* Implement loading spinner for marking as favorite
* Ensure that the correct previous icon gets set
* Remove delay
* Improve compatibility with various parsers
Co-authored-by: Alexandre Alapetite <alexandre@alapetite.fr>
* Support multiple icons (top, bottom)
* Remove preload for now
* Fix CSS, remove !important
* Implement read/unread and alt
* Ensure correct bookmark icon gets set after error
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Co-authored-by: Alexandre Alapetite <alexandre@alapetite.fr>
* Fix favicon hashing in GReader API (#7570)
This allows the correct iconUrl to be returned from the GReader API for
a given feed.
* Fix method signature
* Fix Fever API
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Co-authored-by: CarelessCaution <189675655+CarelessCaution@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Alexandre Alapetite <alexandre@alapetite.fr>
Closes https://github.com/FreshRSS/FreshRSS/issues/6262
Changes proposed in this pull request:
- CSS: the search button was too big/not flexible enough for the height because of the padding
How to test the feature manually:
1. browser configuration: change the default font size from (`16`pt mostly) to `15` or `14`
2. go to subscription management -> `Subscription tools`
3. there should be no scroll bar (because the left hand side navigation is short and the content right hand side is short too)
Side effect: All buttons will be a bit smaller as before (because `px` -> `rem`) It should not be an issue at all
* add shortcut in config
* open my labels menu with shortcut
* the first 9 items are selectable + input field
* i18n
* Update app/i18n/nl/conf.php
Co-authored-by: Frans de Jonge <fransdejonge@gmail.com>
* index.menu.mylabels
* order fixed
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Co-authored-by: Frans de Jonge <fransdejonge@gmail.com>
* New stats box layout
* repartition: table overview improved with links and icons
* Show selected feed name in title
* i18n string: overview
* fix
* fix
* fix
* delete unused stat in frss
* Update app/i18n/fr/admin.php
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Co-authored-by: Alexandre Alapetite <alexandre@alapetite.fr>
Add option to sort results by received date (existing, default), publication date, title, URL (link), random.
fix https://github.com/FreshRSS/FreshRSS/issues/1771
fix https://github.com/FreshRSS/FreshRSS/issues/2083
fix https://github.com/FreshRSS/FreshRSS/issues/2119
fix https://github.com/FreshRSS/FreshRSS/issues/2596
fix https://github.com/FreshRSS/FreshRSS/issues/3204
fix https://github.com/FreshRSS/FreshRSS/issues/4405
fix https://github.com/FreshRSS/FreshRSS/issues/5529
fix https://github.com/FreshRSS/FreshRSS/issues/5864
fix https://github.com/FreshRSS/Extensions/issues/161
URL parameters:
* `&sort=id` (current behaviour, sorting according to newest received articles)
* `&sort=date` (publication date, which is not indicative of how new an article is)
* `&sort=title`
* `&sort=link`
* `&sort=rand` (random order - which disables infinite scrolling, at least for now)
combined with `&order=ASC` or `&order=DESC`

## Implementation notes
The sorting criteria by *received date* (id), which is the default, and which was the only one before this PR, is the one that has the best sorting characteristics:
* *uniqueness*: no entries have the exact same received date
* *monotonicity*: new entries always have a higher received date
* *performance*: this field is efficiently indexed in database for fast usage, including for paging (indexing could also be done to other fields, but with lower effective performance)
In contrary, sorting criteria such as by *publication date*, by *title*, or by *link* are neither unique nor monotonic. In particular, multiple articles may share the same *publication date*, and we may receive articles with a *publication date* far in the future, and then later some new articles with a *publication date* far in the past.
To understand why sorting by *publication date* is problematic, it helps to think about sorting by *title* or by *link*, as sorting by *title* and by *publication date* share more or less the same characteristics.
### Problem 1: new articles
New articles may be received in the background after what is shown on screen, and before the next user action such as *mark all as read*. Due to the lack of *monotonicity* when sorting by e.g. *publication date* or *title*, users risk marking as read a batch of articles containing some fresh articles without seeing them.
Mitigation: A parameter `idMax` tracks the maximum ID related to a batch of actions such as *mark all as read* to exclude articles received after those that are displayed.
### Problem 2: paging / pagination
When navigating articles, only a few articles are displayed, and a new "page" of articles needs to be received from the database when scrolling down or when clicking the button to show more articles. When sorting by e.g. *publication date* or *title*, it is not trivial to show the next page without re-showing some of the same articles, and without skipping any. Indeed, views are often with additional criteria such as showing only unread articles, and users may mark some articles as read while viewing them, hereby removing some articles from the previous pages. And like for *Problem 1*, new articles may have been received in the background. Consequently, it is not possible to use `OFFSET` to implement pagination (so the patches suggested by a few users were wrong due to that, in particular).
Mitigation: `idMax` is also used (just like for *Problem 1*) and a *Keyset Pagination* approach is used, combining an unstable sorting criterion such as *publication date* or *title*, together with *id* to ensure stable sorting. (So, 2 sorting criteria + 1 filter criteria)
See e.g. https://www.alwaysdeveloping.net/dailydrop/2022/07/01-keyset-pagination/
### Problem 3: performance
Sorting by anything else than *received date* (id) is doomed to be slow(er) due to the combination of 3 criteria (see *Problem 2*). An `OFFSET` approach (which is not possible anyway as explained) would be even slower. Furthermore, we have no SQL index at the moment, but they would not necessarily help much due to the multiple sorting criteria needed and involving some `OR` logic which is difficult to optimise for databases.
The nicest syntax would be using tuples and corresponding indexes, but that is poorly supported by MySQL https://bugs.mysql.com/bug.php?id=104128
Mitigation: a compatibility SQL syntax is used to implement *Keyset Pagination*
### Problem 4: user confusion
Several users have shown that they do not fully understand the difference between *received date* and *publication date*, and particularly not the pitfalls of *publication date*.
Mitigation: the menus to mark-as-read *before 1 day* and *before 1 week* are disabled when sorting by anything else than *received date*. Likewise, the separation headers *Today* and *Yesterday* and *Before yesterday* are only shown when sorting by *received date*.
Again here, to better understand why, it helps to think about sorting by *title* or by *link*, as sorting by *title* and by *publication date* share more or less the same characteristics.
* [ ] We should write a Q&A and/or documentation about the problems associated to *sorting by publication date*: risks of not noticing new publication, of inadvertently marking them as read, of having some articles with a date in the future hanging at the top of the views (vice versa when sorting in ascending order), performance, etc.
### Problem 5: APIs
Sorting by anything else than *received date* breaks the guarantees needed for a successful synchronisation via API.
Mitigation: sorting by *received date* is ensured for all API calls.
* PHPStan 2.0
fix https://github.com/FreshRSS/FreshRSS/issues/6989https://github.com/phpstan/phpstan/releases/tag/2.0.0https://github.com/phpstan/phpstan/blob/2.0.x/UPGRADING.md
* More
* More
* Done
* fix i18n CLI
* Restore a PHPStan Next test
For work towards PHPStan Level 10
* 4 more on Level 10
* fix getTagsForEntry
* API at Level 10
* More Level 10
* Finish Minz at Level 10
* Finish CLI at Level 10
* Finish Controllers at Level 10
* More Level 10
* More
* Pass bleedingEdge
* Clean PHPStan options and add TODOs
* Level 10 for main config
* More
* Consitency array vs. list
* Sanitize themes get_infos
* Simplify TagDAO->getTagsForEntries()
* Finish reportAnyTypeWideningInVarTag
* Prepare checkBenevolentUnionTypes and checkImplicitMixed
* Fixes
* Refix
* Another fix
* Casing of __METHOD__ constant
before
count(...)' is used in a loop and is a low performing construction.
after
Foreach instead (easier to read and support)
Co-authored-by: LucS <l.sanchez-prestataire@alptis.fr>
For some browsers (I tested desktop Edge and mobile Safari), setting document.scrollingElement.scrollTop to zero does not seem to be enough to reset the scroll position at start. Setting history.scrollRestoration = 'manual' seems to fix it for these browsers.
Firefox seems to work without this fix but works also with it.