Prevent new accounts from being created using the same underlying
e-mail as a suspended account using extensions and period
permutations. Stores e-mails as a SHA256 hash
* Bypass MX validation for explicitly allowed domains
This spares some lookups and prevent issues in some edge cases with
local domains.
* Add tests
* Fix test
* Prepare Mastodon for zeitwerk autoloader (Rails 6)
Add inflections and rename/move a few classes.
In particular, app/lib/exceptions.rb and app/lib/sanitize_config.rb
were manually loaded while still in autoload paths.
* Add inflection for Url → URL
* Update twitter-text from 1.14 to 3.1.0
* Disable emoji parsing
* Properly depend on twitter-text for url detection
* Fix some URLs being wrongly detected client-side
* Add test for server-side validation of non-autolinkable URLs
* Fix server-side status length counting
* Increase DNS timeout from 1 second to 5 seconds for MX check
1 seconds is rather short when using a recursive DNS resolver which
hasn't got a cached result already available. Use 5 seconds instead,
which is the timeout value we use for outgoing HTTP queries.
* Add more precise error messages for invalid e-mail addresses
Fix#271
Add back the `GET /api/v1/trends` API with the caveat that it does
not return tags that have not been allowed to trend by the staff.
When a hashtag begins to trend (internally) and that hashtag has
not been previously reviewed by the staff, the staff is notified.
The new admin UI for hashtags allows filtering hashtags by where
they are used (e.g. in the profile directory), whether they have
been reviewed or are pending reviewal, they show by how many people
the hashtag is used in the directory, how many people used it
today, how many statuses with it have been created today, and it
allows fixing the name of the hashtag to make it more readable.
The disallowed hashtags feature has been reworked. It is now
controlled from the admin UI for hashtags instead of from
the file `config/settings.yml`
This fixes the StatusLengthValidator tests to use
StatusLengthValidator::MAX_CHARS to derive the length of the strings
tested, and so makes them resilient to changes in MAX_CHARS (such as the
one that made these tests fail, with it being changed from 500 to 512).
This seems a bit odd for some types of tests, but appears to make sense
here, where the testing goes beyond `status.length > MAX_CHARS`.