mirror of
https://we.phorge.it/source/phorge.git
synced 2024-12-26 07:20:57 +01:00
No description
3058cae4b8
Summary: Ref T13249. See PHI1059. This allows "locked" in `maniphest.statuses` to specify that either "comments" are locked (current behavior, advisory, overridable by users with edit permission, e.g. for calming discussion on a contentious issue or putting a guard rail on things); or "edits" are locked (hard lock, only task owner can edit things). Roughly, "comments" is a soft/advisory lock. "edits" is a hard/strict lock. (I think both types of locks have reasonable use cases, which is why I'm not just making locks stronger across the board.) When "edits" are locked: - The edit policy looks like "no one" to normal callers. - In one special case, we sneak the real value through a back channel using PolicyCodex in the specific narrow case that you're editing the object. Otherwise, the policy selector control incorrectly switches to "No One". - We also have to do a little more validation around applying a mixture of status + owner transactions that could leave the task uneditable. For now, I'm allowing you to reassign a hard-locked task to someone else. If you get this wrong, we can end up in a state where no one can edit the task. If this is an issue, we could respond in various ways: prevent these edits; prevent assigning to disabled users; provide a `bin/task reassign`; uh maybe have a quorum convene? Test Plan: - Defined "Soft Locked" and "Hard Locked" statues. - "Hard Locked" a task, hit errors (trying to unassign myself, trying to hard lock an unassigned task). - Saw nice new policy guidance icon in header. {F6210362} Reviewers: amckinley Reviewed By: amckinley Maniphest Tasks: T13249 Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20165 |
||
---|---|---|
bin | ||
conf | ||
externals | ||
resources | ||
scripts | ||
src | ||
support | ||
webroot | ||
.arcconfig | ||
.arclint | ||
.arcunit | ||
.editorconfig | ||
.gitignore | ||
LICENSE | ||
NOTICE | ||
README.md |
Phabricator is a collection of web applications which help software companies build better software.
Phabricator includes applications for:
- reviewing and auditing source code;
- hosting and browsing repositories;
- tracking bugs;
- managing projects;
- conversing with team members;
- assembling a party to venture forth;
- writing stuff down and reading it later;
- hiding stuff from coworkers; and
- also some other things.
You can learn more about the project (and find links to documentation and resources) at Phabricator.org
Phabricator is developed and maintained by Phacility.
SUPPORT RESOURCES
For resources on filing bugs, requesting features, reporting security issues, and getting other kinds of support, see Support Resources.
NO PULL REQUESTS!
We do not accept pull requests through GitHub. If you would like to contribute code, please read our Contributor's Guide.
LICENSE
Phabricator is released under the Apache 2.0 license except as otherwise noted.