Extend the list of users that have to be notified when a message is
changed, so that in addition to users who have a UserMessage row, any
users who subscribed later to a stream with history public to
subscribers will also get the update.
Fixes: #8750.
This adds experimental support in /register for sending key
statistical data on the last 1000 private messages that the user is a
participant in. Because it's experimental, we require developers to
request it explicitly in production (we don't use these data yet in
the webapp, and it likely carries some perf cost).
We expect this to be extremely helpful in initializing the mobile app
user experience for showing recent private message conversations.
See the code comments, but this has been heavily optimized to be very
efficient and do all the filtering work at the database layer so that
we minimize network transit with the database.
Fixes#11944.
Previously, we had some expensive-to-calculate keys in
zulip_default_context, especially around enabled authentication
backends, which in total were a significant contributor to the
performance of various logged-out pages. Now, these keys are only
computed for the login/registration pages where they are needed.
This is a moderate performance optimization for the loading time of
many logged-out pages.
Closes#11929.
With the previous commit, fixes#1836.
As specified in the issue above, we make
get_email_gateway_message_string_from_address raise an exception if
it doesn't recognise the email gateway address pattern. Then, we make
appropriate adjustments in the codepaths which call this function.
These functions don't really belong in actions.py, so we move them out,
into email_mirror_helpers.py. They can't go directly into
email_mirror.py or we'd get circular imports resulting in ImportError.
The hope is that by having a shorter list of initial streams, it'll
avoid some potential confusion confusion about the value of topics.
At the very least, having 5 streams each with 1 topic was not a good
way to introduce Zulip.
This commit minimizes changes to the message content in
`send_initial_realm_messages` to keep the diff readable. Future commits will
reshape the content.
There were several problems with the old format:
* The sender was not necessarily the sender; it was the person who did
the deletion (which could be an organization administrator)
* It didn't include the ID of the sender, just the email address.
* It didn't include the recipient ID, instead having a semi-malformed
recipient_type_id under the weird name recipient_user_ids.
Since nothing was relying on the old behavior, we can just fix the
event structure.
Closes#2420
We add rate limiting (max X emails withing Y seconds per realm) to the
email mirror. By creating RateLimitedRealmMirror class, inheriting from
RateLimitedObject, and rate_limit_mirror_by_realm function, following a
mechanism used by rate_limit_user, we're able to have this
implementation mostly rely on the already existing, and proven over
time, rate_limiter.py code. The rules are configurable in settings.py in
RATE_LIMITING_MIRROR_REALM_RULES, analogically to RATE_LIMITING_RULES.
Rate limit verification happens in the MirrorWorker in
queue_processors.py. We don't rate limit missed message emails, as due
to using one time addresses, they're not a spam threat.
test_mirror_worker is adapted to the altered MirrorWorker code and a new
test - test_mirror_worker_rate_limiting is added in test_queue_worker.py
to provide coverage for these changes.
We clean up test_mirror_worker for more readability, as well as make it
verify that mirror_email gets called the correct amount of times and use
a correct rcpt_to address, so that the test doesn't fail when some
verification of the address is added in the following commits
implementing rate limiting in the email mirror.
Fixes#9840.
Old addresses caused bugs in some cases with non-latin characters in
stream names (see issue number above). We switch to using django's
slugify helper function to convert stream names to full ascii, while
also getting rid of problematic non-alphanumeric characters, in a
reasonable way. See Django's documentation for slugify to see more about
how this function works.
Tests extended by tabbott to cover cases where we do end up with ascii.
To prepare for changing how the stream name gets encoded into mirror
email addresses while making sure old addresses keep working, we ignore
the stream_name part when receiving emails into the mirror and we only
look at the email_token to identify into which stream to mirror the
email.
See the comment, but this is a significant performance optimization
for all of our pages using common_context, because this code path is
called more than a dozen times (recursively) by common_context.
We never intended to render them for this use case as the result would
not look good, and now we have a convenient bugdown option for
controlling this behavior.
Since we're not storing the markdown rendering anywhere, there's
conveniently no data migration required.
Fixes#11889.
This renames references to user avatars, bot avatars, or organization
icons to profile pictures. The string in the UI are updated,
in addition to the help files, comments, and documentation. Actual
variable/function names, changelog entries, routes, and s3 buckets are
left as-is in order to avoid introducing bugs.
Fixes#11824.
Follow up on 92dc363. This modifies the ScheduledEmail model
and send_future_email to properly support multiple recipients.
Tweaked by tabbott to add some useful explanatory comments and fix
issues with the migration.
Apparently, our invalid realm error page had HTTP status 200, which
could be confusing and in particular broken our mobile app's error
handling for this case.
When soft deactivation is run for in "auto" mode (no emails are
specified and all users inactive for specified number of days are
deactivated), catch-up is also run in the "auto" mode if
AUTO_CATCH_UP_SOFT_DEACTIVATED_USERS is True.
Automatically catching up soft-deactivated users periodically would
ensure a good user experience for returning users, but on some servers
we may want to turn off this option to save on some disk space.
Fixes#8858, at least for the default configuration, by eliminating
the situation where there are a very large number of messages to recover.
A user who has been soft deactivated for a long time might have 10Ks of message
history that was "soft deactivated". It might take a minute or more to add
UserMessage rows for all of these messages, causing timeouts. So, we paginate
the creation of these UserMessage rows.
This logic for passing through whether the user was logged in never
worked, because we were trying to read the client.
Fix this, and add tests to ensure it never breaks again.
Restructured by tabbott to have completely different code with the
same intent.
Fixes#11802.
Previously, the LDAP authentication model ignored the realm-level
settings for who can join a realm. This was sort of reasonable at the
time, because the original LDAP auth was an SSO solution that didn't
allow multiple realms, and so one could fully configure authentication
settings on the LDAP side. But now that we allow multiple realms with
the LDAP backend, one could easily imagine wanting different
restrictions on them, and so it makes sense to add this enforcement.
This field is primarily intended to support avoiding displaying the
"more topics" feature in new organizations and streams, where we might
know that all messages in the stream are already available in the
browser.
Based on original work by Roman Godov, and significantly modified by
tabbott.
The second migration involved here could be expensive on Zulip Cloud,
but is unlikely to be an issue on other servers.
The actual bug in #11791 was caused by code reverted in
3ed85f4cd7, so technically #11791 is
already fixed. However, it makes sense to add tests to ensure that it
doesn't regress in the future as part of closing out the issue.
Fixes#11791.
Apparently, our new validator for stream color having a valid format
incorrectly handled colors that had duplicate characters in them.
(This is caused in part by the spectrum.js logic automatically
converting #ffff00 to #ff0, which our validator rejected). Given that
we had old stream colors in the #ff0 format in our database anyway for
legacy, there's no benefit to banning these colors.
In the future, we could imagine standardizing the format, but doing so
will require also changing the frontend to submit colors only in the
6-character format.
Fixes an issue reported in
https://github.com/zulip/zulip/issues/11845#issuecomment-471417073
Addresses point 2 of #10612. We use a regex to detect if a form
of FWD indicator is present at the beginning of the subject, which
means the message has been forwarded.
remove_quotations argument is added to a couple of functions where
it's necessary.
In filter_footer, the criteria for a line to be a possible beginning
of a footer is changed to line.strip() == "--", instead of
line.strip().startswith("--"), because the former would remove
quotations from plaintext emails. This change makes sense, because
RFC 3676 specifies ""-- " as the separator line between the body
and the signature of a message":
https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3676
We remove the 'subject' argument of process_stream_message and make
subject processing happen inside the function, as it's a more
appropriate place than the general process_message function and is
needed to have a good way of disabling removing quotations in forwarded
emails sent into the mirror.
This used to have a single function test_email_subject_stripping which
would run through a sizeable list of example subjects from subjects.json
fixture, form an email with each subject, send it to the email mirror
and check if the resulting stream message has a correctly stripped
topic. That took too much time, because we run through the entire
process_message and most_recent_message codepaths a lot of times.
We change the way of testing to:
1. Ensure process_message applies subject stripping (only need to run
process_message twice here)
2. Test the strip_from_subject function separately, on all the example
from the subjects.json fixtures. This is very fast.
Some urls which end with image file extensions (eg .jpg) may link to
html pages. This adds handling for linx.li, wikipedia.org and
pasteboard.co. If it is possible, we redirect to the actual image url
otherwise we do not attempt to render it as an image.
Fixes#10438.
Fixes part 3 of #10612. When sending an email to the email mirror to a
stream address, if "+show-sender" is added in the address, the stream
message will now include "From: <sender>" at the top.
The test_events system was in several tests using get_realm to fetch a
realm object, rather than accessing self.user_profile.realm. This
created subtle problems where we were neither directly editing nor
refreshing the `realm` object associated with our UserProfile object
from the database after our the `do_*` methods.
The payoff for this is we can update the previously confused
`do_change_icon_source` test to actually change the state and have the
correct result.
This reverts commit ff90c0101c but keeps
the test cases added for reference.
This was reverted because it was both not a clean solution and created
other realm filters bugs involving dashes (etc.).
Earlier the behavior was to raise an exception thereby stopping the
whole sync. Now we log an error message and skip the field. Also
fixes the `query_ldap` command to report missing fields without
error.
Fixes: #11780.
This fixes an issue where invalid emoji name prevents following
emojis from rendering.
This reverts the code change in
8842349629, while still passing the
tests added in that commit (it seems the original commit had
misdiagnosed an ordering bug and thus introduced this issue).
Fixes: #11770.
The night logo synchronization on the settings page was perfect, but
the actual display logic had a few problems:
* We were including the realm_logo in context_processors, even though
it is only used in home.py.
* We used different variable names for the templating in navbar.html
than anywhere else the codebase.
* The behavior that the night logo would default to the day logo if
only one was uploaded was not correctly implemented for the navbar
position, either in the synchronization for updates code or the
logic in the navbar.html templates.
This commit leverages the ahocorasick algorithm to build a set of user_ids
that have their alert_words present in the message. It runs in linear time
of the order of length of the input message as opposed to number of
alert_words. This is after building a ahocorasick Automaton which runs
in O(number of alert_words in entire realm) which is usually cached.
This fixes an issue where blank lines between blocks were causing
auto-numbering of list to stop before the blank line resulting
in two separate numbered list instead of one.
Edited significantly by tabbott to explain the tricky details in the
comments.
Fixes: #11651.
Add `max_int_size` parameter to `to_non_negative_int()` in
decorator.py so it will be able to validate that the integer doesn't
exceed the integer maximum limit.
Fixes#11451
This is important for situations such as with our Zapier app,
where the requesting user may be a bot that would like to access
its owner's subscriptions.
Tweaked by tabbott to eliminate the 2^N growth of cases in
do_get_streams.
tests now ran in 7.649s from 9.297s. And this test works just as well
with 3 bots, since only 3 database queries with 3 bots confirms we're
not doing linear queries in the number of bots in the organization.
We want to use the baseline features of bugdown, but not fancy things
like inline URL previews, since the whole structure of stream
descriptions is to have a single-line thing supporting some
formatting.
The migration part of this change fixes a bug encountered by some
organizations upgrading from older versions of Zulip.
This allows us to have some features using bugdown rendering where
inline image previews will not be rendered (which would be problematic
for e.g. stream descriptions).
Guest users will just get an empty list of default streams; we also
hide the "Default streams" organization view from the guest users UI.
This is for consistency with not providing guest users the full list
of streams in an organization.
Fixing this involves fixing the backend to handle unchanged field
submissions of the Zoom credentials without trying to re-validate the
credentials (for performance) as well as to fetch the already-sent
secret.
Visually, #zoom_help_text acts like
.organization-settings-parent div:first-of-type when the Zoom option
is selected, but isn't treated as such.
No visual change with the #google_hangouts_domain change; just there to make
the code more readable/defensible.
When a bunch of messages with active notifications are all read at
once -- e.g. by the user choosing to mark all messages, or all in a
stream, as read, or just scrolling quickly through a PM conversation
-- there can be a large batch of this information to convey. Doing it
in a single GCM/FCM message is better for server congestion, and for
the device's battery.
The corresponding client-side logic is in zulip/zulip-mobile#3343 .
Existing clients today only understand one message ID at a time; so
accommodate them by sending individual GCM/FCM messages up to an
arbitrary threshold, with the rest only as a batch.
Also add an explicit test for this logic. The existing tests
that happen to cause this function to run don't exercise the
last condition, so without a new test `--coverage` complains.
We do not anticipate our UI for showing stream descriptions looking
reasonable for multi-line descriptions, so we should just ban creating
them.
Given the frontend changes, multi-line descriptions are only likely to
show up from importing content from other tools, in which case
replacing newlines with spaces is cleaner than the alternative.
This change should help people discover to distinguish
silent mentions in text as a part of Zulip syntax while
differentiating them from regular mentions.
ACCOUNT_ACTIVATION_DAYS doesn't seems to be used anywhere.
INVITATION_LINK_VALIDITY_DAYS seems to do it's job currently.
(It was only ever used in very early Zulip commits).
Since da8f4bc0e back in August, this control flow has caused
`flags.active_mobile_push_notification` to be cleared if we don't send
these `remove` messages at all, and if we send them directly to GCM...
but not if we send them via the Zulip notification bouncer.
As a result, on a server configured to send `remove` notification-messages
via the bouncer, we accumulate "active" messages and never clear them.
If the user then does `mark_all_as_read`, we end up sending a `remove`
for each of those messages again, and all in one giant burst. We've
seen puzzling bursts of hundreds of removals pass through the bouncer
since turning on removals on chat.zulip.org; it's likely many of them
are caused by this bug.
This issue was made more acute with f4478aad5, which unconditionally
enabled removals.
Test added by tabbott.
The client-side fix to make these not a problem was in release
16.2.96, of 2018-08-22. We've been sending them from the
development community server chat.zulip.org since 2018-11-29.
We started forcing clients to upgrade with commit fb7bfbe9a,
deployed 2018-12-05 to zulipchat.com.
(The mobile app unconditionally makes a request to a route on
zulipchat.com to check for this kind of forced upgrade, so that
applies to mobile users of any Zulip server.)
So at this point it's long past safe for us to unconditionally
send these. Hardwire the old `SEND_REMOVE_PUSH_NOTIFICATIONS`
setting to True, and simplify it out.