refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Team/issues/1252
Although we filter out archived tiers from being shown in Portal - we
must also persist this information, so that when they are unarchived,
they continue to not be shown in Portal.
Unfortunately this information is stored in a setting, rather than on
the Tier object itself, two things to consider for the future are:
1. Representing the display value on the Tier object in the API
2. Updating the DB tables to allow storing the display value on the Tier
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Team/issues/1252
This will be used to archive and unarchive Tiers. There is a restriction
on archiving "free" Tiers because our current system expects only one,
and it should always be active.
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Team/issues/1037
Tiers have a new `type` column to differentiate between `free` and `paid` tiers. This change -
- sets type as paid for all new tiers created, as `free` tier is created by default
- excludes any price/stripe data change for free tier
- updates all usages of default product to fetch the first paid product from the products list in DB instead of just the first product it finds.
no-issue
Since updating the product repository to force transactions, the options
parameter was used in every call, meaning it wasn't optional any more,
which broke usage. This updates the parameter to have a default so that
existing usage still works.
no-issue
Since we run our product repository methods in transactions now we must
ensure that all database interations in the method use the transaction.
This adds the missing options to the reading of existing prices so that
they happen inside of the transaction.
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Team/issues/982
These calls to the edit method were missing the transaction option from
the parent which meant that they ran outside of the transaction and
would cause the method to timeout.
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Team/issues/919
As we pass the `benefits` to the Product model on creation, we do not
need to manually fetch them again. In fact doing so causes a strange SQL
error, where we attempt to run `SELECT undefined.*`.