fixes https://github.com/TryGhost/Team/issues/2601
Sets the value of outbound_link_tagging to the same value of
members_track_sources, so that is disabled by default for privacy
sensitive sites.
Also makes sure the `outbound_link_tagging` setting is available in
admin (currently excluded because it is in the analytics group)
closes https://github.com/TryGhost/Team/issues/2110
- added failing test showing feature service `@feature` properties
weren't autotracking correctly if accessed before
authentication+settings fetch occurs
- shows labs and feature properties on the feature service are not
reacting to changes in the settings service
- removing the `@computed` on the `feature.labs` getter stops it being
cached but it then fails on the `feature.testFlag` computed property
- updated `settings` service to behave as expected with our current
version of Ember
- inspected the store schema for `Setting` to define the "proxied"
properties up-front rather than only after fetching
- updated the property definition to use `computed` so we're opting in
to the old style reactivity (required adding the `@classic` decorator to
pass linting)
no issue
The `settings` service has been a source of confusion when writing with modern Ember patterns because it's use of the deprecated `ProxyMixin` forced all property access/setting to go via `.get()` and `.set()` whereas the rest of the system has mostly (there are a few other uses of ProxyObjects remaining) eliminated the use of the non-native get/set methods.
- removed use of `ProxyMixin` in the `settings` service by grabbing the attributes off the setting model after fetching and using `Object.defineProperty()` to add native getters/setters that pass through to the model's getters/setters. Ember's autotracking automatically works across the native getters/setters so we can then use the service as if it was any other native object
- updated all code to use `settings.{attrName}` directly for getting/setting instead of `.get()` and `.set()`
- removed use of observer in the `customViews` service because it was being set up before the native properties had been added on the settings service meaning autotracking wasn't able to set up properly
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/issues/14101
Twitter/facebook URL validation doesn't follow our typical validation and was duplicated across multiple screens making the controllers unnecessarily complex.
- extracted url input fields and their validation into separate components
- uses tracked scratch values so that the input field values can reset to the saved value on save
- twitter/facebook URL inputs are different to our other inputs because invalid values won't prevent saving, instead they are reset to their previous value on save
- added `this.validate()` call after a successful save in `settings` service so the service and underlying model validations are both in sync (fixes validation error sticking around after saving with invalid twitter/facebook values that have been reset)
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Team/issues/496
reqs https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/pull/12925
The publish menu was meant to default to matching post visibility but that wasn't working consistently and didn't make sense for sites which don't email every post to their members.
A "Default newsletter recipients" option has been added to the "Email newsletter" settings screen and the publish menu updated to reflect the option. The free/paid toggles in the publish menu have also been swapped out for a multi-select style component that will cater to more complex member segmentation.
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Team/issues/450
- duplicated and refactored/updated direct and connect settings UI from labs to the "connect stripe" step of the launch site wizard
- updated wizard buttons to be right-aligned
no issue
Adds new FirstPromoter integration on the integrations page. FirstPromoter enables sites to launch their own members referral program, and integration allows Site admins to directly add their FirstPromoter tracking ID in the settings to enable FirstPromoter script on their site.
no-issue
This adds three initial customisation options for newsletters:
1. Show/Hide site title and logo
2. Set font to serif/sans serif
3. Display a publish with Ghost badge
This is the first step in allowing customisation of the look and feel of newsletters.
Co-authored-by: Rish <zrishabhgarg@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Peter Zimon <zimo@ghost.org>
refs #10318
* Updated settings model with new settings
* Removed parseSubscriptionSettings from settings service
* Updated members-utils to use new settings
* Updated labs controller to use new settings
* Fixed dependency for member-settings-form
* Updated members-lab-setting component to use new settings
* Updated disconnect modal to use new settings
* Updated members portal modal to use new settings
* Removed Direct from settings
* Renamed members_allow_signup -> members_allow_free_signup
* Allowed for null fromAddress
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/issues/10318
- primary change is in the settings service which is the only place we fetch the settings endpoint
- mocked APIs and fixture data updated to expect and to filter on `?group` rather than `?type`
no issue
depends on 77e1ada6c6
- reverts commit 6760527 with modifications for naming
- Adds new portal settings UI in Labs -> Members setting
- Allows customization of new portal-* settings upstream
- Updates settings service to include portal group
- Updates settings modal to include new portal-* settings
requires fdeb7daf40
- swapped to using settings model for storing custom views instead of user accessibility field
- added conditional that checks current user is an admin/owner when displaying the manage custom views button in the content filter (only admins/owners can edit settings model)
- passed `session.user` into the `<GhContentFilter>` component as an argument so that the conditional getter doesn't need to handle async user access
- fixed no-shadow linting error in settings service
no issue
- There is no way to turn on "Complimentary" subscription when Stripe is not connected
- There is no constructiove information that can be shown about subscriptions
no issue
- ran [es5-getter-ember-codemod](https://github.com/rondale-sc/es5-getter-ember-codemod)
- [es5 getters RFC](https://github.com/emberjs/rfcs/blob/master/text/0281-es5-getters.md)
- updates the majority of `object.get('property')` with `object.property` with exceptions:
- `.get('nested.property')` - it's not possible to determine if this is relying on "safe" path chaining for when `nested` doesn't exist
- `.get('config.x')` and `.get('settings.x')` - both our `config` and `settings` services are proxy objects which do not support es5 getters
- this PR is not exhaustive, there are still a number of places where `.get('service.foo')` and similar could be replaced but it gets us a long way there in a quick and automated fashion
closesTryGhost/Ghost#9472
- add `changedAttributes()` passthrough to `settings` service
- use `changedAttributes()` in general settings `toggleIsPrivate` method to reset the password to the last known value when disabling private mode
no issue
Automated tools, code generators, and editor integrations are increasingly standardising on the import style used in `ember-modules-codemod`. Our import style differed a little with regards to service/controller injection imports which meant we were starting to see inconsistent naming.
no issue
- add eslint-plugin-ember, configure no-old-shims rule
- run `eslint --fix` on `app`, `lib`, `mirage`, and `tests` to move imports to the new module imports
- further cleanup of Ember globals usage
- remove event-dispatcher initializer now that `canDispatchToEventManager` is deprecated
no issue
- adds `eslint-plugin-sort-imports-es6-autofix` dependency
- implements ESLint's base `sort-imports` rule but has a distinction in that `import {foo} from 'bar';` is considered `multiple` rather than `single`
- fixes ESLint's autofix behaviour so `eslint --fix` will actually fix the sort order
- updates all unordered import rules by using `eslint --fix`
With the increased number of `import` statements since Ember+ecosystem started moving towards es6 modules I've found it frustrating at times trying to search through randomly ordered import statements. Recently I've been sorting imports manually when I've added new code or touched old code so I thought I'd add an ESLint rule to codify it.
closesTryGhost/Ghost#8307
- unloading the store and refreshing the `session.user` attribute after an import was triggering a rendering edge case where the style was re-computed and a re-render was attempted after the sidebar has been destroyed
- rather than binding a style attribute directly to a CP in `gh-nav-menu` we pass the menu icon in (using `settings.settledIcon` - see below) and manually set the style attribute via the `didReceiveAttrs` hook so that outside changes don't trigger re-computations when we don't expect them and so we can still react to icons being uploaded or removed
- our usage of `settings.icon` is a bit of an odd situation because it's a link to an external resource that will only resolve correctly after a successful save - if we change `settings.icon` in the local store and the nav menu icon style updates before the save has been completed then the server will give us the old icon. To work around this a `settings.settledIcon` attribute has been added that is only updated when we receive data from the store ensuring that our cache-busting technique works correctly
no issue
- adds `settings` service that acts as a proxy to the singular settings model with methods to fetch and reload, also prevents accidentally loading only some settings types which has caused problems in the past
- updates app boot, signin, and signup processes to fetch settings ensuring that any part of the app can grab settings synchronously if needed
- removes `timeZone` service, it's no longer needed as we can grab `settings.activeTimezone` directly
- replaces all store queries for the settings model with appropriate `settings` methods
- refactors `apps/*` routes/controllers, they had become a little convoluted with the way they were dealing with settings and the new service helped to clean that up