We originally added the `cached_votes_up > 0` in commit 4ce95e273
because back then `cached_votes_up` was used in the denominator. That's
no longer the case, and it doesn't make sense to mark a debate with 1
vote and 10 flags as conflictive but not doing it when the debate has no
votes and 1000 flags.
We're fixing the bug right now because we're about to change the
affected line in order to apply a new rubocop rule.
This rule was added in rubocop-rspec 2.11.0. We aren't adding it
because, out of 3 offenses, this cop can only correct 2 automatically.
Not sure how to correct the other one since it uses `.and change`.
This rule was added in rubocop-rspec 2.9.0.
We were using `be_nil` 50% of the time, and `be nil` the rest of the
time. No strong preference for either one, but IMHO we don't lose
anything be being consistent.
Note we're excluding a few files:
* Configuration files that weren't generated by us
* Migration files that weren't generated by us
* The Gemfile, since it includes an important comment that must be on
the same line as the gem declaration
* The Budget::Stats class, since the heading statistics are a mess and
having shorter lines would require a lot of refactoring
For the HashAlignment rule, we're using the default `key` style (keys
are aligned and values aren't) instead of the `table` style (both keys
and values are aligned) because, even if we used both in the
application, we used the `key` style a lot more. Furthermore, the
`table` style looks strange in places where there are both very long and
very short keys and sometimes we weren't even consistent with the
`table` style, aligning some keys without aligning other keys.
Ideally we could align hashes to "either key or table", so developers
can decide whether keeping the symmetry of the code is worth it in a
case-per-case basis, but Rubocop doesn't allow this option.
We were already applying these rules in most cases.
Note we aren't enabling the `MultilineArrayLineBreaks` rule because
we've got places with many elements whire it isn't clear whether
having one element per line would make the code more readable.
We were using two different sets of extensions but, since the markdown
code is always written by administrators, IMHO it makes sense to be
consistent and always render markdown code the same way.
* Add Tables option to Redcarpet in Legislation draft
* Allow table tags in Admin Legislation Sanitizer
* Add Test to render markdown tables in Legislation drafts
* Add Test for Admin Legislation Sanitizer
We include test for image, table and h1 to h6 tags and additional tests to strengthen the allowed and disallowed parameters
* Add Table from markdown test in System and Factories
* Add test to render tables for admin user
* Remove comment line about Redcarpet options
* Edit custom css for legislation draft table to make it responsive
This methods performs much better when we need to load a lot of
globalized models translations and returns the best fallback translation
for the current language.
Note that in the budgets wizard test we now create district with no
associated geozone, so the text "all city" will appear in the districts
table too, meaning we can't use `within "section", text: "All city" do`
anymore since it would result in an ambiguous match.
Co-Authored-By: Julian Herrero <microweb10@gmail.com>
Co-Authored-By: Javi Martín <javim@elretirao.net>
These tests were failing with Ruby 3.0 because we were getting an error
when loading the `translations` association of the dummy class:
```
NameError:
uninitialized constant
DummyBanner::#<Class:0x000055630e4dccd8>::Translation
```
Specifying the `class_name` of the `translations` association solves the
issue.
It has been detected that for the :pt-BR, :zh-CN and :zh-TW locales,
the translate button was being displayed, but when requesting the
translation, the remote translation validation failed due to:
'''
validates :locale, inclusion: { in: ->(_) {
RemoteTranslations::Microsoft::AvailableLocales.available_locales }}
'''
That available_locales method did not contemplate these 3 languages
in the format used by the application.
To solve this problem the api response is mapped to return all
locales in the format expected by the application.
Add remote translation model test to ensure that a remote translation
is valid when its locale is pt-BR.
Co-Authored-By: Javi Martín <35156+javierm@users.noreply.github.com>
When accessing the valuation area, we were only displaying the
investments directly assigned to the current valuator, but we weren't
displaying the investments assigned to that valuator's group.
Using the `assigned_investments_ids` method, which takes the valuator
group into account, solves the issue.
We've also found an issue on our development machines: since we don't
have a unique index per `investment_id` and `valuator_id` in the
`budget_valuator_assignments` table, we've found duplicate records on
this table. When that happened, we were displaying the same investment
several times.
Since now we no longer join this table in the query returning the
investment, this issue is also solved, and we're adding a test for it.
We can now remove the call to the `distinct` method when calculating the
number of investments per heading.
To get the heading where a user voted, we were relying on the
`balloted_heading_id` field.
Our guess is this was done so the total number of users is the same as
the sum of users who voted on a heading. That is, if 2000 people voted
just on the "All city" heading, 1000 voted just on the "North district"
heading, and 500 people voted on both, instead of showing "3500 people
voted in total, 2500 voted in all city, 1500 voted in north district",
we show something like "3500 people voted in total, 2250 voted in all
city, and 1250 voted in north district".
However, this approach has some disadvantages.
The first disadvantage is, the stats aren't correct. In the case above,
2500 voted on the "All city heading", so the statistics for this heading
don't show reality.
The second one is we weren't considering the last heading where users
voted inside the budget being displayed, but the last heading where
users voted, period. That means that, if all the people above voted on a
later budget, the stats for the budget above would become "3500 people
voted in total, 0 voted in all city, and 0 voted in north district".
That also means we were including headings from previous budgets in the
statistics for more recent budgets when people hadn't voted on the
recent ones.
So we're removing the `balloted_heading_id` since its data is lost once
people vote on a new budget. And, in order to show the right stats and
simplify the code, we're no longer trying to add votes just to one
heading when users vote on several headings.
Co-Authored-By: Julian Nicolas Herrero <microweb10@gmail.com>
It was added in rubocop-performance 1.13.0. We were already applying it
in most places.
We aren't adding it for performance reasons but in order to make the
code more consistent.
Note we could use `acts_as_paranoid` with the `without_default_scope`
option, but we aren't doing so because it isn't possible to consider
deleted records in uniqueness validations with the paranoia gem [1].
I've added tests for these cases so we don't accidentally add
`acts_as_paranoid` in the future.
Also note we're extracting a `RowComponent` because, when
enabling/disabling a tenant, we're also enabling/disabling the link
pointing to its URL, and so we need to update the URL column after the
AJAX call.
[1] See issues 285 and 319 in https://github.com/rubysherpas/paranoia/
Some institutions using CONSUL have expressed interest in this feature
since some of their tenants might already have their own domains.
We've considered many options for the user interface to select whether
we're using a subdomain or a domain, like having two separate fields,
using a check box, ... In the end we've chosen radio buttons because
they make it easier to follow a logical sequence: first you decide
whether you're introducing a domain or subdomain, and then you enter it.
We've also considered hiding this option and assuming "if it's got a
dot, it's a domain". However, this wouldn't work with nested subdomains
and it wouldn't work with domains which are simply machine names.
Note that a group of radio buttons (or check boxes) is difficult to
style when the text of the label might expand over more than one line
(as is the case here on small screens); in this case, most solutions
result in the second line of the label appearing immediately under the
radio button, instead of being aligned with the first line of the label.
That's why I've added a container for the input+label combination.
Creating a schema takes about 3-4 seconds on my machine, so omitting
the callbacks makes tests much faster.
To do so, we're using the `insert!` method added in Rails 6.0, which
inserts a record without executing callbacks or validations. To make the
tests look consistent, we're adding a FactoryBot strategy which uses
`insert!` instead of `create!`.
Note this strategy is useless in most cases because it doesn't work when
models have translatable attributes or associations. However, IMHO it's
worth it even if we only use it for tenants.
We could also use `Tenant.insert!` instead, but then we would have to
add all the mandatory attributes, and in this case the code is clearer
if we only add the attributes we need for the test.
This way we'll avoid having all tenant organizations named "CONSUL" by
default, and we'll also use different email senders per tenant, which
will reduce the change of the emails being marked as spam.
We were using `consul.dev` as default, which might be fine for the
development environment, but it's something that definitely needs to be
changed on production.
Now we're providing a better default setting: using the same domain
which is used to generate URLs in emails. This also makes it easier to
configure new tenants, since the setting will default to whatever host
the new tenant is using.
The `|| "consul.dev"` part might not be needed; I'm keeping it because
I'm not sure production environents would not experience any new issues
if we don't add it, but we might remove it in the future.
We were using the same logic in many different places, so we're
simplifying the code. I'm not convinced about the method names, though,
so we might change them in the future.
Note using this method for the default tenant in the `TenantDiskService`
class resulted in a `//` in the path, which is probably harmless but
very ugly and it also generates a different key than the one we got
until now. I've added an extra test to make sure that isn't the case.
We're using the "tenants" subfolder for consistency with the folder
structure we use in ActiveStorage and because some CONSUL installations
might have folders inside the `data` folder which might conflict with
the folders created by tenants.
Note that the Python scripts have a lot of duplication, meaning we need
to change all of them. I'm not refactoring them because I'm not familiar
enough with these scripts (or with Python, for that matter).
Also note that the scripts folder is still shared by all tenants,
meaning it isn't possible to have different scripts for different
tenants. I'm not sure how this situation should be handled; again, I'm
not familiar enough with this feature.
Right now this is configured using the `secrets.yml` file, which is the
file we've used in the past to configure SMTP settings.
Note that, in the `current_secrets` method, the `if default?` condition
is there so in single-tenant applications it returns the exact same
object as `Rails.application.secrets`, and it makes it immediately clear
for developers reading the code. We're also caching the tenant secrets
(using `||=`) so they behave the same way as Rails secrets; for this to
work properly 100% of the time (for example, in tests) we need to expire
these cached secrets whenever the Rails secrets change.
A similar `unless Tenant.default?` condition is present in the
ApplicationMailer because there's a chance some CONSUL installations
might not be using secrets to define the SMTP settings(they might be
using environment variables, for example) and so in this case we don't
want to force settings based on the secrets.yml file because it would
break the application.
The structure of the SMTP settings in the secrets file should be:
```
production:
tenants:
name_of_the_tenant_subdomain:
smtp_settings:
address:
(...)
```
While this is not strictly necessary, it can help moving the data of one
tenant to a different server or removing it.
Note we're using subfolders inside the `tenants` subfolder. If we simply
used subfolders with the schema names, if the schema names were, for
instance, language codes like `es`, `en`, `it`, ... they would conflict
with the default subfolders used by Active Storage.