refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Team/issues/513
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Team/issues/477
- We have skipped work to improve the 'defaultTo' value when working on Ghost 4.0 release, so adding this comment while context loaded
- defaultTo should not be set to anything as it leads to more maintenance work during major version bump
- having validation might make sense but could lead to similar maintenance work unless it's linked to some global nosion of "supported API versions" used everywhere
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/issues/10318
- Storing JSON object in settings has caused multiple bugs in the past and was considered an antipattern
- This is a last bit in the long process of getting rid of "object" settings in the database. At this point there should be no settings with this type. Yey!
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/issues/12602
* Updated members_status_events table
By replacing the `status` column with a `from_status` and `to_status`
column, we are able to track the changes between multiple statuses
easier, and accumulate the data. e.g. the delta of paid members in a
given time range is the sum of the `to_status` columns set to 'paid'
minus the sum of the `from_status` columns set to 'paid' within that
time range
* Updated MEGA to handle addition of 'comped' status
With the addition of the 'comped' status, we need to ensure that MEGA
will still send emails to the correct recipients. I've opted to use an
"inverse" filter, as that is the intention of the free/paid split in
MEGA - as far as MEGA is concerned, "free" is the opposite of "paid"
* Updated customQuery for MemberStatusEvent
With the `status` column replaced with `from_status` and `to_status`
this allows us to fix and update the customQuery to correctly accumulate
the data into deltas over time, broken down by day.
* Populated members_status_events table
As the table will be used to generate deltas, we need to backfill the
data so that existing sites will be able to sum up the deltas and
calculate correct data.
The assumptions used in backfilling is that a Member's current status,
is their only status.
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/issues/12602
As we only want to add events for when an email is changed, we need to store the previous email if we want a complete log of all emails for a member
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/issues/12602
* Added members_payment_events table
This table will store successful and unsuccessful payment attempts, and
can be used to calculate gross volume over time.
* Added members_login_events table
This table can be used to audit member logins
* Added members_email_change_events table
This table will allow us to store a history of email addresses associated with a member
* Added members_status_events table
This table will allow us to track the change in status over time for members, as well
as calculate aggregates over time, e.g. paid members over time
* Added members_paid_subscription_events
This table will allow us to track subscriptions changes for members, as well as
calculating MRR over time
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/issues/12567
- Changing unique constraint from slug to slug+type should allow for posts and pages to be created with the same slug
- The constraint will be present on application layer for API v4 while we figure out how to deal with it in API v5
no-issue
This value is nullable from the Stripe API so we're making sure that we
can store exact values locally.
SQLite3 does not supports altering columns so instead we have to:
1. Create a temp table and copy the data to it
2. Delete the original table
3. Recreate the original table with the necessary modifications
4. Copy the data from the temp table
5. Drop the temp table
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.
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 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
- nullable so we can distinguish between members that have and haven't received any trackable emails
- indexed because we'll be using this column for sorting
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
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
- 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.
no issue
- minimal table structure required for the first iteration of content snippets
- snippets are stored pieces of re-usable content that could effectively be entire posts so the `mobiledoc` field length matches the `posts.mobiledoc` field length
no issue
The email table should be a reference for all data that was used when sending an email. From and Reply-to addresses can change over time and we don't have any other reference for their value at the time of sending an email so we should store them alongside the email content.
- schema updated with `from` and `reply_to` columns
- both are set to `nullable` because we don't have historic data (can be populated and changed in later migrations if needed)
- neither `from` or `reply_to` have `isEmail` validations because they can have name+email in an email-specific format
- will help keep concerns separated in the future. `mega` service can deal with all of the email contents/properties, and the `bulk-email` service's concerns are then only email sending and any provider-specific needs
no-issue
After discussion with Matt, we decided that 192 bits for the token is a
good number, as it has no padding when base64 encoded and is more secure
than 128 bits, whilst still a managable size.
no-issue
This is a table to store single use tokens for use in magic links, the
columns are as simple as possible at the moment and are designed as:
id - standard ObjectID like all of our tables
token - 128bit base64 encoded string
data - arbitrary data to store against the token
created_at - timestamp to allow for expiry to be implemented for tokens
no issue
We want to store a list of recipients for each bulk email so that we have a consistent set of data that background processing/sending jobs can work from without worrying about moving large data sets around or member data changing mid-send.
- `email_batches` table acts as a join table with status for email<->email_recipient
- stores a provider-specific ID that we get back when submitting a batch for sending to the bulk email provider
- `status` allows for batch-specific status updates and picking up where we left off when submitting batches if needed
- explicitly tying a list of email recipients to a batch allows for partial retries
- `email_recipients` table acts as a join table for email<->member
- `member_id` does not have a foreign key constraint because members can be deleted but does have an index so that we can efficiently query which emails a member has received
- stores static copies of the member info present at the time of sending an email for consistency in background jobs and auditing/historical data
no-issue
We are in the process of creating migrations to add foreign key constraints
and cascading deletes to the members_stripe_* tables to make listing members
and deleting members faster. As well as the migrations we need to update the
database schema so that new installations have the correct indexes and constraints.
Co-authored-by: Kevin Ansfield <kevin@lookingsideways.co.uk>
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/issues/10318
- Updates default settings to contain correct type and validation for each setting
- Updates `populateDefaults` to correctly insert type value for new settings
- Updates settings schema to allow only select types - `array`, `number`, `boolean`, `string`
- `object` is a temporary type allowed till we get rid of all JSON object settings
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/issues/10318
- maps old `settings.type` values to new `settings.type/group` values
- uses an explicit map so that we don't lose information and can safely roll back even though we're modifying `settings.type` too
- updates `settings.type` values too to keep code working while we switch to using `settings.group`
- sets the `settings.group` value for all settings which are keeping the same group as their current type
- adapts `settings.type` validations to match new groups
- adds flags to specific settings, both in the migration for existing settings records and in default-settings.json for new settings records
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/issues/10318
- `group`
- to replace the `type` column, provides a more descriptive name for the columns use
- for existing sites it will be populated by migrating data from the `type` column in a later migration
- for new sites a minimal update has been added to `parseDefaultSettings()` to populate the `group` field when settings are created during startup - fixes the NOT NULL constraint on `settings.group`
- `flags`
- signifies special handling that is different to other settings in a group
- eg, `PUBLIC,RO` would indicate that the setting is available via unauthenticated endpoints and is read-only
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/issues/10318
- precursor to migrating from `settings.type` to `settings.group`
- renames `blog` type to `site`
- renames `bulk_email` type to `email`
- moves settings out of `site` (previously `blog`) into more appropriate groups such as `core` or individual feature groups
no issue
- reverts commit 87c31444fd but with modifications to settings naming
- Adds new settings for members modal customization to default settings
- `portal_button` controls the visibility of beacon in members modal
- `portal_name` controls the visibility of name field in signup
- `portal_plans` controls the visibility of plans allowed for member to signup with
- Adds stripe connect check to determine if stripe is setup or not
- Adds the 3 new settings to members site data
- Updates to snake case naming for members site API data
- Apps are marked as removed in 3.0, never officially launched and have been deprecated for at least 2 years.
- We've slowly removed bits that got in our way or were insecure over time meaning they mostly didn't work
- This cleans up the remainder of the logic
- The tables should be cleaned up in a future major
- Apps are marked as removed in 3.0, never officially launched and have been deprecated for at least 2 years.
- We've slowly removed bits that got in our way or were insecure over time meaning they mostly didn't work
- This cleans up the remainder of the logic
- The tables should be cleaned up in a future major
no issue
- 3.6.0 contained incorrect references in the `schema.js` file for the `members_label` table that was added in that version. On MySQL knex created a foreign key constraint for that reference which stopped member labels from being createable
- this fixes the schema file and has a migration to drop and recreate the table. Knex handles removal and addition of foreign keys during table drop/create
no issue
* Updated sendEmailWithMagicLink syntax
* Updated label name selection from theme
* Updated migration version for labels
* Added labels to export/import of members
* Added member labels sanitization for case-insensitive duplicates
* Fixed tests
* Fixed label serialization bug on import
* Bumped @tryghost/members-api to 0.15.0
* Fixed lint
* Cleanup
no issue
- The helper allows generating HTML needed to cancel or continue the member's subscription depending on subscription state.
- Added public members endpoint to allow updating subscription's `cancel_at_period_end` attribute available at: `PUT /api/canary/members/subscriptions/:id/`
- Added client-side hook to allow calling subscription cancellation. Allows to create elements with `data-members-cancel-subscription` / `data-members-continue-subscription` attributes which would call subscription update.
- Updated schema and added migration for `current_period_end` column
- As discussed we only add a single column to subscriptions table to avoid preoptimizing for future cases
- Added {{cancel_link}} helper
- Added error handling for {{cancel_link}} when members are disabled
- Added test coverage for {{cancel_link}} helper
- Bumped @tryghost/members-api version to 0.10.2. Needed to use `updateSubscription` middleware
- Bumped gscan to 3.2.0. Needed to recognize new {{cancel_link}} helper
no issue
- Increased default mailgun retry limit to 5
- Handling retry logic closer to SDK layer gives less future manual handling
- Allowed failing request to be passed through to the caller
- To be able to handle failed requests more gracefully in the future we need all available error information to be given to the caller
- The previous method with `Promise.all` would have rejected a whole batch without providing details on each specific batch.
- Limited data returned with a failed message to batch values
- Added better error handling on mega layer
- Added new column to store failed batch info
- Added reference to mailgan error docs
- Refactored batch emailer to respond with instances of an object
- It's hard to reason about the response type of bulk mailer when multiple object types can be returned
- This gives more clarity and ability to check with `instanceof` check
no issue
- The limitation on Mailgun side of API seems to be 1000 emails per message.
- The only place where I could find a hard limit of 1000 emails per
batch was this PHP SDK issue: https://github.com/mailgun/mailgun-php/issues/469
- To store ids of sent messages introduce a mega column on the emails table. They can be synced with stats or other metrics during even pooling in the future
- Removed redundant `join(',')` statement.The SDK accepts an array of emails as well. Less code - better code :)