The items will still match full-text word searches, but they won't match
phrase searches (because those require cache files for non-text
attachments) and the full-text won't sync to other computers, so they
should really be reindexed.
This should be tested, but we run tests in Firefox, and this doesn't
exist in Firefox... Easiest option is probably to add the submenu to the
Firefox menus for the purposes of testing.
If this works out I think we'll want to use this approach for
all data layer changes.
Previously, an unsaved change on an object would update its state
immediately, which was fine for synchronous code but breaks down if a
save involves multiple asynchronous calls, because modifying state after
the relevant data has been saved to the DB but before the `_changed`
object has been cleared would mean that new changes would be lost. Now,
changes are written to _changedData, and a get for the data first checks
_changedData before checking the state property (e.g., _tags) directly.
The changedData property is cleared as it's written, and once the object
is saved, the reload updates the state property with the new data.
If a standalone attachment existed in a collection and then was added to
a parent (e.g., via Create Parent Item), and attachment metadata was
also changed at the same time (e.g., due to file syncing), the
'collection item must be top level' trigger could throw on another
syncing computer. To work around this, remove collections first, then
make changes to the parentItemID columns, and then add new collections.
I think it might be worth having a tag management window that lets you
view tags as a grid, sort by column (e.g., type), select ranges, delete,
consolidate, etc., but until then, this fulfills a popular request.
And use them in new importTextAttachment() and importHTMLAttachment()
test support functions. These can be used to avoid needing a hidden
browser for determining the character set of the imported text
documents.
I'm not sure if we need the browser tests at all -- we still translate
some things via hidden browsers, and I'm not sure what we have that
tests that -- but we definitely don't need to test saving before the
Zotero pane is opened.
While objects in the sync queue that fail to save should remain in the
queue, objects that just don't exist remotely need to be removed, or
else they'll be retried forever.
Instead of My Publications being a separate library, have it be a
special collection inside My Library. Top-level items can be dragged
into it as before, and child items can be toggled off and on with a
button in the item pane. Newly added child items won't be shown by
default.
For upgraders, items in the My Publications library will be moved into
My Library, which might result in their being duplicated if the items
weren't removed from My Library. The client will then upload those new
items into My Library.
The API endpoint will continue to show items in the separate My
Publications library until My Publications items are added to My
Library, so the profile page will continue to show them.
Contains a dummy doc plugin, which is useful for:
- Testing integration.js functionality
- Serving as succint documentation for development of new integration
plugins
The web library will probably still display the old tag in addition to
the new one, at least until browser restart. We'll have to deal with
that separately.
Closes#1205
When refreshing, if fewer than 100 tags to show, just create them from
scratch instead of updating the full set. Otherwise, remove the full set
from DOM and add it back in after updates to avoid reflows (from #1204).
There are various things that could be done to optimize this further
(avoiding unnecessary sorting during full refreshes, calculating a hash
of the full set and not updating it every time), but we should probably
just replace it with @tnajdek's React version first.
Closes#1204
Changes `libraryTreeView::addEventListener('load')` and similar to
`libraryTreeView::onLoad.addListener(listener, once)`, etc. `once` is an
optional boolean that, when true, causes the listener to fire once and
then be removed. This is implicit for 'load'.
'load' maintains its special behavior of running immediately if the
treeview has already been loaded.
Also adds `waitForLoad()` and `waitForSelect()` functions that return
promises on event completion, since most uses of those events were just
resolving deferreds.
When dragging an item to another library, we have to check if there's a
linked item in the target library, but items might not yet be laoded in
the other library, so item.getLinkedItem() can fail with "Item [n] not
yet loaded].
Fixing required asyncifying the follow functions:
- Zotero.Item::getLinkedItem()
- Zotero.Collection::getLinkedCollection()
- Zotero.URI.getURIItem()
- Zotero.URI.getURICollection()
- Various integration functions
As noted in 27cb099c82, import translators should be rewritten to return
a promise from doImport() and wait for promises from successive
item.complete() calls. They should then be marked as minVersion: "5.0"
to be handled properly by this new code.
(But this tries to account, albeit with somewhat worse behavior, for
translators that haven't been rewritten and sandboxes without Promise
(which is currently the case with child sandboxes in the client).)
(Oh, and I haven't tested this at all in the connectors.)
- Archive remotely missing that user chooses to keep
- Ignore archived groups that don't existing remotely
- Unarchive groups that become available again
Previously on Windows, where we don't have /bin/mv, we were recursing
into the data directory and copying files individually, which is very
slow, so automatic migration was disabled. Instead, try moving
directories with OS.File.move() with the `noCopy` flag. Moving
directories is technically unsupported by OS.File, but probably only
because of the possibility of a cross-volume copy (which is only
implemented for some platforms), and using `noCopy` hopefully prevents
that. If someone does have their data directory or storage directory on
a different volume, the migration might be quite slow, but leaving a
data directory behind in the Firefox profile directory (where it can be
easily misplaced with a seemingly unrelated Firefox reset) is worse.
Attachments are now saved before the connector server responds, because they're
no longer started out-of-band in saveItems(). This is necessary to prevent
transaction badness during imports, but it may not be what we want for the
connector, so we may want to revisit this after further testing.
E.g., moving 3,600 items to the trash now takes 4 seconds instead of 62
Instead of saving each item, update internal state and database directly
(which is more brittle but worth it). Also avoid unnecessary sorting
after removing an item from the items tree.
When adding many search conditions (e.g., when matching many items with the
`key` condition), the query can fail due to either the bound parameter limit or
the expression tree size limit.
To avoid this, add support for an 'inlineFilter' property on search conditions
when using the 'is' or 'isNot' operator. 'inlineFilter' is a function that
returns a quoted value suitable for direct embedding in the SQL statement, or
false if not valid. Multiple consecutive conditions for the same 'inlineFilter'
field are combined into an `IN (x, y, z)` condition.