closes#12181
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/pull/12265
- The 'core' value is invalid for settings 'type' column
- The 'core' default value for 'type' column in model is also invalid
- Both need to be removed as they are never used and only introduce confusion into the codebase
refs c1d66f0b01
- fixed base model allowing '@@INDEXES@@' as a permitted attribute/order
- fixed base model automatically setting `@@INDEXES@@` to null on the model when creating
- added `doAuth('members:emails')`
- creates an `email_batch` record attached to the first email in the fixtures
- creates an `email_recipients` record for each member
- runs analytics aggregation so the email and member counts are as expected
- added acceptance test for `/member/:id/?include=email_recipients`
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost-Admin/pull/1796
We want to be able to display an email activity timeline in Ghost-Admin for each member. The quickest way to achieve that right now is to provide access to the `email_recipient` data for the member when fetching, this will allow clients to build up a timeline based on the event timestamps included with each email_recipient/email pair.
- sets up `email_recipients` relationship in `Member` model
- updates members API read endpoint to accept an `email_recipients` include parameter
- appends `email_recipients.email` to the `withRelated` array when `email_recipients` is included so that we have data available for email subject and html/plaintext for previews
- updates members API output serializer to include the email_recipients object in the output
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/issues/12461
- adds `members.email_count` and `members.email_opened_count` columns to contain cached counts for faster queries when outputting member data via API
- adds migration to populate cached counts with existing data
- tested locally on ~50k members which took ~4sec on mysql
- updates members output serializer to include the new fields in API output
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/issues/12421
- add `orderRawQuery` function to members model so that we can ensure members with an open rate are ordered before members without an open rate no matter the order direction chosen
- added `email_open_rate` to members in the test fixtures to allow testing of order
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/issues/12420
- updated `order` bookshelf plugin's `parseOrderOption()` method to return multiple order-related properties
- `order` same as before, a key-value object of property-direction
- `orderRaw` new property that is a raw SQL order string generated from `orderRawQuery()` method in models
- `eagerLoad` new property that is an array of properties the `eagerLoad` plugin should use to join across
- updated `pagination.fetchAll()` to apply normal order + raw order if both are available and to handle eager loading / joins when `options.eagerLoad` is populated
- updated post model to include details for email relationship and to add `orderRawQuery()` that allows `email.open_rate` to be used as an order option
no issue
- cleans up unused tables `emails.{meta,stats}`
- adds timestamp columns `email_recipients.{delivered_at,opened_at,failed_at}` that can be used for event timelines and basic stats aggregation
- indexed because we want to sort by these columns to find the "latest event" when limiting Mailgun events API requests
- adds aggregated stats columns `emails.{delivered_count,opened_count,failed_count}`
- adds a composite index on `email_recipients.[email_id,member_email]` to dramatically speed up `email_recipient` update queries when processing events
- modifies the db initialisation to support an `'@@INDEXES@@'` key in table schema definition for composite indexes
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/issues/12256
We no longer want to filter out cancelled subscriptions, so we are able
to remove the whereIn clause of the relation.
* Fixed paid flag on member
* Fixed content gating for members
Now that the subscriptions for a member include all of them, we must
explicitly check that the member has an active subscription in order to
consider them "paid"
no-issue
This logic would assume that the option was always passed at the point
of publishing the post, which is not the case for scheduled posts.
Instead of setting the property to 'none' when the option is not
present, we take the approach of ONLY setting the propery when
1. It is present and not 'none'
2. The post is being published or scheduled
This means that scheduled posts will have the property set correctly,
and any future publishing will leave the it in the original state
no-issue
* Handled send_email_when_published in Posts API
This restores backwards compatibility of the Posts API allowing existing
clients to continue to use the `send_email_when_published` flag. This
change uses two edits, which is unfortunate. The reason being is that
this is an API compatibility issue, not a model issue, so we shouldn't
introduce code to the model layer to handle it. The visibility property
of the model is used to determine how to fall back, and because it can
be left out of the API request, and relies on a default in the settings,
we require that the model decide on the `visibility` before we run our
fallback logic (or we duplicate the `visibility` default at the cost of
maintenance in the future)
* Dropped send_email_when_published column from posts
Since this column is not used any more, we can drop it from the table.
We include an extra migration to repopulate the column in the event of
a rollback
* Updated importer to handle send_email_when_published
Because we currently export this value from Ghost, we should correctly
import it. This follows the same logic as the migrations for this value.
* Included send_email_when_published in API response
As our v3 API documentation includes `send_email_when_published` we must
retain backward compatibility by calculating the property.
* Fixed fields filter with send_email_when_published
* Added safety checks to frame properties
Some parts of the code pass a manually created "frame" which is missing
lots of properties, so we check for the existence of all of them before
using them.
* Fixed 3.1 migration to include columnDefinition
We require that migrations have all the information they need contained
within them as they run in an unknown state of the codebase, which could
be from the commit they are introduced, to any future commit. In this
case the column definition is removed from the schema in 3.38 and the
migration would fail when run in this version or later.
no-issue
* Used email_recipient_filter in MEGA
This officially decouples the newsletter recipients from the post
visibility allowing us to send emails to free members only
* Supported enum for send_email_when_published in model
This allows us to migrate from the previously used boolean to an enum
when we eventually rename the email_recipient_filter column to
send_email_when_published
* Updated the posts API to handle email_recipient_filter
We now no longer rely on the send_email_when_published property to send
newsletters, meaning we can remove the column and start cleaning up the
new columns name
* Handled draft status changes when emails not sent
We want to reset any concept of sending an email when a post is
transition to the draft status, if and only if, and email has not
already been sent. If an email has been sent, we should leave the email
related fields as they were.
* Removed send_email_when_published from add method
This is not supported at the model layer
* Removed email_recipient_filter from v2&Content API
This should not be exposed on previous api versions, or publicly
* Removed reference to send_email_when_published
This allows us to move completely to the email_recipient_filter
property, keeping the code clean and allowing us to delete the
send_email_when_published column in the database. We plan to then
migrate _back_ to the send_email_when_published name at both the
database and api level.
no issue
- tracking of bulk email opens can be enabled/disabled over time, if we're calculating analytics for emails we don't want emails which didn't have tracking enabled skewing the results so we need a record of whether tracking was enabled for each email
no-issue
This column will allow us to store the canonical recipient filter on the
email resource giving us a detailed log of which members an email was
intended for
no-issue
This column will allow us to decouple the recipients of newsletter from
the `visibility` of a post, allowing us to send emails to specifically
free members, or to send paid posts as newsletters to all members.
closes#12263
- Express parses repeated query parameters as an array (req.query properties). Because there is no clear reason on why not to support this behavior extended order parameter parsing logic to handle arrays. This follows the rule of "liberal inputs, conservative outputs"
- Example supported query string for ordering can now look like: `?order=featured&order=published_at asc`, the priority of the order stays the same with the most significant appearing first and least significant last
refs #11572
- Filtering by fields coming from posts_meta table did not work for post resources. This was due to lack of support for these types of operations on NQL layer. The approach taken here is using same way filtering was done for many:many relations and generates a `WHERE IN` filtering clause. In the future we could look into adding preloading of 1:1 relations which should allow getting rid of `WHERE IN` in favor of `JOIN` and filtering directly by field names.
- Changed structure of `EXPANSIONS` filter configuration. Current approach was based on "bag of all the things". Such structure will become problematic as more fields are added. For example, adding all the fields from 1:1 relation posts:posts_meta might collide with any other relations that would have similar naming like meta_description from tags table (if it were was added).
- Bumped nql version to 0.5.0. This adds filtering support to 1:1 relations
- Added filter expansions which can be unique per model Previous approach with single global expansions lookup wasn't working in case different models would need to declare expansion for same field names. Having a `filterExpansion` method per model works in a similar convention other filter related model methods do (e.g. enforcedFilters, defaultFilters)
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/issues/12256 , https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/issues/12255
Currently when listing subscriptions for Members in both the Admin and the Theme, we only show the subscriptions which have a status of trialing or active.
Based on discussion, the `unpaid` and `past_due` states on Stripe also represent owner's intention of considering a subscription as active instead of `cancelled`, so we allow any subscriptions under these 2 states to be also listed for a member and consider them as `paid`.
- Subscriptions will go into a past_due state if the payment is missed, this should be considered a grace period where the member still has access.
- After this the subscriptions will either go to the unpaid or the cancelled state - this can be configured on an account by account basis in the Stripe dashboard. `unpaid` is considered as an intention to keep the subscription to allow for re-activation later.
no refs
- The token generation logic for single use token was replacing only the first instance of + or / to make the token URL safe, instead of replacing all instances which caused a bug where token was not validated properly in case it included multiple + or / in it.
- The fix ensures replacing all the + or / in the token with URL safe _ or - so it can be properly validated via magic link
no issue
- standard browse/read/add/edit/destroy API endpoints for snippets resource
- updates `@tryghost/admin-api-schema` dependency to version that includes snippet definition and schemas
no-issue
The Action model loops through all registered models when the file is
loaded, by loading the model last, we ensure that it can read all
models, rather than an arbitrary selection which come before it.
requires https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/pull/12192
- added initial `EmailBatch` and `EmailRecipient` model definitions with defaults and relationships
- added missing `post` relationship function to email model
- fetch member list without bookshelf
- bookshelf can add around 3x overhead when fetching the members list for an email
- we don't need full members at this point, only having the data is fine
- if we need full models later on we can push the model hydration into background jobs where recipient batches are fetched ready for an email to be sent
- bookshelf model instantiation of many models blocks the event loop, using knex directly keeps concurrent requests fast
- adds `getFilteredCollectionQuery` method to base model to facilitate getting a knex query based on our normal model filters along with transaction/forUpdate applied
- store recipient list before sending email
- chunk already-fetched members list into batches and insert records into the `email_recipients` table via knex
- chunked into batches of 1000 to match the number of emails that Mailgun accepts in a single API request but this may not be the absolute fastest batch size for recipient insertion:
| Batch size | Batch time | Total time |
| ---------- | ---------- | ---------- |
| 500 | 20ms | 4142ms |
| 1000 | 50ms | 4651ms |
| 5000 | 170ms | 3540ms |
| 10000 | 370ms | 3684ms |
- create an email_batch record before inserting recipient rows so we can effeciently fetch recipients by batch and store the overall batch status
refs #11729
- When ordering is done by fields from a relation (like post's `meta_title` that comes form `posts_meta` table), Bookshelf does not include those relations in the original query which caused errors. To support this usecase added a mechanism to detect fields from a relation and load those relations into query.
- Extended ordering to include table name in ordered field name. The information about the table name is needed to avoid using `tableName` within pagination plugin and gives path to having other than original table ordering fields (e.g. order by posts_meta table fields)
- Added test case to check ordering on posts_meta fields
- Added support for "eager loading" relations. Allows to extend query builder object with joins to related tables,
which could be used in ordering (possibly in filtering later). Bookshelf does not support ordering/filtering by proprieties coming from relations, that's why this kind of plugin and query expansion is needed
- Added note about lack of support for child relations with same property names.
refs #11729
- Having a plugin allows to reason about ordering better and gives way
to further extraction away form the core.
- Just like with filtering, ordering falls into similar category of having effect on knex'es query builder object extension through additional statements - ORDER BY in this case.
- Because there were bugs associated with use of permittedAttributes inside of `parseOrderOption` method, introduced separate `orderAttributes` function which returns only those fields which are orderable (https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/issues/11729#issuecomment-685740836)
This reverts commit 80af56b530.
- reverting temporarily so that all associated functionality can be merged in a single release
- creating email batch/recipient records without using them would cause inconsistent data
no-issue
This is a model for the tokens table, which handles the single use
aspect by customising the `findOne` method to automatically destroy the
model after reading from it
requires https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/pull/12192
- added initial `EmailBatch` and `EmailRecipient` model definitions with defaults and relationships
- added missing `post` relationship function to email model
- fetch member list without bookshelf
- bookshelf can add around 3x overhead when fetching the members list for an email
- we don't need full members at this point, only having the data is fine
- if we need full models later on we can push the model hydration into background jobs where recipient batches are fetched ready for an email to be sent
- bookshelf model instantiation of many models blocks the event loop, using knex directly keeps concurrent requests fast
- store recipient list before sending email
- chunk already-fetched members list into batches and insert records into the `email_recipients` table via knex
- chunked into batches of 1000 to match the number of emails that Mailgun accepts in a single API request but this may not be the absolute fastest batch size for recipient insertion:
| Batch size | Batch time | Total time |
| ---------- | ---------- | ---------- |
| 500 | 20ms | 4142ms |
| 1000 | 50ms | 4651ms |
| 5000 | 170ms | 3540ms |
| 10000 | 370ms | 3684ms |
- create an email_batch record before inserting recipient rows so we can effeciently fetch recipients by batch and store the overall batch status
no issue
- members who have trial subscriptions added directly via Stripe will have a status of `"trialed"` in their Ghost subscription
- the `paid: true` filter was not taking that into account meaning trial users were not receiving newsletters sent to paid members even though they have a "paid" subscription
no issue
- extract filtering of an collection into a separate function
- use extracted function in `findAll()` so that it's query behaviour matches `findPage()`
no issue
- for large result sets or complex queries the count query itself can be quite time consuming
- when `limit: 'all'` is passed as an option there's no need to perform a separate count query because we can determine the pagination data from the final result set
- skipped count query when `limit: 'all'` option is present
- re-ordered comments to be closer to the code they reference (ie, why we have our own count query instead of Bookshelf's `.count()`
no issue
- When bulk insert fails there is no transactional logic to revert
related records form being inserted. Also, previously there were no
attempts to "retry" the insert.
- To avoid complex retry logic, an iterative one-by-one insert retry
approach was taken. If this becomes a bottleneck in the future, the
retry algorithm could be improved.
- To avoid a lot of code duplication refactored model's `bulkAdd` & `bulkDestroy`
methods to use 'bulk-operations' module.
- Updated error handling and logging for bulk delete operations. It's very
unlikely for error to happen here, but still need to make sure there is
a proper logging in place to trace back the failure.
- Added debug logs. This should improve debugging experience and
performance measurements.
- Added handling for unrecognized errors. Handling inspired by current unrecognized
error handling by ghost importer -10e5d5f3d4/core/server/data/importer/importers/data/base.js (L148-L154)
no issue
- When batch insert fails handling should be more granular and aim to retry and insert as many records from the batch as possible.
- Added retry logic for failed member's batch inserts. It's a sequential insert for each record in the batch. This implementation was chosen to keep it as simple as possible
- Added filtering of "toCreate" records when member fails to insert. We should not try inserting related members_labels/members_stripe_customers/members_stripe_customer_subscriptions records because they would definitely fail insertion without associated member record
no-issue
* Added bulkAdd method to Member,Customer&Subscription model
This allows us to keep the db access in the model layer
* Updated @tryghost/members-api to 0.27.2
This includes fixes for rate-limiting of requests, and exposes necessary
Stripe methods for creating customers and complimentary subscriptions,
without affecting the database.
* Refactored importer to parallelise tasks where possible
By parallelising our tasks we are able to improve the speed at which the
entire import completes.
no-issue
* Added stripeSubscriptions relation to member model
This allows us to fetch the subscriptions for a member via standard
model usage, e.g. `withRelated: ['stripeSubscriptions']` rather than
offloading to loops and `decorateWithSubscriptions` functions, this is
more performant and less non-standard than the existing method.
* Updated serialize methods to match existing format
The current usage of `decorateWithSubscriptions` and the usage of
members throughout the codebase has a subscriptions array on a stripe
object on the member, this ensures that when we serialize members to
JSON that we are using the same format.
There is definitely room to change this in future, but this is an
attempt to create as few breaking changes as possible.
* Installed @tryghost/members-api@0.26.0
This includes the required API changes so that everywhere can use
members-api directly rather than models and/or helper methods
- deleted files under `core/server/lib/promise` and related test files
- added `@tryghost/promise` as a dependency
- fixed all local requires to point to the new package
refs #12064
- `critical` is meant to be something unpredictable like internal error, something worthy attention, as described in Ignition -3439456d94/README.md (list-of-errors)
- This error level was introduced with - this PR https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/pull/9426, but there is no context provided why this specific value was used. Assuming it's an outdated value as 'not found' is nowhere to be treated in any special way
no issue
- bookshelf adds `DISTINCT` to any relation query that does not have an explicit `columns` statement
- when measuring the impact of `DISTINCT` on the eager-loading association query when listing members using `{withRelated: 'labels'}`, it can be 2x slower with no index on the sort_order column or 4x slower with an index on sort_order
no-issue
Up until now we have left orphaned rows in members_stripe_* tables when
a member is deleted, this updates the destroy method so that we cascade
and remove any MemberStripeCustomer and StripeCustomerSubscription
models related to the Member.
This also adds regression tests for the new functionality as well as to
confirm the existing functionality of cascading to the members_labels
join table
This adds the relations of Subscription->Customer & Customer->Member
closes#12049
Stripe plans used to default to 0, and our new validation of plan
amounts were causing issues when importing from an older version of
Ghost, this updates the validation to be skipped when importing.
- Added regression test for importing plans
closes#12001
* Moved settings validation to the model
This moves the settings validation out of the validation file and into
the model, as it is _only_ used there.
It also sets us up in the future for custom validators on individual
settings.
* Improved validation of stripe_plans setting
- Checks `interval` is a valid string
- Checks `name` & `currency` are strings
* Moved stripe key validation into model
The stripe key settings are all nullable and the regex validation fails
when the input is `null`. Rather than reworking the entirety of how we
validate with default-settings validation objects, this moves the
validation into methods on the Settings model.
* Added tests for new setting validations
Adds tests for both valid and invalid settings, as well as helpers
making future tests easier and less repetitive
closes#12015
refs 95880dddeb
- The bug was caused by falsy plaintext field assignment to empty string `''` when the html content was `null`. Because of the `setEmptyValuesToNull` function (referenced commit), there is no sense to assign empty string value to plaintext property, because it would still end up being `null`
- The `''` -> `null` conversion was confusing the model layer to think that some fields were changed, where in reality none did. This in turn lead to a bug with falsy cache invalidation
closes#12016
- The change detection didn't work when editing post_meta fileds because we only check current model's `_changed` fields when performing `wasChanged()` check
- A solution was adding change tracking of post_meta relation to currently edited post model and overloading `wasChanged` method to check these fields as well