We had client-side notification stacking in the tray since launch, but now we want to stack notifications in the notifications page, in API responses and in email bundles.
When ActiveStorage::Record uses `connects_to` for read replica support,
it creates a separate connection pool from ApplicationRecord. This causes
`after_commit` callbacks to fire in non-deterministic order - the
Attachment's `create_variants` callback can fire before the User model's
upload callback completes, resulting in FileNotFoundError.
The fix removes replica connection configuration from ActiveStorage::Record
so it shares the same connection pool as application models, ensuring
proper callback ordering.
Also reverts test workarounds that were added to work around this issue,
since the root cause is now fixed.
See: https://github.com/rails/rails/issues/53694
Adds verified? check to bundling_emails? to prevent notification emails
from being sent to users who have never authenticated. This closes the
spam vector where bad actors could create users for known email
addresses and trigger unwanted notifications by mentioning them.
Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
Process variants synchronously on attachment to close the window between
image upload and variant availability, guaranteeing that we won't have
lazy variant processing attempts in GET requests.
Tradeoff is that we do variant processing in upload requests, which is
actually desirable. We're working with images that should take
milliseconds to resize given that we'll already have the file on hand.
References https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/51951
* Bind sessions to identities
* Remove references to the identity token
* Move email changes to identity
* Move account menu into a turbo-frame
* Create tenants from a tenanted route
- New untenanted Identity and Membership models
- New `identity_token` cookie with path "/" holds state across tenants
We're not sure whether the untenanted database will be sqlite or
MySQL, and so I've been careful to minimize
- database reads, placing them behind etags and caching
- database writes, only writing when a new Session is created (login)
Note that we track two things in the identity_token cookie: a signed
id, and the updated_at for the underlying Identity object. This allows
us to effectively cache on the Identity without having to hit the
database, by using an Identity::Mock object that is compatible with
etag and cache methods.
The new integration test shows the desired user-facing behavior, which
is to make it easy to login without a tenanted URL and to jump between
tenants.
- the untenanted "login_help" page shows all linked memberships
- the jump menu shows all linked memberships (except the current)
Also introduced a utility script to populate existing employee
Identities, grouping accounts by email address.
This is the first step of a multi-step SaaS engine extraction.
Looking ahead to an open source release, we need to make sure that
local authentication is treated as an "official" option, and not just
a hack I added for Kevin to do load testing outside our DC. So this PR
gets to green, and adds a CI step in "local authentication" mode.
This all probably feels a little hacky to you, Reader, but the goal of
this change is to ease the next step, which will be extracting the
37id and Queenbee integrations into a proprietary "SaaS mode" engine.
In service of that goal, this commit simply wraps all of the dependent
code and tests with a conditional check on
`config.x.local_authentication`.