* Change account and user fabricators to simplify and improve tests
- `Fabricate(:account)` implicitly fabricates an associated `user` if
no `domain` attribute is given (an account with `domain: nil` is
considered a local account, but no user record was created), unless
`user: nil` is passed
- `Fabricate(:account, user: Fabricate(:user))` should still be possible
but is discouraged.
* Fix and refactor tests
- avoid passing unneeded attributes to `Fabricate(:user)` or
`Fabricate(:account)`
- avoid embedding `Fabricate(:user)` into a `Fabricate(:account)` or the other
way around
- prefer `Fabricate(:user, account_attributes: …)` to
`Fabricate(:user, account: Fabricate(:account, …)`
- also, some tests were using remote accounts with local user records, which is
not representative of production code.
* Fix Sidekiq warnings about JSON serialization
This occurs on every symbol argument we pass, and every symbol key in hashes,
because Sidekiq expects strings instead.
See https://github.com/mperham/sidekiq/pull/5071
We do not need to change how workers parse their arguments because this has
not changed and we were already converting to symbols adequately or using
`with_indifferent_access`.
* Set Sidekiq to raise on unsafe arguments in test mode
In order to more easily catch issues that would produce warnings in production
code.
* Bump rails from 6.1.4.1 to 6.1.4.4
Bumps [rails](https://github.com/rails/rails) from 6.1.4.1 to 6.1.4.4.
- [Release notes](https://github.com/rails/rails/releases)
- [Commits](https://github.com/rails/rails/compare/v6.1.4.1...v6.1.4.4)
---
updated-dependencies:
- dependency-name: rails
dependency-type: direct:production
update-type: version-update:semver-patch
...
Signed-off-by: dependabot[bot] <support@github.com>
* Revert marcel to 1.0.1
Avoid some regression that need to be investigated
Co-authored-by: dependabot[bot] <49699333+dependabot[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Claire <claire.github-309c@sitedethib.com>
* Fix error-prone SQL queries in Account search
While this code seems to not present an actual vulnerability, one could
easily be introduced by mistake due to how the query is built.
This PR parameterises the `to_tsquery` input to make the query more robust.
* Harden code for Status#tagged_with_all and Status#tagged_with_none
Those two scopes aren't used in a way that could be vulnerable to an SQL
injection, but keeping them unchanged might be a hazard.
* Remove unneeded spaces surrounding tsquery term
* Please CodeClimate
* Move advanced_search_for SQL template to its own function
This avoids one level of indentation while making clearer that the SQL template
isn't build from all the dynamic parameters of advanced_search_for.
* Add tests covering tagged_with, tagged_with_all and tagged_with_none
* Rewrite tagged_with_none to avoid multiple joins and make it more robust
* Remove obsolete brakeman warnings
* Revert "Remove unneeded spaces surrounding tsquery term"
The two queries are not strictly equivalent.
This reverts commit 86f16c537e06c6ba4a8b250f25dcce9f049023ff.
* Remove support for OAUTH_REDIRECT_AT_SIGN_IN
Fixes#15959
Introduced in #6540, OAUTH_REDIRECT_AT_SIGN_IN allowed skipping the log-in form
to instead redirect to the external OmniAuth login provider.
However, it did not prevent the log-in form on /about introduced by #10232 from
appearing, and completely broke with the introduction of #15228.
As I restoring that previous log-in flow without introducing a security
vulnerability may require extensive care and knowledge of how OmniAuth works,
this commit removes support for OAUTH_REDIRECT_AT_SIGN_IN instead for the time
being.
* Add OMNIAUTH_ONLY environment variable to enforce external log-in only
* Disable user registration when OMNIAUTH_ONLY is set to true
* Replace log-in links When OMNIAUTH_ONLY is set with exactly one OmniAuth provider
Fixes#15959
Introduced in #6540, OAUTH_REDIRECT_AT_SIGN_IN allowed skipping the log-in form
to instead redirect to the external OmniAuth login provider.
However, it did not prevent the log-in form on /about introduced by #10232 from
appearing, and completely broke with the introduction of #15228.
As I restoring that previous log-in flow without introducing a security
vulnerability may require extensive care and knowledge of how OmniAuth works,
this commit removes support for OAUTH_REDIRECT_AT_SIGN_IN instead for the time
being.
Some Mastodon versions (v1.1 and v1.2) had a duplicate index in `db/schema.rb`
without any migration script creating it. #2224 (included in v1.3) removed the
duplicate index from the file but did not provide a migration script to remove
it.
This means that any instance that was installed from v1.1 or v1.2's source code
has a duplicate index and a corresponding warning in PgHero. Instances set up
using an earlier or later Mastodon version do not have this issue.
This PR removes the duplicate index if it is present.