While trying to reproduce an issue reported internally where a user saw the "is replying..." from another user who had disabled presence (aka. was "offline"), I noticed something odd about the way we "notify" presence via `notifyState`. The way it is setup up, it's being called on every "input" event in the composer/editor, due to it tracking the "reply" property of the composer model. That's fine, but the way the `helperFn` helper works, make it so we're calling the `on.cleanup` callback also on **every** "input" events in the composer/editor. For every character we enter in the composer, we're "entering" the presence channel and immediatelly "leaving" it... If I remove the checks on `reply` (and thus the auto-tracking), then the `notifyState` function is called much less frequently. But we have some specs that expects us not to "publish" our presence when we open the composer and the reply is "empty". Note: I switched to using `replyDirty` instead to re-use the checks the composer model is already doing to ensure we actually have changed something in the reply. The best I came up with was not to rely on the `helperFn` but now, there's no way (that I could find) to call `composerPresenceManager.leave()` when the composer is closed. I tried a lot of different ways, but none worked. I'm sure it's something stupid easy, but I can't figure it out just now. Internal ref - t/127490/74 |
||
|---|---|---|
| .devcontainer | ||
| .github | ||
| .vscode | ||
| app | ||
| bin | ||
| config | ||
| db | ||
| docs | ||
| images | ||
| lib | ||
| log | ||
| migrations | ||
| patches | ||
| plugins | ||
| public | ||
| script | ||
| spec | ||
| test | ||
| vendor | ||
| .editorconfig | ||
| .git-blame-ignore-revs | ||
| .gitattributes | ||
| .gitignore | ||
| .ignore | ||
| .jsdoc | ||
| .licensed.yml | ||
| .licensee.json | ||
| .npmrc | ||
| .pnpmfile.cjs | ||
| .prettierignore | ||
| .prettierrc.cjs | ||
| .rspec | ||
| .rspec_parallel | ||
| .rubocop.yml | ||
| .ruby-gemset.sample | ||
| .ruby-version.sample | ||
| .streerc | ||
| .template-lintrc.cjs | ||
| Brewfile | ||
| CODEOWNERS | ||
| config.ru | ||
| CONTRIBUTING.md | ||
| COPYRIGHT.md | ||
| d | ||
| discourse.sublime-project | ||
| eslint.config.mjs | ||
| Gemfile | ||
| Gemfile.lock | ||
| jsconfig.json | ||
| lefthook.yml | ||
| LICENSE.txt | ||
| package.json | ||
| pnpm-lock.yaml | ||
| pnpm-workspace.yaml | ||
| Rakefile | ||
| README.md | ||
| translator.yml | ||
Discourse is the online home for your community. We offer a 100% open source community platform to those who want complete control over how and where their site is run.
Our platform has been battle-tested for over a decade and continues to evolve to meet users’ needs for a powerful community platform. Discourse allows you to create discussion topics and connect using real-time chat, as well as access an ever-growing number of official and community themes. In addition, we offer a wide variety of plugins for features ranging from chatbots powered by Discourse AI to functionalities like SQL analysis using the Data Explorer plugin.
To learn more, visit discourse.org and join our support community at meta.discourse.org.
Screenshots
Browse lots more notable Discourse instances.
Development
To get your environment set up, follow the community setup guide for your operating system.
- If you're on macOS, try the macOS development guide.
- If you're on Ubuntu, try the Ubuntu development guide.
- If you're on Windows, try the Windows 10 development guide.
- If you're looking to use a simpler Docker-based install, try the Docker development guide.
If you're familiar with how Rails works and are comfortable setting up your own environment, you can also try out the Discourse Advanced Developer Guide, which is aimed primarily at Ubuntu and macOS environments.
Before you get started, ensure you have the following minimum versions: Ruby 3.2+, PostgreSQL 13, Redis 7. If you're having trouble, please see our TROUBLESHOOTING GUIDE first!
Setting up Discourse
If you want to set up a Discourse forum for production use, see our Discourse Install Guide.
If you're looking for official hosting, see discourse.org/pricing.
Requirements
Discourse is built for the next 10 years of the Internet, so our requirements are high.
Discourse supports the latest, stable releases of all major browsers and platforms:
| Browsers | Tablets | Phones |
|---|---|---|
| Apple Safari | iPadOS | iOS |
| Google Chrome | Android | Android |
| Microsoft Edge | ||
| Mozilla Firefox |
Additionally, we aim to support Safari on iOS 15.7+.
Built With
- Ruby on Rails — Our back end API is a Rails app. It responds to requests RESTfully in JSON.
- Ember.js — Our front end is an Ember.js app that communicates with the Rails API.
- PostgreSQL — Our main data store is in Postgres.
- Redis — We use Redis as a cache and for transient data.
- BrowserStack — We use BrowserStack to test on real devices and browsers.
Plus lots of Ruby Gems, a complete list of which is at /main/Gemfile.
Contributing
Discourse is 100% free and open source. We encourage and support an active, healthy community that accepts contributions from the public – including you!
Before contributing to Discourse:
- Please read the complete mission statements on discourse.org. Yes we actually believe this stuff; you should too.
- Read and sign the Electronic Discourse Forums Contribution License Agreement.
- Dig into CONTRIBUTING.MD, which covers submitting bugs, requesting new features, preparing your code for a pull request, etc.
- Always strive to collaborate with mutual respect.
- Not sure what to work on? We've got some ideas.
We look forward to seeing your pull requests!
Security
We take security very seriously at Discourse; all our code is 100% open source and peer reviewed. Please read our security guide for an overview of security measures in Discourse, or if you wish to report a security issue.
The Discourse Team
The original Discourse code contributors can be found in AUTHORS.MD. For a complete list of the many individuals that contributed to the design and implementation of Discourse, please refer to the official Discourse blog and GitHub's list of contributors.
Copyright / License
Copyright 2014 - 2023 Civilized Discourse Construction Kit, Inc.
Licensed under the GNU General Public License Version 2.0 (or later); you may not use this work except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License in the LICENSE file, or at:
https://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/gpl-2.0.txt
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.
Discourse logo and “Discourse Forum” ®, Civilized Discourse Construction Kit, Inc.
Accessibility
To guide our ongoing effort to build accessible software we follow the W3C’s Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG). If you'd like to report an accessibility issue that makes it difficult for you to use Discourse, email accessibility@discourse.org. For more information visit discourse.org/accessibility.
Dedication
Discourse is built with love, Internet style.

