fixes PROD-102
When a newsletter has a sender_email stored in the database that Ghost
is not allowed to send from, we no longer return it as sender_email in
the API. Instead we return it as the sender_reply_to. That way the
expected behaviour is shown correctly in the frontend and the API result
also makes more sense.
In addition to that, when a change is made to a newsletters reply_to
address we'll clear any invalid sender_email values in that newsletter.
That makes sure we can clear the sender_reply_to value instead of
keeping the current fallback to sender_email if that one is stored.
On top of that, this change correclty updates the browse endpoint to use
the newsletter service instead of directly using the model.
ref GRO-54
fixes GRO-63
fixes GRO-62
fixes GRO-69
When the config `hostSettings:managedEmail:enabled` is enabled, or the
new flag (`newEmailAddresses`) is enabled for self-hosters, we'll start
to check the from addresses of all outgoing emails more strictly.
- Current flow: nothing changes if the managedEmail config is not set or
the `newEmailAddresses` feature flag is not set
- When managedEmail is enabled: never allow to send an email from any
chosen email. We always use `mail.from` for all outgoing emails. Custom
addresses should be set as replyTo instead. Changing the newsletter
sender_email is not allowed anymore (and ignored if it is set).
- When managedEmail is enabled with a custom sending domain: if a from
address doesn't match the sending domain, we'll default to mail.from and
use the original as a replyTo if appropriate and only when no other
replyTo was set. A newsletter sender email addresss can only be set to
an email address on this domain.
- When `newEmailAddresses` is enabled: self hosters are free to set all
email addresses to whatever they want, without verification. In addition
to that, we stop making up our own email addresses and send from
`mail.from` by default instead of generating a `noreply`+ `@` +
`sitedomain.com` address
A more in depth example of all cases can be seen in
`ghost/core/test/integration/services/email-addresses.test.js`
Includes lots of new E2E tests for most new situations. Apart from that,
all email snapshots are changed because the from and replyTo addresses
are now included in snapshots (so we can see unexpected changes in the
future).
Dropped test coverage requirement, because tests were failing coverage
locally, but not in CI
Fixed settings test that set the site title to an array - bug tracked in
GRO-68
refs: https://github.com/TryGhost/Toolbox/issues/595
We're rolling out new rules around the node assert library, the first of which is enforcing the use of assert/strict. This means we don't need to use the strict version of methods, as the standard version will work that way by default.
This caught some gotchas in our existing usage of assert where the lack of strict mode had unexpected results:
- Url matching needs to be done on `url.href` see aa58b354a4
- Null and undefined are not the same thing, there were a few cases of this being confused
- Particularly questionable changes in [PostExporter tests](c1a468744b) tracked [here](https://github.com/TryGhost/Team/issues/3505).
- A typo see eaac9c293a
Moving forward, using assert strict should help us to catch unexpected behaviour, particularly around nulls and undefineds during implementation.
no issue
There was an error when generating the snapshot for this test. It never ran, so the snapshot was never committed. On top of that, the generated snapshot would change every time because the email verification token was not replaced with a static value.
- this cleans up all imports or variables that aren't currently being used
- this really helps keep the tests clean by only allowing what is needed
- I've left `should` as an exemption for now because we need to clean up
how it is used
refs: https://github.com/TryGhost/Toolbox/issues/389
This removes many error logs when the end-to-end test suite is run with the log-level set to error. Many errors are intentional, so the resolution is typically to stub the error log function and assert that it would have been called.
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Team/issues/2400
- we've deemed it useful to start to return `Content-Version` for all
API requests, because it becomes useful to know which version of Ghost
a response has come from in logs
- this should also help us detect Admin<->Ghost API mismatches, which
was the cause of a bug recently (ref'd issue)
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Toolbox/issues/499
- Outgoing emails have been a weak point of Ghost's stability recently. The concept of "emailMockReceiver" similarly to "webhookMockReceiver", allows to test side-effects like outgoing emails.
- This is a first iteration which should lay groundwork for testing all outgoing emails in the future
- The change adds a new concept of "email mock receiver" which is very similar to how the "webhook mock receiver" works. The email mock receiver exposes two methods to record and verify snapshots:
- matchHTMLSnapshot - records and verifies only the HTML content of the outgoint email
- matchMetadataSnapshot - records and verifies all the non-HTML properties sent along an email content, e.g.: to address, plaintext, subject, etc.
- What's missing is matching content based on dynamic content like dates, links with JWT tokens, etc.
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Toolbox/issues/354
- this commit turns the Ghost repo into a monorepo so we can bring our
internal packages back in, which makes life easier when working on
Ghost