) instead of (profile_id, created, id).
It's been falling back to PRIMARY instead, which is really
very inefficient for a profile that hasn't posted in a few
months. Even though forcing the index will cause a filesort,
it's usually going to be better. Even for large profiles it
seems much faster than the badly-indexed query.
to (profile_id, id) instead of (profile_id, created, id).
It's been falling back to PRIMARY instead, which is really
very inefficient for a profile that hasn't posted in a few
months. Even though forcing the index will cause a filesort,
it's usually going to be better. Even for large profiles it
seems much faster than the badly-indexed query.
The magic __call() method is used to implement a getter and setter interface, and simply didn't bother to throw an error for things it didn't recognize.
This may expose a number of existing errors where mistyped method names are called and we're not noticing that they're failing.
This bug was hitting a number of places where we had the pattern:
$db->find();
while($dbo->fetch()) {
$x = clone($dbo);
// do anything with $x other than storing it in an array
}
The cloned object's destructor would trigger on the second run through the loop, freeing the database result set -- not really what we wanted.
(Loops that stored the clones into an array were fine, since the clones stay in scope in the array longer than the original does.)
Detaching the database result from the clone lets us work with its data without interfering with the rest of the query.
In the unlikely even that somebody is making clones in the middle of a query, then trying to continue the query with the clone instead of the original object, well they're gonna be broken now.
* Subscription::start was sometimes passing users instead of profiles to hooks, which broke OStatus subscription notifications; now normalizing to profiles for processing.
* H-card parsing would trigger a lot of PHP warnings and notices in hKit. Now suppressing warnings and notices for the duration of the call to keep them out of output when display_errors is on.
* H-card parsing would trigger a PHP fatal error if the source page was not well-formed XML and Tidy was not present on the system. Switched normalization to use the PHP DOM module which is always present, as we have no need for Tidy's extra features here.
* Trying to fetch avatars from Google profiles failed and triggered a PHP warning due to the relative URL not being resolved during h-card parsing. Now passing profile page URL into hKit by sneaking a <base> tag in while we normalize the HTML source.
* Profile pages without a "Link" header could trigger PHP notices due to a bad NULL -> array(NULL) conversion in LinkHeader::getLink(). Now checking that there was a return value before converting single return value into array.
Base problem is that our caching-on-insert interferes with relying on column default values; the cached object is missing those fields, so they appear to be empty (null) when the object is retrieved from cache.
Now explicitly setting them when inserting subscriptions, and cleaned up some code that had alternate code paths.
May also have made auto-subscription work for remote OStatus subscribers, but can't test until magic sigs are working again.
While deletion is in progress, the account is locked with the 'deleted' role, which disables all actions with rights control.
Todo:
* Pretty up the notice on the profile page about the pending delete. Show status?
* Possibly more thorough account disabling, such as disallowing all use for login and access.
* Improve error recovery; worst case is that an account gets left locked in 'deleted' state but the queue jobs have gotten dropped out. This would leave the username in use and any undeleted notices in place.
This bug was hitting a number of places where we had the pattern:
$db->find();
while($dbo->fetch()) {
$x = clone($dbo);
// do anything with $x other than storing it in an array
}
The cloned object's destructor would trigger on the second run through the loop, freeing the database result set -- not really what we wanted.
(Loops that stored the clones into an array were fine, since the clones stay in scope in the array longer than the original does.)
Detaching the database result from the clone lets us work with its data without interfering with the rest of the query.
In the unlikely even that somebody is making clones in the middle of a query, then trying to continue the query with the clone instead of the original object, well they're gonna be broken now.