refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Team/issues/873
This handles the creation of product events when a members access to
products is changed. This can happen on creation, update, and any
changes to stripe subscriptions.
We manually workout the difference between the current products and the
new products, and add the events accordingly.
no-issue
Calling ObjectId doesn't return a string a but an ObjectId object.
Whilst this object is cast to a string via the toJSON and toString
methods, this is not enough for MySQL. Instead we should explicitly cast
this to a string ourselves and the application level.
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Team/issues/946
This adds the bulk edit method which handles bulk edit operations to members
to be used by the filtering feature. They have been combined into a single method
as that is how they are exposed to the API. This is definitely a candidate for a
refactor in the form of a service in front of the repository.
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/commit/1dd52075
- Fixes bulkDestroy being passed the context
- Fixes passing options.search to the model layer
- Updates return value since the changes in referenced commit
no-issue
The logic for bulk destroy is currently incorrectly inside of the
members api controller in Ghost core. Moving it out to here allows us to
simplify the controller to rely on the service, rather than implement
the logic.
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Team/issues/959
Because we were using the pre-existing products to determine a members
status, instead of the products _after_ we have handled the updates to
subscriptions, members with a paid subscription which was later canceled
were changed to 'comped' rather than 'free'. This adds a final check to
set a member to 'free' if their new set of products is empty.
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Team/issues/542
Importing members with a created_at date will incorrectly create events
for the member for the date of the import. This updates our event
handling to use either the passed created_at date, or in the case of
subscriptions the start_date of the subscription. We're using start_date
for subscriptions rather than created, as this is more accurate because
start_date works correctly for backdated subscriptions in Stripe.