DB_DataObject hides errors by silently returning null for any non-existent method call, making it harder to tell what the heck's going on... the rights check for blocked remote users returned null for the check for subscribe rights, thus eval'ing to false. We now log a note in this circumstance, which would have cut about 3 hours off of the debug time.
DB_DataObject hides errors by silently returning null for any non-existent method call, making it harder to tell what the heck's going on... the rights check for blocked remote users returned null for the check for subscribe rights, thus eval'ing to false. We now log a note in this circumstance, which would have cut about 3 hours off of the debug time.
Success return code from omb_broadcast_message was dropped in commit ec88d2650e (Aug 10 2009) which switched us to libomb backend. With queues enabled, this would lead to the notice being readded to the outgoing OMB queue for redelivery as the queue system thought the send failed. The resends caused extra load and confusion for third-party sites, and more worryingly just plugged up our own queue so legit messages were badly delayed.
This commit should restore the previous state, where we fire-and-forget; that is, we're not actually checking to see if all remote subscribers received the message successfully and there will be no resends.
Success return code from omb_broadcast_message was dropped in commit ec88d2650e (Aug 10 2009) which switched us to libomb backend. With queues enabled, this would lead to the notice being readded to the outgoing OMB queue for redelivery as the queue system thought the send failed. The resends caused extra load and confusion for third-party sites, and more worryingly just plugged up our own queue so legit messages were badly delayed.
This commit should restore the previous state, where we fire-and-forget; that is, we're not actually checking to see if all remote subscribers received the message successfully and there will be no resends.
With $config['db']['schemacheck'] set to 'script' in live deployment, Schema class wasn't being preloaded for us; the uses of TableDef by plugins for DataObject configuration would then fail because the class wasn't loaded. Broken to separate files, the autoloader can find all classes in either case.
PHP Fatal error: Class 'TableDef' not found in /var/www/statusnet/plugins/OpenID/User_openid.php on line 43, referer: http://identi.ca/brionv/all
With $config['db']['schemacheck'] set to 'script' in live deployment, Schema class wasn't being preloaded for us; the uses of TableDef by plugins for DataObject configuration would then fail because the class wasn't loaded. Broken to separate files, the autoloader can find all classes in either case.
PHP Fatal error: Class 'TableDef' not found in /var/www/statusnet/plugins/OpenID/User_openid.php on line 43, referer: http://identi.ca/brionv/all
XHTML mode breaks a lot of JS and has been causing trouble for Safari and Chrome, especially with the fancier new UI-side plugins like realtime and maps.