* Fix footer link circle dividers' screen reader accessibility by adding aria-hidden
* Remove a circle erroneously added in prev commit, and make code more DRY
Conflicts:
- `README.md`:
Upstream updated its README, while we have a completely different one.
Kept our README.
- `app/controllers/concerns/web_app_controller_concern.rb`:
Conflict because of glitch-soc's theming system.
Additionally, glitch-soc has different behavior regarding moved accounts.
Ported some of the changes, but kept our overall behavior.
- `app/javascript/packs/admin.js`:
Code changes actually applied to `app/javascript/core/admin.js`
Conflicts:
- `README.md`:
Discarded upstream changes: we have our own README
- `app/controllers/follower_accounts_controller.rb`:
Port upstream's minor refactoring
When opening a page such as /web/timelines/home in a desktop browser, the
cursor was automatically placed in the textarea of the compose form.
When using the keyboard for navigation (using a browser plugin like vimium or
vim vixen, or just to hit 'space' to scroll down a page), you have remember to
leave the field before using that.
Since you only visit the page to write a new post some of the time, this PR
attempts to have nothing focused initially (and require the user to click or
e.g. use 'tab' to focus the textarea).
Tested:
* /web/timeslines/home no longer autofocuses the compose box
* pressing the 'n' hotkey still focuses the compose box
* clicking 'reply' for a post still focuses the compose box
* replying to a CW'ed post still focuses the compose box
* introducing the CW field still focuses the CW field
* introducing the CW field for a reply still focuses the CW field
* removing the CW field still focuses the compose box
* /web/statuses/new still autofocuses the compose box
fixes#15862
Conflicts:
- `app/models/concerns/domain_materializable.rb`:
Fixed a code style issue upstream in a PR that got merged in glitch-soc
earlier.
Changed the code to match upstream's.
Conflicts:
- `.github/workflows/build-image.yml`:
Upstream changed how docker images were built, including how
they were cached.
I don't know much about it, so applied upstream's changes.
- `app/controllers/admin/domain_blocks_controller.rb`:
The feature, that was in glitch-soc, got backported upstream.
It also had a few fixes upstream, so those have been ported!
- `app/javascript/packs/admin.js`:
Glitch-soc changes have been backported upstream. As a result,
some code from `app/javascript/core/admin.js` got added upstream.
Kept our version since our shared Javascript already has that feature.
- `app/models/user.rb`:
Upstream added something to distinguish unusable and unusable-because-moved
accounts, while glitch-soc considers moved accounts usable.
Took upstream's code for `functional_or_moved?` and made `functional?`
call it.
- `app/views/statuses/_simple_status.html.haml`:
Upstream cleaned up code style a bit, on a line that we had custom changes
for.
Applied upstream's change while keeping our change.
- `config/initializers/content_security_policy.rb`:
Upstream adopted one CSP directive we already had.
The conflict is because of our files being structurally different, but the
change itself was already part of glitch-soc.
Kept our version.
Conflicts:
- `app/views/admin/announcements/edit.html.haml`:
Upstream change too close to theming-related glitch-soc change.
Ported upstream changes.
- `app/views/admin/announcements/new.html.haml`
Upstream change too close to theming-related glitch-soc change.
Ported upstream changes.
Conflicts:
- `app/models/account.rb`:
Conflict because we (glitch-soc) have disabled trending of posts without
review.
Discarded that upstream change.
- `app/views/admin/settings/discovery/show.html.haml`:
Just an extra setting in glitch-soc.
Kept that extra setting.
Conflicts:
- `app/models/custom_emoji.rb`:
Not a real conflict, just upstream changing a line too close to
a glitch-soc-specific validation.
Applied upstream changes.
- `app/models/public_feed.rb`:
Not a real conflict, just upstream changing a line too close to
a glitch-soc-specific parameter documentation.
Applied upstream changes.