Also add an apply_to_mentions attribute on Glitch::KeywordMute, which is
used to calculate scope. Next up: additions to the test suite to
demonstrate how scoping works.
Old statuses and statuses from Pawoo, which runs a modified version of
Mastodon, may not have been marked sensitive even if spoiler text is
present.
Such statuses are still not marked sensitve if they are local or
arrived before version upgrade. Marking recently fetched remote status
sensitive contradicts the behavior.
Considering what people expected when they authored such statuses, this
change removes the sensitivity enforcement.
This has a couple of advantages over the regex approach:
- Keywords are individually addressable, which makes it easier to gather
statistics (#363)
- Keywords can be individually applied to different feeds, e.g. skipping
mentions (#454)
It *does* end up creating many more Regexp objects. I'm not yet sure if
the difference is significant.
Conflicts:
app/javascript/mastodon/locales/en.json
app/javascript/mastodon/locales/ja.json
app/javascript/mastodon/locales/pl.json
The above conflicts appear to be a text conflict introduced by
glitch-soc's additional level of columns (i.e. moving a bunch of columns
under the Misc option). They were resolved via accept-ours.
Do not touch statuses_count on accounts table when mass-destroying
statuses to reduce load when removing accounts, same for
reblogs_count and favourites_count
Do not count statuses with direct visibility in statuses_count
Fix#828
* optimize direct timeline
* fix typo in class name
* change filter condition for direct timeline
* fix codestyle issue
* revoke index_accounts_not_silenced because direct timeline does not use it.
* revoke index_accounts_not_silenced because direct timeline does not use it.
* fix rspec test condition.
* fix rspec test condition.
* fix rspec test condition.
* revoke adding column and partial index
* (direct timeline) move merging logic to model
* fix pagination parameter
* add method arguments that switches return array of status or cache_ids
* fix order by
* returns ActiveRecord.Relation in default behavor
* fix codestyle issue
* Track trending tags
- Half-life of 1 day
- Historical usage in daily buckets (last 7 days stored)
- GET /api/v1/trends
Fix#271
* Add trends to web UI
* Don't render compose form on search route, adjust search results header
* Disqualify tag from trends if it's in disallowed hashtags setting
* Count distinct accounts using tag, ignore silenced accounts
> Good lord what is happening in there
Previously the contents of the Web Push API payloads closely resembled the structure of JavaScript's [Notification](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Notification). But now that the API is open to non-browser apps, and given that there is no required coupling between contents of the payload and a Notification object, here is how I changed the payload:
```json
{
"access_token": "...",
"preferred_locale": "en",
"notification_id": "12345",
"notification_type": "follow",
"title": "So and so followed you",
"body": "This is my bio",
"icon": "https://example.com/avatar.png"
}
```
The title, body and icon attributes are included as a fallback so you can construct a minimal notification if you cannot perform a network request to the API to get more data.
* Add preference to hide following/followers lists
- Public pages
- ActivityPub collections (does not return pages but does give total)
- REST API (unless it's your own) (does not federate)
Fix#6901
* Add preference
* Add delegation
* Fix issue
* Fix issue
- POST /api/v1/push/subscription
- PUT /api/v1/push/subscription
- DELETE /api/v1/push/subscription
- New OAuth scope: "push" (required for the above methods)
Same URI passed between follow request and follow, since they are
the same thing in ActivityPub. Local URIs are generated during
creation using UUIDs and are passed to serializers.