Also changes Zotero.Item.prototype.clone() to take an `options` object for its
second parameter instead of a boolean `skipTags`. The object includes
`skipTags` as well as a new `includeCollections` property to add the new item
to the same collections.
Indexing currently happens a second after the 201 is returned to the
connector, so we have to wait for that before continuing tests, or else
a DB clear in a later test (e.g., storageLocal) will cause an error to
be logged when the indexing kicks off.
WPD code hasn't been updated in many years, and there was an issue with
document permissions in 5.0. We'll need to replace nsIWBP in Electron,
but this will do for now.
Attachments are opened using file:// URIs instead of
zotero://attachment, which is what Standalone does anyway. Ancient HTML
annotations and highlights won't be displayed anymore, but I'm not sure
they worked anyway, and it hasn't been possible to create them in years.
We might be able to write out existing annotations to notes.
iframes are skipped during saving, in an attempt to reduce the number of
junk ad files. JS can still cause problems with viewing, so we might
still want to either disable scripts or force the viewed page offline
(if such a thing is possible).
There might be issues with auxiliary filename length/characters during
cross-platform file syncing. (We modified the WPD code to shorten/clean
them.)
- Add test for recogning within a collection (follow-up from #1015)
- Update/remove some outdated code
These tests are still skipped by default, since we don't want to actually do
lookups on every test run.
If the API returns a modified item after an upload (e.g., to strip invalid
characters), don't update the Date Modified field when saving those changes to
the local version (though it would still be good to avoid API-side changes as
much as possible).
And omit in ZFS file sync requests
The API previously didn't allow these properties to be set for group items,
because they were set atomically during the file upload process, but 1) that's
not really necessary (makes a little sense for 'filename', but not really a big
deal if an old file is renamed on another computer before the new file is
synced down) and 2) skipping them results in the properties getting erased
after items are uploaded and the empty values returned by the server overwrite
the local values.
Before 5.0 we performed a regexp on new item data values to determine if
they were integers and saved them natively in SQLite if so. We no longer
do that, but setField() used strict equality when checking for changes,
so an item could be marked as changed when comparing to a new string
value (e.g., from a write response from the API, which always returns
strings). To avoid that, this converts all old values in the DB to
strings and saves all incoming values as strings automatically. (This
should also help with searching and some other things.)
Until we have a consistent way of sanitizing HTML on client and server, account
for differences manually. More differences between HTMLPurifier and TinyMCE
should be added as necessary.
- Fix upgrading of Mozilla-style attachments/storage file paths on upgrade
(requires re-upgrade)
- Save relative paths using forward slashes for consistency, and convert
to platform-appropriate slashes on use
- Fixes#994, 5.0: "+" doesn't expand all collections within a library
- If a container (library, collection) is closed directly, the open state of
all containers below it are now restored when it's reopened. Previously all
collections would be closed on a manual reopen (though they might have been
restored on the next Zotero restart).
- If "-" is pressed, all containers are closed, and reopening the library will
show only top-level collections.
- Use custom exception for user-initiated sync cancellations, which can bubble
up to the sync runner -- this should help with a sync stop button (#915)
- Separate out deletions-downloading code
- Refactor delay generator handling on library version mismatch
- Clearer variable names
Return false for single ids or skip for multiple ids. This is the original
behavior, but at some point it started throwing an UnloadedDataException. IDs
are always loaded at initialization, though, so we know whether the objects
actually exist.
This is necessary to get a library version after the write instead of an
item version. Otherwise after a full-text write, the main library
version is behind, so the next sync checks all object types for that
library instead of getting a 304.
Full text is batched up to 500K characters or 10 items, whichever is
less.
This also switches to using ?format=versions for /fulltext requests,
which isn't currently necessary but reflects what it's actually doing.