If we have a central ID, in theory it should not trigger
CA failures when getting a token. However, it is, so maybe:
* This is the wrong way of checking attached-ness.
* It is somehow losing the central ID later.
or something else is going on.
Bug: T140144
Bug: T119736
Change-Id: I71c6f121a728e503aa9d62778e64c650cd8d46af
Attempting to get a CentralAuth token for an unattached
user (or a user mid-attachment) throws an exception.
Bug: T119736
Change-Id: I2a34754f55b952f5bcd4da6c6f89a32ebc29ecf1
This would make the wiki names localized to the current user
interface language, rather than the wiki language.
Bug: T139807
Change-Id: I2b787e1486819d6833e169ac6db519cd36a3c3eb
The message for tooltip-pt-notifications-message was removed to comply
with the new naming. The problem is that in the back end, sections are
still defined as 'message' vs 'alerts' and the sections in the user
toolbar are defined with those terms. In no-JS mode (which is before
the user clicks any of the badges) this tooltip is created automatically
by MediaWiki based on class names.
It's easier to return the message key with different text for translation
and wait for the bigger tech debt to correct all instances of 'message'
to 'notice' (including in the API, which would require a much more
massive work)
Bug: T139520
Change-Id: I6368b63e38f64aa065f2580df812de1c63a93716
We need the API to return the notifications for the special page
in timestamp order and not read/unread order, so that the 'continue'
value is still correct.
On top of that, if we have many unread notifications, they should
still be placed according to the dates, so the API must bring back
proper result.
In this fix, we add 'unreadFirst' to filters, and only use that
filter when needed (namely, in the popup)
Bug: T136885
Change-Id: I3018d09b009d735402d83074a5ffcd14ea1c242a
When we fetch the pages per wiki, the API returns an object that
defines the local wiki we are in as its dbName; this then gets
stored into the model as the source, which forces us to check against
the dbName whenever we want to perform an operation so we can tell
the API layer to fetch and perform the actions locally, rather than
use a foreign API.
The term 'local' makes no sense for naming the model (and upcoming
tech debt work will fix this) but it makes sense in the context of
the API layer -- and hence, the source name should follow suit.
This fix makes sure that the local wiki objects always have their
sources defined to be 'local', and thus making us use the test for
dbName in very specific points (when we get the data) rather than
throughout the codebase, randonly.
This is also the first step to allow proper updating of things like
seenTime accross wikis, especially in cases where we view a remote
wiki as if it is local (in the Special:Notifications page)
Change-Id: I94633a1cd074580cbc5029d7c75d179e908e5c52
Instead of 'cheating' and externally aggregating the itemUpdate event
we should just let the relevant (non-xwiki) models aggregate this
centrally and properly, and include it as an offered event.
Change-Id: Ibe528fe971e1be8309a97275b1a1be8979306ff5
When trying to find the max timestamp of all
notifications in one source or the max timestamp
between all the sources, check for empty array
to avoid "Warning: max(): Array must contain at
least one element...".
Bug: T139529
Change-Id: I0bf04ded40872c1c7a0cd3a9a62bc789814f5419
Launch JS version of Special:Notifications even of the
user doesn't have any local notifications.
Bug: T139512
Change-Id: Ia01a57de307b0d7da6a7d81ec8ee32d02ccc1887
Following up on setting max-width, this actually should be strict
width for the moment (until we decide on more responsive design)
since without restricting width, the notification view becomes really
thin and compact if the list contains notifications that have short
titles and descriptions.
Bug: T138433
Change-Id: Ia663f7968033b01f3553a326f70736cc6a6a54a9