25 Feb, 2014

3 commits

  • Signed-off-by: Dmitriy Zaporozhets <dmitriy.zaporozhets@gmail.com>
    Dmitriy Zaporozhets
     
  • Cleaner headers in Notification Emails
    
    Make the informations available in the notification email headers (sender, recipient, subject, etc.) more readable and meaningful.
    
    * Remove the email subject prefix
    * Don't write the project namespace in email subjects
    * Write the issue/merge request title in the notification email subject
    * Make the email appear as sent from the action author (the actual email address is still `gitlab@gitlab.com`)
    
    For instance, this is the notification email for a new issue comment before:
    
    > From: gitlab@gitlab.com
    > To: myemailaddress@gmail.com
    > Subject: GitLab | GitLab HQ / GitLab-Shell | New note for issue #1234
    
    And after :
    
    > From: Nick Brown <gitlab@gitlab.com>
    > To: myemailaddress@gmail.com
    > Subject: GitLab-Shell |  Add local update hook  (#1234)
    
    The recipient of the notification can easily get the gist of the message without even opening it — just by looking at how it appears in her inbox. None of the actual email addresses (From, To, Reply-to) changes, just the display name.
    
    Having a consistent subject for all notification emails sent about some resource also allow good email clients to group the discussion by thread (although grouping in Mail.app still needs some work).
    Dmitriy Zaporozhets
     
  • Main purpose is move big amount of methods from user, group, project
    models and place filtering logic in one place.
    It also fixes 500 error on group page for PostgreSQL
    
    Signed-off-by: Dmitriy Zaporozhets <dmitriy.zaporozhets@gmail.com>
    Dmitriy Zaporozhets
     

20 Feb, 2014

2 commits


19 Feb, 2014

1 commit

  • This changes the email "From" field from "gitlab@example.com" to either:
    
    * "John Doe <gitlab@example.com>" if the author of the action is known,
    * "GitLab <gitlab@example.com>" otherwise.
    
    Rationale: this allow mails to appear as if they were sent by the
    author. It appears in the mailbox more like a real discussion between
    the sender and the receiver ("John sent: we should refactor this") and
    less like a robot notifying about something.
    Pierre de La Morinerie
     

13 Feb, 2014

1 commit

  • Emails are used to associate commits with users. The emails
    are not verified and don't have to be valid email addresses. They
    are assigned on a first come, first serve basis.
    
    Notifications are sent when an email is added.
    Jason Hollingsworth
     

10 Feb, 2014

1 commit


05 Feb, 2014

3 commits


03 Feb, 2014

2 commits


31 Jan, 2014

1 commit


24 Jan, 2014

1 commit


19 Jan, 2014

1 commit


17 Jan, 2014

1 commit


16 Jan, 2014

4 commits


15 Jan, 2014

5 commits


04 Dec, 2013

1 commit


01 Dec, 2013

1 commit


20 Nov, 2013

1 commit


08 Nov, 2013

1 commit


14 Oct, 2013

1 commit


08 Oct, 2013

1 commit


26 Sep, 2013

1 commit


13 Sep, 2013

1 commit


12 Sep, 2013

1 commit


29 Aug, 2013

1 commit


28 Aug, 2013

1 commit


27 Aug, 2013

1 commit


25 Aug, 2013

1 commit

  • Any mention of Issues, MergeRequests, or Commits via GitLab-flavored markdown
    references in descriptions, titles, or attached Notes creates a back-reference
    Note that links to the original referencer. Furthermore, pushing commits with
    commit messages that match a (configurable) regexp to a project's default
    branch will close any issues mentioned by GFM in the matched closing phrase.
    If accepting a merge request would close any Issues in this way, a banner is
    appended to the merge request's main panel to indicate this.
    ash wilson
     

22 Aug, 2013

1 commit