Mastodon enforces the “sensitive” flag on media attachments whenever a toot
is posted with a Content Warning. However, it does so *after* potentially
converting the Content Warning to toot text (when there is no toot text),
which leads to inconsistent and surprising behavior for API clients.
This commit fixes this inconsistency.
This two-line change fixes a crash in the front end that occurred
under the following circumstances:
* A server had more than one announcement,
* A user was displaying the announcements, and
* An announcement was deleted (or unpublished, which amounts to
the same thing.)
As might be expected, the bug was caused by attempting to access a
notification using an index value outside the bounds of the existing
announcements. Specifically, in two places. First,
`_markAnnouncementAsRead` attempts to modify announcements based on
the current index. This is what caused the front end crash. Second,
when rendering the `Announcements` component, the code paginates the
announcements and displays the current one. This did not cause a
crash, but caused the front end to confusingly display a blank
announcement (in situations that would have caused a crash) with no
way for the user to navigate back to previous announcements.
This commit fixes both issues by adding a check to ensure that the
code never attempts to access an announcement with an index greater
than or equal to the number of announcements present.
Only look up private toots from database if the request failed because of 401,
403 or 404 errors, as those may indicate a private toot, rather than something
that isn't a toot or cannot be processed.
* Change ActivityPub follower/following collections to not link first page
* Add support for hiding followers and following of remote users
* Switch to using a single `hide_collections` column
* Address code style remarks
* Improve description of privacy levels in compose interface
* Change strings in defaultMessage and source as well as english
Co-authored-by: Thibaut Girka <thib@sitedethib.com>
Fixes#13136
When a user's canonical acct domain is different from its id's domain
(WEB_DOMAIN ≠ LOCAL_DOMAIN), two webfinger queries are required to find the
canonical domain from the URI. However, we skip webfinger queries when
updating only the key of a remote user, which led to the creation of a
duplicate account, using the URI's domain instead of the canonical acct: one.
`request.format` is not a symbol but a `Mime::Type`, so the condition actually
never matched, and a session was created even for those requests, preventing
caching.