refs #12568
- DI pattern through constructor allows for very clear separation of concerns and makes it easy to extract the class into a separate module
refs #12568
- When the server is in maintenance mode (e.g. during migration) it needs to serve a 503 page. Previously this role was delegated to the "frontend" which tightly coupled server bootup and frontend.
- With a dedicated HTTP application serving up 503 server is no longer coupled to the frontend during maintenance
refs #12568
- Allowing express app (frontend) to be booted after the migrations
decouples server maintenance mode from a need to have the "frontend"
loaded beforehand
refs #12160
This flag will allow us easier filtering of members via the API
* Added status column to members table
This flag will be used to determine if a member is free or paid, rather
than relying on joins with the customers and subscriptions tables.
* Added migration to populate members.status
As we add the column with a default value of "free" we only need to care
about the paid members here. We also preemptively handle migrations for
SQLite where there are > 998 paid members.
refs #12568
- The readivility of multiple nested promises is very poor
- Refactored this piece of code before doing a bigger reshuffle of frontend/server boot process
no issue
We added `portal-action` and `requestSrc` in 3.x to allow Portal to handle notifications only for auth actions trigged while using it directly, so that existing themes are not affected in any way. Going forward in 4.0, we don't want to have any special handling in backend for Portal but instead expect themes to handle any Portal specific behavior directly.
- Removes setting of `portal-action` for auth actions like signup
- Removes `requestSrc` being passed through to determine portal actions
closes https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/issues/12449
We’re starting to bump into errors with our current exporter due to the size of some of the tables in the db and hitting an issue with Ghost running out of memory during export. The intention for the export/import is not to be backup/restore functionality, but for exporting content and authors.
In addition, exporting and re-importing Stripe secret/publishable keys can cause unexpected side-effects for sites that can has major side-effects. This change -
- Removes `email_batches` and `email_recipients` tables from export data to reduce export size due to large amount of analytics data
- Removes stripe's secret/publishable/webhook keys to avoid unexpected issues with re-import
no reference
- The instructions in readmes were outdates. Updated with a little more accurate information (they still need a massive cleanup, but that should be a part of a separate effort)