This is really just a hack for the broken CSS in the Cloudy theme, I think; copying from other non-notice-navigation pages that do this as well. There will be plenty of others also broken.
The ensure* family of functions will now return an OStatusShadowException in this case, which gives us a pleasant error message instead of a giant exception backtrace when you do 'sub somebody@this.local.server'.
Can be extended later to allow actually using the local profile, since we could figure it out.
* added locale/en/LC_MESSAGES/statusnet.po to make it easier to start customizing English texts
* added notes to locale/README about customizing and how to disable languages you haven't customized
* renamed PO templates from *.po to *.pot to match general conventions and reduce confusion for people trying to find which file they're supposed to edit
We do the OStatus queue first, so if we're sending a notice to the
same server twice (e.g., with OMB), our richer and more featureful
notice comes in first.
Conflicts:
lib/attachmentlist.php
plugins/OStatus/classes/Ostatus_profile.php
Merge tried to delete things that it seems it shouldn't, very confusing order. Hope rest of the cherry-picking isn't a problem.
Current test run includes:
* register accounts (via web form)
* local post
* @-mention using path (@domain/path/to/user)
Subscriptions, webfinger mentions, various paths to subscription and unsubscription, etc to come.
* drop OStatusPlugin::localProfileFromUrl(), we can just look up on user.uri
* clean up a few edge cases that returned null through Ostatus_profile::ensure* code paths, now throws clear exception when we can't find a feed from the given profile url
* add some doc comments on the ensure* methods
Superfeedr (sp.?) posts entries without author information. We can
assume that this is intended to be by the original author.
Re-structured the checks for entries that come in by PuSH so they can
either have no author or an empty author, but not a different author.
Parsing hcards for the data we need wasn't hard enough to justify using
hkit. It was dependent on a number of external systems (something to
run tidy), and only could handle XHTML.
We now parse HTML with the PHP dom libraries used elsewhere, and
scrape out our own hcards. Seems to work nicer and faster and most of
all works with Google Buzz profile URLs.