* Whenever a remote keypair changes, unfollow them and re-subscribe to them
In Mastodon (it could be different for other OStatus or AP-enabled software),
a keypair change is indicative of whole user (or instance) data loss. In this
situation, the “new” user might be different, and almost certainly has an empty
followers list. In this case, Mastodon instances will disagree on follower
lists, leading to unreliable delivery and “shadow followers”, that is users
believed by a remote instance to be followers, without the affected user
knowing.
Drawbacks of this change are:
1. If an user legitimately changes public key for some reason without losing
data (not possible in Mastodon at the moment), they will have their remote
followers unsubscribed/re-subscribed needlessly.
2. Depending of the number of remote followers, this may generate quite some
traffic.
3. If the user change is an attempt at usurpation, the remote followers will
unknowingly follow the usurper. Note that this is *not* a change of
behavior, Mastodon already behaves like that, although delivery might be
unreliable, and the usurper would not have known the former user's
followers.
* Rename ResubscribeWorker to RefollowWorker
* Process followers in batches
This PR adds section for protocol specific information, then always show
both of OStatus and ActivityPub. Specifically, this will help admins to
check PuSH subscription status and unsubscribe manually, even `protocol`
has been changed.
This also includes below changes:
* Add `overflow: hidden` to prevent float leaking
* Add missing fields for ActivityPub
They are marked as read-only by Rails, but we know what we are doing,
so we are un-marking them as such.
The mastodon:maintenance:update_counter_caches task is not really
supposed to be run anymore (it was a one-time thing during an upgrade)
however, just in case, I have modified it to not touch ActivityPub
accounts.
Also, no point writing to logger from these rake tasks, since they
are not to be run from cron. Better to give stdout feedback.
Keystone V2 is deprecated in favour of V3. This adds the necessary
connection parameters for establishing a V3 connection. Connections
to V2 endpoints are still possible and the configuration should
remain compatible.
This also introduces a SWIFT_REGION variable for multi-region
OpenStack environments and a SWIFT_CACHE_TTL that controls how long
tokens and other meta-data is cached for. Caching tokens avoids
rate-limiting errors that would result in media uploads becoming
unavailable during high load or when using tasks like
media:remove_remote. fog-openstack only supports token caching for
V3 endpoints, so a recommendation for using V3 was added.
When a new user confirms their e-mail, bootstrap their home timeline
by automatically following a set of accounts. By default, all local
admin accounts (that are unlocked). Can be customized by new admin
setting (comma-separated usernames, local and unlocked only)
Resolved:
* Lot of redundant renders while mouse moving
* Scroll jumping when timeline loaded
* Scroll position isn't kept when statuses below the scrollTop was deleted then new status arrived
Unresolved:
* Scroll position isn't kept when statuses over the scrollTop was deleted then new status arrived
-> It needs to know which statuses are over the scrollTop
* New status indicator should be active when new statuses arrived while mouse moved recently
-> It needs a) update indicator in ScrollableList, or b) set scrollTop status while mouse moving
To reflect status posting immediately, we've inserted the status into timelines directly. However, status insertion changes "latest status", and it means next timeline refresh only fetches statuses since the inserted status. This behavior is very bad for disconnected timeline and mobile views.
After this patch, it refreshes timeline for disconnected timelines, instead of direct insertion.
In before, the method uses stream_entry id as status id, so replied status was wrongly selected.
This PR uses StatusFinder which was introduced with `Api::Web::EmbedsController`.