Without this, going to `https://thelounge.example.com/index.html` would return the raw file. This now excludes it from the `public` folder so it cannot be rendered as is.
Renaming the file is for good measure, to indicate that this HTML file must be templated. Because it is a straight rename with no modification, rebasing PRs on it should not be to painful, as git re-applies changes on renamed files.
- Keep consistent width between the Help page and Changelog (which is already different from other windows 😠)
- Add icons to the About links
- Make sure `li` elements (i.e. all the lists in changelogs) are consistent in size with rest of the client
- Display version and release notes link on the "About The Lounge" header line, smaller, pushed to the right
- Check new releases when opening the Help window in order to display it without having to open the release notes. Release notes are being fed to the Changelog page at that moment to avoid fetching twice.
- Re-check version/fetch release notes after 24h. Since The Lounge can now run 24/7, reconnect when losing the network, we have to assume an "always-on" usage.
- Change icon, animate background color when getting response from GitHub to avoid flashing.
- Combine click handlers with our wonderful window management. These were the same handler, even with similar checks (`target` exists, etc.), just in 2 different places. This is necessary for the next item.
- Combine "Open release notes" and "Go back to Help" button behaviors with window management handlers. The window management code is gross as ever, and is in desperate need of a refactor, but at least there is no duplicated code for the same behavior + history management. This fixes the "Next" history behavior (however reloading the app while viewing the notes does not load on the notes, but this is a bug for a different PR!).
- Added a rule in the history management thingy: if a link we want to add history handling to has an `id`, store that in the state
- Added a button to go back to the Help window
- Fixed links to releases
- Send user to the GitHub issues *list* instead of *new issue form* because if they do not have a GitHub account, they will be redirected to the login page, which is a rather unpleasant experience when you are already confused...
- Fixed a bug that would return data about a new release in `latest` even though it is already the `current`. It was showing the current version as "The Lounge v... is now available".
- Added https://user-images.githubusercontent.com to the CSP rule when prefetch storage is enabled, because that is where we have stored screenshots in the changelog so far. Meh (we can improve that later if we decide to have a dedicated place for screenshots).
- Fetch changelog info even in public mode because users in public mode can access the release notes. They do not see the result of the version checker however.
Also draft some kind of plugin system for auth, although it essentially consists in writing a function
and there is no mechanism to automatically fallback from one auth to another
This option is less and less the norm on modern webapps, it is fair to assume this is the default behavior. In fact, we were making it the default.
But more importantly, coming soon is the ability of remotely logging out of your other sessions, which is well handled through token deletion. That means we need to know about said tokens, which are not sent in no-"Stay signed in" version.
- PasswordCompareAsync prevents timeouts on resource constraint devices
- All password.compare calls are now async
- Updated tests to accept async functions
The Lounge first log as a special user in order to search (as in LDAP's
'"search" verb) for the user's full DN. It then attempts to bind using the
found user DN and the user provided password.
Since @xPaw provided a really nice way to watch user config files, there is now no need to be cheap about it (it used to be run every second, possibly why it could be disabled via settings?).
This commit also improves the function a little bit by making use of ES6 syntax.
A warning gets displayed on the server console when the `autoload` option is still present in the config file.
This follows a recent change in WebKit (see https://webkit.org/blog/6830/a-refined-content-security-policy/, section "More restrictive wildcard *") to remove websocket schemes from the connect-src directive.
Users of Safari v10 (to be publicly released in a few days) would be affected by this and could not load the app.
Power to the people!
There is now 2 ways to set the theme: on the app config file (defaults
for all users) and in the user settings.
All CSS files present in the `client/themes` folder will be given as
choices to the users.
This is temporary (as in, temporary for a fairly long time) until we
have proper theme management.