- this version is written in TS, but was published a few months ago and
needs to be bumped here
- also updates a previous deep include into the library, which was
unnecessary anyway
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Product/issues/4196
The offers API basically returns the data you pass to it, rather than
the created database record. It looks like this is how it was intended
to work in the first place; the `setMilliseconds` is because the test
helper expects `.000Z`, which I assume is because MySQL will strip off
the milliseconds when it's saved.
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Product/issues/4153
- We need use the `created_at` timestamp in the new AdminX offers. The
API doesn't return that value.
- With this change the API returns the created_at property so that we
can consume it.
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This pull request adds a `createdAt` property to the offer domain model,
data transfer object, and repository. This allows tracking and auditing
the creation and modification of offers and offer codes in
`ghost/offers`.
fixes GRO-25
Updated @tryghost/nql to 0.12.0 and other packages that depend on it
1. SQLite: when a filter string contains /.
When we use a NQL contain/starts/endsWith filter that contains a slash,
underlyingly the whole filter will get converted to a MongoDB query, in
which we just use a regexp to represent the filter. In here we will
escape the slash: \/ as expected in a regexp. Later when we convert this
MongoDB query back to knex/SQL, we use a SQL LIKE query. Currently we
don't remove the escaping here for a normal slash. MySQL seems to ignore
this (kinda incorrect). SQLite doesn't like it, and this breaks queries
on SQLite that use slashes. The solution here is simple: remove the
backslash escaping when converting the regexp to LIKE, just like we do
with other special regexp characters.
2. We don't escape % and _, which have a special meaning in LIKE queries
Usage of % and _ is now as expected and doesn't have the special SQL
meaning anymore.
As per our architecture guidelines we want to keep bookshelf implementations of
Repositories in Ghost core, so that all the bookshelf code is kept together, and
the packages implementing business logic with entities and services require less
dependencies to test. This separation should also help us inadvertently add
business logic to repository implementations by having a more "physical"
boundary between them.
I don't think we need to instantiate and use the `equals` method here. It adds
an extra dependency to the Repository implementation, but it is slightly more
"correct" as it means that we leak internals by comparing strings exactly?
The ValueObject pattern here was very much a trial and isn't something we're
necessarily sticking with, so I don't see a problem with this string comparison.
We do not want our Repositories to implement business logic like deciding which
events should be created. As that creates too tight of a coupling, and makes it
harder to swap out repositories in future. Instead they should only be concerned
with the storage, retrieval and hydration of Entities from the persistence engine.
fixes https://github.com/TryGhost/Product/issues/3728
- When importing members from Stripe with an existing offer, that didn't
exist in Ghost, the offer never got linked with the imported
subscription because of a missing return statement.
- Fixes importing offers with duplicate names
- Added E2E tests for creating members from a Stripe Customer ID
closes https://github.com/TryGhost/Product/issues/3595
- when importing paid members with a coupon in Stripe, we currently
search for the corresponding offer in our database and attach it to the
subscription if found. However, if an offer doesn't exist in the
database, we do not create one and don't attach any offer to the
subscription
- with this change, we now support the creation of a new offer, based on
a Stripe coupon, if it didn't exist already
refs: https://github.com/TryGhost/Toolbox/issues/188
- some of our older packages used a pattern for linting which missed using test config for linting tests
- we need this to be consistent so that we can add more eslint rules for testing
- two packages also didn't use the lib pattern, which made the lint pattern error - so this was fixed as well
As discussed with the product team we want to enforce kebab-case file names for
all files, with the exception of files which export a single class, in which
case they should be PascalCase and reflect the class which they export.
This will help find classes faster, and should push better naming for them too.
Some files and packages have been excluded from this linting, specifically when
a library or framework depends on the naming of a file for the functionality
e.g. Ember, knex-migrator, adapter-manager
- we previously used `@stdlib/utils` instead of the child package
`@stdlib/copy`, which is a lot smaller and contains our only use of
the parent
- this saves 140+MB of dependencies
- we keep ending up with multiple versions of the depedency in our tree,
and it's causing problems when comparing instances
- the workaround I'm implementing for now is to bump the package
everywhere and set a resolution so we only have 1 shared instance
- hopefully we can come up with a better method down the line
- there's a weird situation when we have mixed versions of the
dependency because different libraries try to compare instances
- this brings the usage up to 1.2.21 so we can fix the build for now
- this was all getting terribly behind so I've done several things:
- majority of `@tryghost/*` except Lexical packages
- gscan + knex-migrator to remove old `@tryghost/errors` usage
- bumped lockfile
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Team/issues/1871
This commit adds a test to the serialize method of `post-emaiserializer`. It checks whether the generated email HTML is valid and standard HTML5 and that all properties are escaped.
To do this validation, I depend on the new `html-validate` dev dependency. Just parsing the HTML with a HTML parser is not enough to guarantee that the HTML is okay.
Apart from that this fixes:
- Removed the sanitizeHTML method and replaced it with normal HTML escaping. We don't want to allow any HTML in the escaped fields. Whereas `sanitizeHTML` still allows valid HTML, but we don't want that and want the same behaviour as on the site. E.g., a post with a title `All your need to know about the <br /> tag` should actually render the same title and non-html content, being `All your need to know about the <br /> tag`
- The file, nft and audio card didn't (always) escape the injected HTML fields (new version @tryghost/kg-default-cards)
- `@tryghost/string` is bumped because it contains the new escapeHtml method
- without this, the model doesn't have the context on who was
adding/editing it
- this resulted in being unable to store actions for Offers because the
`actor` is unknown
- this is the pattern we use elsewhere in the code so I've copied it
into here
- cleaned up unused dependencies
- adds missing dependencies that are used in the code
- this should help us be more explicit about the dependencies a package
uses
- because of how the npm scripts were set up, we were running the full
Admin integration tests during the unit tests phase of CI
- this commit renames the majority of `test` to `test:unit` in the
package.json files, and aliases `test` to `test:unit`
- special packages like Admin have no-op'd `test:unit` scripts so we
don't end up running its tests