This is a dependency of people.js. We include the stubs to prepare it
for a conversion to TypeScript.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
Zulip already has integrations for server-side Sentry integration;
however, it has historically used the Zulip-specific `blueslip`
library for monitoring browser-side errors. However, the latter sends
errors to email, as well optionally to an internal `#errors` stream.
While this is sufficient for low volumes of users, and useful in that
it does not rely on outside services, at higher volumes it is very
difficult to do any analysis or filtering of the errors. Client-side
errors are exceptionally noisy, with many false positives due to
browser extensions or similar, so determining real real errors from a
stream of un-grouped emails or messages in a stream is quite
difficult.
Add a client-side Javascript sentry integration. To provide useful
backtraces, this requires extending the pre-deploy hooks to upload the
source-maps to Sentry. Additional keys are added to the non-public
API of `page_params` to control the DSN, realm identifier, and sample
rates.
This lets us simplify the long-ish ‘../../static/js’ paths, and will
remove the need for the ‘zrequire’ wrapper.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Corepack manages multiple per-project version of Yarn and PNPM, which
means we have to maintain less installation code, and could help us
switch away from Yarn 1 without making the system unusable for
development of other Yarn 1 projects.
https://nodejs.org/api/corepack.html
The Unicode spaces in the timerender test resulted from an ICU
upgrade: https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/45068.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This script pulls from our previously custom-written emoji strings
and fills in the rest from CLDR. It also removes 4 custom emoji which
collide with some of the new CLDR names (they will now just be called
by their CLDR name).
Now that we can assume Python 3.6+, we can use the
email.headerregistry module to replace hacky manual email address
parsing.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Set the default_language as cookie and reload the page so that
the spectator can immediately see the language change in effect.
We can reload the page forcefully for spectators since there is
no chance of any work being lost. It is possible that the spectator
may lose the selected message on doing so.
This requires a new dependency, to be able to set cookies from
frontend JavaScript.
Fixes#21961
This PR changes the library used for panning and zooming in the lightbox
module from timmywil/panzoom to avanka/panzoom.
The original (timmywil) version of the library contains a bug where if
you have a high resolution touchpad and Firefox and you zoom in and out
repeatedly on an image, the image may drift. avanka/panzoom does not
appear to display this behavior.
Restores the behaviour from before 5f83bc5cfe, where clicking
outside the image closes the lightbox, primarily by way of swapping
out the panzoom library.
Fixes: #21163.
This PR changes how the Pan & Zoom feature of images displayed in the
attachment lightbox are handled.
The existing method of using a canvas element is replaced by the Panzoom
library (timmywil/panzoom). This library is lightweight and has 0
transitive dependencies.
This fixes#20759 where the issue is that the viewport of a zoomed image
was not expanding to fill the available space on the page. Switching to
this new library also solves several other UX issues:
* Images are no longer blurred when in Pan & Zoom mode.
* The zoom behavior itself uses focal point zooming: zooming occurs
where the cursor is on the image instead of at the center of the
image, reducing the need for extra panning.
* CSS transitions are used for a more visually pleasing experience
when switching images, toggling zoom off, etc.
* The library has the potential to open other file types which
leaves that option open for us in the future.
We add postcss-import for night_mode.css only. This plugin inlines
the imports of external files, instead of letting the file go via
our usual webpack toolchain.
We do this so that we can use the postcss-prefixwrap plugin to scope
the third-party CSS properly and use it inside our night-mode class.
Fixes#10607.
[anders@zulip.com: Replace postcss-wrap with postcss-prefixwrap.]
Co-authored-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Along with the extraction, we do some simplifications of inserting
text in compose too. This same function can now be used in
compose formatting popover too.
We use "text-field-edit", which has good cross-browser `undo` /
`redo` support, to do the text replace for us instead of writing
that logic ourselves.