CSFR-prevention is already implemented but adding this doesn't hurt.
A brief introduction to Same-Site cookies (and the difference between strict and
lax) can be found at
https://blog.mozilla.org/security/2018/04/24/same-site-cookies-in-firefox-60/
TLDR: We use lax since we want the cookies to be sent when the user navigates
safely from an external site.
* No need to re-require sidekiq plugins, they are required via Gemfile
* Add derailed_benchmarks tool, no need to require TTY gems in Gemfile
* Replace ruby-oembed with FetchOEmbedService
Reduce startup by 45382 allocated objects
* Remove preloaded JSON-LD in favour of caching HTTP responses
Reduce boot RAM by about 6 MiB
* Fix tests
* Fix test suite by stubbing out JSON-LD contexts
The cache store is explicitly used by some specs, but they were not
isolated and therefore not reliable. This fixes the issue by clearing
the cache after each specs.
* Add overview of active sessions
* Better display of browser/platform name
* Improve how browser information is stored and displayed for sessions overview
* Fix test
* Dont use raise_error by itself (avoids warning)
* Add coverage for AccountFilter
* Improve coverage and refactor for Subscription#lease_seconds
* Improve coverage and refactor for NotificationMailer
* Simplify assignment of min/max threshold on subscription
* Make private toots get PuSHed to subscription URLs that belong to domains where you have approved followers
* Authorized followers controller, stub for bulk action
* Soft block in the background
* Add simple test for new controller
* Rename Settings::FollowersController to Settings::FollowerDomainsController, paginate results,
rename "private" post setting to "followers-only", fix pagination style, improve post privacy
preferences style, improve warning style
* Extract compose form warnings into own container, show warning when posting to followers-only with unlocked account
This commit introduces Capybara and the first feature spec.
I focused on coverage for log in for the first feature spec because that would
have prevented a1c63cb01d causing #1236.