This is allowed starting from fc661ee13a ("core: allow URL parameters and POST
bodies to co-exist"), which landed in Etherpad 1.8.0. For the discussion, see
issue #3568.
For whatever reason (a bug, a database corruption, ...) the userId field in
"msg" can sometimes be missing.
In this case, let's be defensive, use "unknown" as userId and issue a warning
in the console, instead of crashing the client.
Fixes#3731 (really a patch, the underlying issue is still present)
The saved revision "star" button appeared in the timeslider toolbar too.
This change introduces a second flag "page" in toolbar.menu(), which controls
whether the toolbar is being drawn for a pad or in the timeslider page.
Fixes#3767.
Revision b480416375 fixed a bug, but introduced a regression, and the "save
revision" "star" button started to appear both on the left and the right
toolbar.
This change introduces a flag "whichMenu" in toolbar.menu(), that controls
whether the left, the right or the timeslider toolbar is being drawn.
This change only slightly modifies the bahaviour of travis/runner.sh, but:
1. speeds up the tests, because it does not install dependencies before running
them. Dependencies are already installed by .travis.yml in its "install"
section;
2. if for some reason Etherpad does not start, there is a sudden failure,
instead of launching the front end tests anyway, and then having to wait 10
minutes for them to time out;
3. it is compatible with a different way of installing etherpad dependencies
("npm ci" instead of "npm install"), whereas the previous one broke. This
will probably be introduced in a while, so this change future-proofs for it
(see #3778).
4. it is more robust, because it detects more reliably the paths, and changes
between them correctly;
Please note that the script now requires bash instead of a generic posix shell.
This may break on platforms which default to a different shell (FreeBSD, MacOS?)
This is a followup on 312c72c364, which did the same on the main code base,
and is preliminary work for tidying up John's changes in the following commits.
No functional changes.
Command:
find tests/frontend -name '*.js' -type f -print0 | xargs -0 sed --in-place 's/[[:space:]]*$//'
For all the supported operating systems, the latest version of each browser is
supported, with the Exception of Win 8 / IE 10, which has an explicit version
pinned.
By specification [0], the if-modified-since HTTP header sent by browsers does
not include milliseconds.
Before this patch, let's say a file was generate at time:
t_real-file = 2020-03-22T02:15:53.548Z (note the fractional seconds)
When issuing a conditional request, the browser would truncate the fractional
part, and only request an if-modified-since with this contents:
t_if-modified-since = 2020-03-22T02:15:53.000Z
The minify() function would return HTTP/304 only if
t_if-modified-since >= t_real-file, but this would never be true unless, by
chance, a file was generated at XX.000Z.
This resulted in that file being minified/compressed again and resent to the
client for no reason. After this patch, the server correctly responds with
HTTP/304 without doing any computation, and the browser uses the cached file.
[0] https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Headers/If-Modified-Since
No variation in # of security vulnerabilities.
The output of `npm audit` goes from this:
found 7 vulnerabilities (5 low, 2 high) in 13881 scanned packages
7 vulnerabilities require manual review. See the full report for details.
To this:
found 7 vulnerabilities (5 low, 2 high) in 13795 scanned packages
7 vulnerabilities require manual review. See the full report for details.
This is a dev dependency. No impact in production.
After this upgrade the backend tests ("cd src; npm test") still pass.
This fixes 2 reported security vulnerabilities.
The output of `npm audit` goes from this:
found 9 vulnerabilities (7 low, 2 high) in 13707 scanned packages
run `npm audit fix` to fix 1 of them.
1 vulnerability requires semver-major dependency updates.
7 vulnerabilities require manual review. See the full report for details.
To this:
found 7 vulnerabilities (5 low, 2 high) in 13881 scanned packages
7 vulnerabilities require manual review. See the full report for details.
This is a dev dependency. No impact in production.
After this upgrade the backend tests ("cd src; npm test") still pass.
This fixes 1 reported security vulnerability.
The output of `npm audit` goes from this:
found 10 vulnerabilities (8 low, 2 high) in 13390 scanned packages
run `npm audit fix` to fix 2 of them.
1 vulnerability requires semver-major dependency updates.
7 vulnerabilities require manual review. See the full report for details.
To this:
found 9 vulnerabilities (7 low, 2 high) in 13707 scanned packages
run `npm audit fix` to fix 1 of them.
1 vulnerability requires semver-major dependency updates.
7 vulnerabilities require manual review. See the full report for details.
This fixes 107 reported security vulnerabilites.
The output of `npm audit` goes from this:
found 117 vulnerabilities (115 low, 2 high) in 13365 scanned packages
run `npm audit fix` to fix 6 of them.
1 vulnerability requires semver-major dependency updates.
110 vulnerabilities require manual review. See the full report for details.
To this:
found 10 vulnerabilities (8 low, 2 high) in 13390 scanned packages
run `npm audit fix` to fix 2 of them.
1 vulnerability requires semver-major dependency updates.
7 vulnerabilities require manual review. See the full report for details.
The changelog for npm can be read at https://github.com/npm/cli/releases
CleanCSS 3.4.19 had a Regex Denial of Service vulnerability and has to be
updated. The major version bump requires the following changes:
1. Disabling rebase is necessary because otherwise the URLs for the web fonts
become wrong;
EXAMPLE 1:
/static/css/src/static/font/fontawesome-etherpad.woff
instead of
/static/font/fontawesome-etherpad.woff
EXAMPLE 2 (this is more surprising):
/p/src/static/font/opendyslexic.otf
instead of
/static/font/opendyslexic.otf
2. CleanCSS.minify() can either receive a string containing the CSS, or an array
of strings. In that case each array element is interpreted as an absolute
local path from which the CSS file is read.
In version 4.x, CleanCSS API was simplified, eliminating the relativeTo
parameter, and thus we cannot use our already loaded "content" argument, but
we have to wrap the absolute path to the CSS in an array and ask the library
to read it by itself.
Fixes#3616.