These mini notice lists were previously not actually showing links to the notices, making them hard to use. There was code to output a link, but it had been unused due to the config options triggering it not being set. The links also looked bad ("( see )" with bad spacing).
Replaced that code with a call into NoticeListItem's existing code to format a relative timestamp with the notice permalink, which looks nice. Used a div rather than p to avoid clearing the float, so it flows nicely.
As a hack this removes the mysql_timestamp bit from the field settings on reply.modified so that our value actually gets saved. This *should* work ok as long as system timezone is set correctly, which we now set to UTC to match when connecting.
UserActivityStream -- used to create a full activity stream including subscriptions, favorites, notices, etc -- normally buffers everything into memory at once. This is infeasible for accounts with long histories of serious usage; it can take tens of seconds just to pull all records from the database, and working with them all in memory is very likely to hit resource limits.
This commit adds an alternate mode for this class which avoids pulling notices until during the actual output. Instead of pre-sorting and buffering all the notices, empty spaces between the other activities are filled in with notices as we're making output. This means more smaller queries spread out during operations, and less stuff kept in memory.
Callers (backupaccount action, and backupuser.php) which can stream their output pass an $outputMode param of UserActivityStream::OUTPUT_RAW, and during getString() it'll send straight to output as well as slurping the notices in this extra funky fashion.
Other callers will let it default to the OUTPUT_STRING mode, which keeps the previous behavior.
There should be a better way to do this, swapping out the stringer output for raw output more consitently.
Changes the replacement of Twitter "entities" from in-place reverse ordering ('to preserve indices') to a forward-facing append-in-chunks that pulls in both the text and link portions, and escapes them all.
This unfortunately means first *de*-escaping the < and > that Twitter helpfully adds for us.... and any literal &blah;s that get written. This seems to match Twitter's web UI, however horrid it is.
http://status.net/open-source/issues/2442
Notes:
* Mapstraction causes JavaScript errors in XHTML mode, breaking our code if we're run later so the link doesn't work to get back to Desktop.
* not 100% sure how safe feature detection is here?
* Currently will be useless but visible links if no JS available; need to fall back to server-side for limited browsers
file_quota is adjusted from the defined value to take into account the maximum upload size limits in PHP, or cropped to 0 if uploads are disabled.
This can be used by client apps to determine maximum size for an attachment.
Now using the original text form of @-mentions and #-tags, as in Twitter's own HTMLification.
Canonical forms are still used in generating links, where it's polite to match the canonical form.
Search highlighting was being done with a regex on raw HTML text, followed by a second regex undoing replacements within double-quoted attribute values.
This broke on imported Twitter messages, as the way we generate the markup uses single quotes on the attributes, which didn't get matched by the second regex.
I've replaced this do-then-undo cycle by dividing up the import HTML into freetext spans and tags; the freetext gets replaced, while the tags are left untouched.