...by splitting input into characters, instead of whitespace delimited
words. This means you can now match partial words, real substrings from
anywhere: "foo ba" will match "Foo Bar Baz", while previously you had to
have full words ("foo bar") to match anything.
My dev setup incurred an 8% increase in storage usage, from ~13MB to
~14MB (for ~40k torrents).
Small change, big improvement. Wonder why I didn't do this at first.
* user page: add manual activation button for mods
Moderators can press this button on inactive users to manually
activate their accounts.
Furthermore, the admin form code has been refactored a bit, reducing
some code duplication.
* Extend ES term preprocessing for OR groups
Implements handling "foo"|"bar" literal OR groups in the Elasticsearch
term preprocessor. Groups can be negated with -, but don't mesh with
precedence (like plain literals).
This is a partial hack, the real solution would be to parse the entire
search terms ourselves, with AND and OR groups, negations etc. But
having that work neatly with the simple_query_string would be bit of a
hassle.
* Update help.html search tips
since search (quoting strings) has changed a bit.
Hitting the cancel button does not return "", but null. Therefore
the toLowerCase() fails, and throwing an exception means "sure go
ahead submitting this" to JS for some godforsaken reason.
Just remove the toLowerCase for now, have people type the names
properly.
* Use Flask-Assets to minify self-hosted JS files
By having Flask-Assets minify the two JS files we ship, namely
main.js and bootstrap-select.js, we can shave off 28406 bytes.
The minified files are generated on startup. If one wishes to
manually clean them up or build them, they can use the
"flask assets" management command, e.g. "flask assets clean".
* Workaround to fix tests
State carries over in tests, which is the dumbest shit ever. Fix it
by clearing the bundles before setting them.
* Implement comment locking
This adds a new flags to torrents, which is only editable by
moderators and admins. If checked, it does not allow unprivileged
users to post, edit or delete comments on that torrent.
* Rename "locked" to "comment_locked".
* Shorter button and additional words on alt text
* Admin log: Change comment locking message
dude I love bikeshedding xd
* Bikeshedding over admin log messages
* >&
Also some bikeshedding
This started out as a simple rebase, but then I rebased the wrong
branches and it all got confusing, so here it is as a new dank
commit.
We now have an @admin_only decorator, and we ask for confirmation
before we nuke. We can also see the nuke button when users are
banned, and nuking is a separate endpoint with a separate form.
Additionally, it now uses the new tracker API.
Because reading warnings is overrated.
This does not fix people using custom domains, but it's more likely
they'll know what's up when their email is thrown into the void.
Fixes#437.
Before bootstrap-select is loaded, a small JS piece replaces the
class for the pickers with the appropriate bootstrap-select classes.
If there is no JS, the dropdowns will stay as form-control.
* Implement torrent nuking ability for mods
This deletes all torrents of a specific user.
A current caveat is that it will delete both sukebei and nyaa torrents,
but will only leave a log entry in the current flavour's log.
Also did some bootstrap untangling on the user view page.
* Per-flavour logging
Hopefully this works. Maybe.
* Tracker API: chunk into 100-element sublists
* isort
* Restrict nuking to superadmins
Also do a lint.sh.
* Implement upload ratelimit for non-trusted uploaders
Users may upload X torrents in Y minutes after which they
will have to wait Z minutes between uploads.
* Show torrent period count when ratelimited
* Only ratelimit new accounts
Previously, people couldn't quite tell you needed to give a report
reason. Now we disable the submit button until there is a reason,
and flask.flash() if someone manages to submit an empty reason
anyway.
Disables all POSTs, optionally allowing users to log in (without updating last login date)
Blocked POSTs will redirect to the GET endpoint if possible, otherwise to referrer or in last case, home page.
API requests will get a plaintext message with 405 status code.