Changes include:
- Ensure Member.add_user is not called directly when not necessary
- New GroupMember.add_users_to_group to have the same abstraction level as for Project
- Refactor Member.add_user to take a source instead of an array of members
- Fix Rubocop offenses
- Always use Project#add_user instead of project.team.add_user
- Factorize users addition as members in Member.add_users_to_source
- Make access_level a keyword argument in GroupMember.add_users_to_group and ProjectMember.add_users_to_projects
- Destroy any requester before adding them as a member
- Improve the way we handle access requesters in Member.add_user
Instead of removing the requester and creating a new member,
we now simply accepts their access request. This way, they will
receive a "access request granted" email.
- Fix error that was previously silently ignored
- Stop raising when access level is invalid in Member, let Rails validation do their work
Signed-off-by: Rémy Coutable <remy@rymai.me>
In the previous setup the GroupsFinder class had two distinct tasks:
1. Finding the projects user A could see
2. Finding the projects of user A that user B could see
Task two was actually handled outside of the GroupsFinder (in the
UsersController) by restricting the returned list of groups to those the
viewed user was a member of. Moving all this logic into a single finder
proved to be far too complex and confusing, hence there are now two
finders:
* GroupsFinder: for finding groups a user can see
* JoinedGroupsFinder: for finding groups that user A is a member of,
restricted to either public groups or groups user B can also see.