zulip/docs/subsystems/notifications.md

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# Notifications in Zulip
This is a design document aiming to provide context for developers
working on Zulip's email notifications and mobile push notifications
code paths. We recommend first becoming familiar with [sending
messages](../subsystems/sending-messages.md); this document expands on
the details of the email/mobile push notifications code path.
## Important corner cases
Here we name a few corner cases worth understanding in designing this
sort of notifications system:
* The **Idle Desktop Problem**: We don't want the presence of a
desktop computer at the office to eat all notifications because the
user has an "online" client that they may not have used in 3 days.
* The **Hard Disconnect Problem**: A client can lose its connection to
the Internet (or be suspended, or whatever) at any time, and this
happens routinely. We want to ensure that races where a user closes
their laptop shortly after a notifiable message is sent does not
result in the user never receiving a notification about a message
(due to the system thinking that client received it).
## The mobile/email notifications flow
As a reminder, the relevant part of the flow for sending messages is
as follows:
* `do_send_messages` is the synchronous message-sending code path,
and passing the following data in its `send_event` call:
* Data about the message's content (E.g. mentions, wildcard
mentions, and alert words) and encodes it into the `UserMessage`
table's `flags` structure, which is in turn passed into
`send_event` for each user receiving the message.
* Data about user configuration relevant to the message, such as
`push_notify_user_ids` and `stream_notify_user_ids`, are included
alongside `flags` in the per-user data structure.
* The `presence_idle_user_ids` set, containing the subset of
recipient users who are mentioned, are PM recipients, have alert
words, or otherwise would normally get a notification, but have not
interacted with a Zulip client in the last few minutes. (Users who
have generally will not receive a notification unless the
`enable_online_push_notifications` flag is enabled). This data
structure ignores users for whom the message is not notifiable,
which is important to avoid this being thousands of `user_ids` for
messages to large streams with few currently active users.
* The Tornado [event queue system](../subsystems/events-system.md)
processes that data, as well as data about each user's active event
queues, to (1) push an event to each queue needing that message and
(2) for notifiable messages, pushing an event onto the
`missedmessage_mobile_notifications` and/or `missedmessage_emails`
queues. This important message-processing logic has notable extra
logic not present when processing normal events, both for details
like splicing `flags` to customize event payloads per-user, as well.
* The Tornado system determines whether the user is "offline/idle".
Zulip's email notifications are designed to not fire when the user
is actively using Zulip to avoid spam, and this is where those
checks are implemented.
* Users in `presence_idle_user_ids` are always considered idle:
the variable name means "users who are idle because of
presence". This is how we solve the Idle Desktop Problem; users
with an idle desktop are treated the same as users who aren't
logged in for this check.
* However, that check does not handle the Hard Disconnect Problem:
if a user was present 1 minute before a message was sent, and then
closed their laptop, the user will not be in
`presence_idle_user_ids`, and so without an additional mechanism,
messages sent shortly after a user leaves would never trigger a
notification (!).
* We solve that problem by also notifying if
`receiver_is_off_zulip` returns `True`, which checks whether the user has any
current events system clients registered to receive `message`
events. This check is done immediately (handling soft disconnects,
where E.g. the user closes their last Zulip tab and we get the
`DELETE /events/{queue_id}` request).
* The `receiver_is_off_zulip` check is effectively repeated when
event queues are garbage-collected (in `missedmessage_hook`) by
looking for whether the queue being garbage-collectee was the only
one; this second check solves the Hard Disconnect Problem, resulting in
notifications for these hard-disconnect cases usually coming 10
minutes late.
* The message-edit code path has parallel logic in
`maybe_enqueue_notifications_for_message_update` for triggering
notifications in cases like a mention added during message
editing.
* The business logic for all these notification decisions made
inside Tornado has extensive automated test suites; e.g.
`test_message_edit_notifications.py` covers all the cases around
editing a message to add/remove a mention.
* We may in the future want to add some sort of system for letting
users see past notifications, to help with explaining and
debugging this system, since it has so much complexity.
* Desktop notifications are the simplest; they are implemented
client-side by the web/desktop app's logic
(`static/js/notifications.js`) inspecting the `flags` fields that
were spliced into `message` events by the Tornado system, as well as
the user's notification settings.
* The queue processors for those queues make the final determination
for whether to send a notification, and do the work to generate an
email (`zerver/lib/email_notifications.py`) or mobile
(`zerver/lib/push_notifications.py`) notification. We'll detail
this process in more detail for each system below, but it's
important to know that it's normal for a message to sit in these
queues for minutes (and in the future, possibly hours).
* Both queue processor code paths do additional filtering before
sending a notification:
* Messages that have already been marked as read by the user before
the queue processor runs never trigger a notification.
* Messages that were already deleted never trigger a notification.
* The user-level settings for whether email/mobile notifications are
disabled are rechecked, as the user may have disabled one of these
settings during the queuing period.
* The **Email notifications queue processor**, `MissedMessageWorker`,
takes care to wait for 2 minutes (hopefully in the future this will be a
configuration setting) and starts a thread to batch together multiple
messages into a single email. These features are unnecessary
for mobile push notifications, because we can live-update those
details with a future notification, whereas emails cannot be readily
updated once sent. Zulip's email notifications are styled similarly
to GitHub's email notifications, with a clean, simple design that
makes replying from an email client possible (using the [incoming
email integration](../production/email-gateway.md)).
* The **Push notifications queue processor**,
`PushNotificationsWorker`, is a simple wrapper around the
`push_notifications.py` code that actually sends the
notification. This logic is somewhat complicated by having to track
the number of unread push notifications to display on the mobile
apps' badges, as well as using the [Mobile Push Notifications
Service](../production/mobile-push-notifications.md) for self-hosted
systems.
The following important constraints are worth understanding about the
structure of the system, when thinking about changes to it:
* **Bulk database queries** are much more efficient for checking
details from the database like "which users receiving this message
are online".
* **Thousands of users**. Zulip supports thousands of users, and we
want to avoid `send_event()` pushing large amounts of per-user data
to Tornado via RabbitMQ for scalability reasons.
* **Tornado doesn't do database queries**. Because the Tornado system
is an asynchronous event-driven framework, and our Django database
library is synchronous, database queries are very expensive. So
these queries need to be done in either `do_send_messages` or the
queue processor logic. (For example, this means `presence` data
should be checked in either `do_send_messages` or the queue
processors, not in Tornado).
* **Future configuration**. Notification settings are an area that we
expect to only expand with time, with upcoming features like
following a topic (to get notifications for messages only within
that topic in a stream). There are a lot of different workflows
possible with Zulip's threading, and it's important to make it easy
for users to set up Zulip's notification to fit as many of those
workflows as possible.
* **Message editing**. Zulip supports editing messages, and that
interacts with notifications in ways that require careful handling:
Notifications should have
the latest edited content (users often fix typos 30 seconds after
sending a message), adding a mention when editing a message should
send a notification to the newly mentioned user(s), and deleting a
message should cancel any unsent notifications for it.