* Derive default for api request structs, move type enums
* Simplify api by using enum types directly, instead of string
* Add default and clone for most api structs
* Show nsfw communities in logged in and you've enabled nsfw in your profile atleast
* Reuse existing user check
Co-authored-by: Sun Wukong <monkey@king.com>
* Initial working of hiding communities and adding a db entry for mod log
* Return mod log for hidden communities
* Clean up hidding communities PR
* use lower case like other migration files
* Formatting fix
* pass in admin id to list, make match logic the same in post_view as community_view. Dont force non null for reason
* Clean PR review stuff
* Change person_id to mod_person_id on hide community table
* Make bools optional, add a space for formating
Co-authored-by: Thor Odinson <odinson@asgard.com>
Co-authored-by: Dessalines <dessalines@users.noreply.github.com>
* First pass at invite-only migration.
* Implement email verification (fixes#219)
* remove unwrap
* Adding views and functionality to registration application. #209
* Add private instance site column, and back end checks.
* Adding some message fields to LoginResponse
* Adding private instance to site setup.
* A few additions:
- Add a DeleteAccount response.
- RegistrationApplicationView now has the safe LocalUserSettings.
- Adding VerifyEmail to websocket API, added a proper response type.
* Adding and reorganizing some email helpers.
* A few fixes for private sites:
- Added a check_registration_application function.
- Only send a verification email if its been changed.
- VerifyEmail now returns LoginResponse.
- Deleting the old tokens after a successful email verify.
- If port is missing on email config, display a better error message.
* Version 0.15.0-rc.3
* Adding published to email_verification table.
* Adding fixes from comments.
* Version 0.15.0-rc.4
* Adding modlog private site check.
* Version 0.15.0-rc.6
Co-authored-by: Felix Ableitner <me@nutomic.com>
* Trying out rust-musl-builder for cargo publish
* Version 0.13.5-rc.1
* Try rust:nightly
* Version 0.13.5-rc.2
* Try rust slim
* Version 0.13.5-rc.3
* Try rust 1.51
* Version 0.13.5-rc.4
* Trying another nightly
* Version 0.13.5-rc.5
* Trying another fix
* Version 0.13.5-rc.6
* Updating lemmy-js-client.
* Fix prod deploy script and clippy
* Try using buster.
* Using more generic and updated images.
* again.
* again.
* Try alternate env
* again.
* again.
* Version 0.11.4-rc.24
* again.
* Better old_tag
* Version 0.11.4-rc.27
* Updating cargo.lock
* Trying to run a cargo check to update the lock
* Version 0.11.4-rc.28
* A first pass at user / community blocking. #426
* Adding unit tests for person and community block.
* Moving migration
* Fixing creator_blocked for comment queries, added tests.
* Don't let a person block themselves
* Fix post creator_blocked
* Adding creator_blocked to PersonMentionView
* Moving blocked and follows to MyUserInfo
* Rename to local_user_view
* Add moderates to MyUserInfo
* Adding BlockCommunityResponse
* Fixing name, and check_person_block
* Fixing tests.
* Using type in Blockable trait.
* Changing recipient to target, adding unfollow to block action.
Since DB tests execute diesel migrations automatically, concurrent
execution causes flaky failures from simultaneous migrations. This can
be worked around using `cargo test --workspace -- --test-threads=1`,
which is what the CI config does, but this is not intuitive for
newcomer developers and unnecessarily slows down the test suite for
the majority of tests which are safe to run concurrently. This fixes
this issue by integrating with the small test crate `serial_test` and
using it to explicitly mark DB tests to run sequentially while
allowing all other tests to run in parallel.
Additionally, this greatly improves the speed of `cargo test` by
disabling doc-tests in all crates, since these are aren't currently
used and cargo's doc-test pass, even when no doc-tests exist, has
significant overhead. On my machine, this change significantly
improves test suite times by about 85%, making it much more practical
to develop with tools like `cargo watch` auto-running tests.