The code paths for deleting a dossier were different, depending on
whether the dossier was deleted by the user, or from the Manager.
This commit unifies the two code paths into one.
This has the effect of:
- An operation log is now recorded when an user deletes its own dossier;
- Gestionnaires are now notified even when the dossier is deleted from
the Manager;
- The `support:delete_user_account` task now requires the email address
of the author.
An Admin may archive a procedure to make it unavailable to
the general public, but before all dossiers are handled. In this case,
the messagerie needs to be available.
Fix#4089
Replaces
> La valeur du champ doit être un nombre entier (sans chiffres après
> la virgule)
by
> La valeur du champ « Nombre de parents » doit être un nombre entier
> (sans chiffres après la virgule)
Commentaires bu Users and Gestionnaire need the messagerie to be available; Automatic system Commentaires can be created anytime.
This reintroduces Commentaire validation that was introduced in #3979 and disabled in #4018
* Use the existing Dossier#messagerie_available? method
* Raise when attempting to build a Commentaire if not messagerie_available?
* Disable the Messagerie form if not messagerie_available?
* Add tests :)
* Tweak the Horaires formatting while we’re here.
Using an “inactive” Follow scope, similar to the “active” scope.
(I was tempted to use a default_scope, but this breaks when trying to `unscope` it in associations.)
Displaying separate estimations for en_construction and en_instruction
doesn't really make sense for the users: they want to know how
long it is going to take overall, not the petty details of our workflow.
The `nearing_end_of_retention` test creates a `just_expired_dossier` “six months ago”, which is 29 Oct 2018. The autumn DST change was on October 28; this is the first time this test runs under these conditions. We workaround the time offset by creating the dossier one hour earlier.
This is technically a workaround, not a fix: the date arithmetics in `nearing_end_of_retention` are probably wrong. It looks like it’s comparing intervals, which seems error-prone, while it should be comparing dates. For now, I’m just making the tests pass.
When the time computations are done accross a Daylight Saving Time
change, they may be off by one hour.
It doesn't matter, as the estimated delay is counted in days, not
hours.