Since version 2.0 introduced many breaking changes, we're upgrading to
it first.
The changes have been done by installing the rubocop-faker gem and
running:
```
rubocop \
--require rubocop-faker \
--only Faker/DeprecatedArguments \
--auto-correct
```
Our previous system to delete cached attachments didn't work for
documents because the `custom_hash_data` is different for files created
from a file and files created from cached attachments.
When creating a document attachment, the name of the file is taken into
account to calculate the hash. Let's say the original file name is
"logo.pdf", and the generated hash is "123456". The cached attachment
will be "123456.pdf", so the generated hash using the cached attachment
will be something different, like "28af3". So the file that will be
removed will be "28af3.pdf", and not "123456.pdf", which will still be
present.
Furthermore, there are times where users choose a file and then they
close the browser or go to a different page. In those cases, we weren't
deleting the cached attachments either.
So we're adding a rake task to delete these files once a day. This way
we can simplify the logic we were using to destroy cached attachments.
Note there's related a bug in documents: when editing a record (for
example, a proposal), if the title of the document changes, its hash
changes, and so it will be impossible to generate a link to that
document. Changing the way this hash is generated is not an option
because it would break links to existing files. We'll try to fix it when
moving to Active Storage.
People who have already upgraded to version 1.3.0 don't need to execute
them again.
We're not deleting the tasks yet in case some people would like to
upgrade from version 1.2.0 to version 1.3.1. In this case, they'll have
to execute the tasks manually.
Note we're making the validation rule dynamic so it's affected by the
way we stub the constant in the tests to emulate data created in old
applications.
Co-Authored-By: Javi Martín <javim@elretirao.net>
By using real XML responses developers will be able to understand better
how the integration works (the data flow), and the correspondency between
`remote_census` settings and their place at a real XML response.
As `stubbed_responses` methods were removed from the model layer now the
stubbing part should be managed from the test environment code so also
added a new helper module `RemoteCensusSetup` that can be used anywhere
where we need to call the web service.
Co-Authored-By: Javi Martín <javim@elretirao.net>
By simplyfing the responses the configuration for specs can be simpler too.
We're also using more generic terms instead of the ones used in Madrid's
Census API.
Co-Authored-By: Javi Martín <javim@elretirao.net>
Otherwise the variants returned for document_type="1" and
document_number="" will be
`["0", "00", "000", "0000", "00000", "000000", "0000000", "00000000"]`
which seems to be useless.
Probably this case is not real for production environments where those
arguments will always be fullfilled but seems to be interesting for
testing environment where this method is being called when those
paremeters where empty.
We've had to add a couple of hacks in order to make jQuery UI datepicker
work with Turbolinks, and one of our tests is failing because the
datepicker changes its height when changing from a month with 5 weeks to
a month with 6 weeks.
We could add a workaround so the test still passes (jQuery UI doesn't
provide a configuration option to always displays 6 weeks in the
datepicker), but I think it's easier to just use the HTML5 native date
input field, which also allows us to simplify the code a bit and IMHO it
improves the user experience, particularly when using mobile phones.
Since date fields are not supported in Safari and Internet Explorer,
we're still using the jQuery UI datepicker on those browsers (and on any
other browser not supporting date fields).
Due to these changes, we're moving the tests checking datepicker's
behaviour to the dashboard. I've choosing not to change the public pages
because I'm not 100% sure everybody would like this change (some people
prefer the datepicker because we can configure the way it looks).
Note we're using a new sanitizer. Ideally we'd reuse the
`AdminWYSIWYGSanitizer`, but then code that would be correctly shown by
markdown-it (like the <h1> tag) wouldn't be shown on the web, which is
confusing. Ideally we would configure markdown-it to only allow the tags
present in the `AdminWYSIWYGSanitizer` and provide some kind of help
showing which tags are allowed.
Using `pluck("DISTINCT")` was raising a warning in Rails 5.2:
DEPRECATION WARNING: Dangerous query method (method whose arguments are
used as raw SQL) called with non-attribute argument(s): "DISTINCT
taggings.tag_id". Non-attribute arguments will be disallowed in Rails
6.0. This method should not be called with user-provided values, such as
request parameters or model attributes. Known-safe values can be passed
by wrapping them in Arel.sql().
Since there was only one other use of distinct, I've decided to change
both of them in the same commit, even if the second one wasn't raising a
warning.
Rails 5.2 crashes in the `db:create` task because it tries to run the
`after_initialize` block before the database is created.
The easiest way to solve it is to move the code out of the initializer
and calculate the API type definitions on demand. Note results are still
cached using a class instance variable (not to be confused with a class
variable), and so once definitions are obtained, they will remain
constant until the application is restarted, even in the development
environment.
These tasks are not needed for new installations, and in existing
installations they've already been executed when upgrading to version
1.1.
One of them also raises a warning in Rails 5.2:
DEPRECATION WARNING: Dangerous query method (method whose arguments are
used as raw SQL) called with non-attribute argument(s): "MIN(id) as id".
Non-attribute arguments will be disallowed in Rails 6.0. This method
should not be called with user-provided values, such as request
parameters or model attributes. Known-safe values can be passed by
wrapping them in Arel.sql()
Implementation tries to be open for further extensions, such as deciding on
search dictionary based on configuration option or by locale set for
given user.
While this is not a secret and in theory should be in a file under
version control, currently the CONSUL installer disables delayed jobs by
default, meaning we were keeping two versions of the delayed jobs
configuration file, and some existing configurations have their settings
defined in a file in capistrano's `shared` folder.
So we're moving existing settings to the secrets file.
Existing installations having their configuration settings in the
capistrano shared folder needed this migration.
Note we can't just use `YAML.load` because we'd lose the anchors defined
in the file. So we have to parse the file the hard way.
There's no point generating stats nobody can access.
Note with this change we're automatically excluding polls created in the
dashboard, since these polls don't have stats enabled.
If we didn't run this task, investments for existing budgets wouldn't
show their administrator/valuators as an option when we're editing them,
leading to data loss.
We were manually doing the same thing, generating inconsistent results,
since the method `valuation_tag_list` was using the `valuation` context,
when actually the expected behavior would be to use the `valuation_tag`
context.