By default, Devise will look for views:
1. First in `views/resource/passwords/…`,
2. Then in `views/devise/passwords/…` if not found.
By moving the views to `views/devise`, we avoid having a partial in
`views/shared` that we need to include manually, and instead let Devise
do the job automatically.
Providing a query param ("locale") will enable localization. A language picker will be shown once
localization is activated. Locale is stored in a cookie "locale".
There are two cases where the draft auto-save might fail because the
user is no longer authenticated:
- The user signed-out in another tab,
- The brower quit and re-opened, so the Session cookie expired.
In both cases, the auto-save will never succeed until the user
authenticates again, so displaying a "Retry" button is cruel.
Moreover, in plus of all auto-save requests failing with a small error,
the actual hard failure only occurs after filling all the form and
trying to submit it. Then the user is redirected to the sign-in page –
but all their changes are lost.
Instead, we now redirect to the sign-in page on the first 401 error
during the auto-save, let the user sign-in, and then redirect back to
the form.
In this test, two Avis are created for each expert:
- one for the original dossier,
- one for the dossier linked to the original dossier.
When we check for a sign-up link, we should do so using the
Avis for the original dossier explicitely.
Follow-up of #5953.
Refactor the concerns with two goals:
- Getting closer from the way ActiveStorage adds its own hooks.
Usually ActiveStorage does this using an `Attachment#after_create`
hook, which then delegates to the blob to enqueue the job.
- Enqueuing each job only once. By hooking on `Attachment#after_create`,
we guarantee each job will be added only once.
We then let the jobs themselves check if they are relevant or not, and
retry or discard themselves if necessary.
We also need to update the tests a bit, because Rails'
`perform_enqueued_jobs(&block)` test helper doesn't honor the `retry_on`
clause of jobs. Instead it forwards the exception to the caller – which
makes the test fail.
Instead we use the inline version of `perform_enqueued_jobs()`, without
a block, which properly ignores errors catched by retry_on.