Under InnoDB, database entries created in transactions are not processed by fulltext indexes until the transaction is committed. To work around this, cases that test fulltext search have been split off into a separate class that adds and removes seed discussions/posts outside of transactions during setUp/tearDown.
Some tests need to change settings, but since MemoryCacheSettingsRepository caches settings in-memory, those changes aren't reflected. The new `purgeSettingsCache` removes it from the container, eliminating that cache.
For UserTest, we also need to regenerate the display name driver, since that's set statically on boot, before we'll get a change to clear the settings cache.
Before transactions, each test class would need to explicitly state starting state for permissions, which made the initial permission configuration somewhat arbitrary. Now, we might as well use the initial state of the default installation.
One of the User show_test tests has been commented out until
Previously, the `prepareDatabase` method would directly modify the database, booting the app in the process. This would prevent any extenders from being applied, since `->extend()` has no effect once the app is booted.
Since the new implementation of `prepareDatabase` simply registers seed data to be applied during app boot, the workaround of sticking this seed data into `prepDb` is no longer necessary, and seed data common to all test cases in a class can be provided in `setUp`.
When needed, app boot is explicitly triggered in individual test cases by calling `$this->app()`.
Making the $user argument nullable prevents this unnecessary exception, and doesn't introduce any issues since we check that $user exists as part of the method.
Add an `onFollowing` param to GlobalSearchState
This ensures that it will be taken into account by IndexPage's `refreshParams` call, preventing the following page from being shown if the user:
1. goes to following
2. goes to any other page not inheriting IndexPage
3. goes to 'all discussions'
Ref https://github.com/flarum/core/issues/2516 for a full explanation.
Fixes https://github.com/flarum/core/issues/1959
These transform lines are known to cause issues on iOS, and were added to hack around chrome issues that have since been fixed upstream.
Due to a commit by @fabpot in october, the mimetypes symfony class
now re-orders the shortened mimetypes that are returned when looking
up based on header mimetype. Our validator uses the first key, pops
the prefix off and then matches against our hardcoded array.
I've added a constraint to symfony/mime ^5.2.0 which ships with this change.
This constraint is fully compatible with our current lineup. In addition
I changed the hardcoded array to use the first entry from symfony mime types
now `jpg` instead of `jpeg`.