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.
For internal stream messages, most of the time, we have access to
a Stream object. For the few corner cases where we don't, it is a
much cleaner approach to have a separate function that accepts a
stream name than having one multi-option helper that accepts both
names and objects.
If the caller has access to a Stream object, it is wasteful to
query a database for a stream by ID or name. In addition, not
having to go through stream names eliminates various classes of
possible bugs involved with getting a Stream object back.
A key part of this is the new helper, get_user_by_delivery_email. Its
verbose name is important for clarity; it should help avoid blind
copy-pasting of get_user (which we'll also want to rename).
Unfortunately, it requires detailed understanding of the context to
figure out which one to use; each is used in about half of call sites.
Another important note is that this PR doesn't migrate get_user calls
in the tests except where not doing so would cause the tests to fail.
This probably deserves a follow-up refactor to avoid bugs here.
This fixes a lot of spammy output of the form:
2018-11-27 17:46:48.279 INFO [zerver.lib.push_notifications] Sending push notification to user 46
when running populate_db, which is both confusing (since we're not
actually sending push notifications here) and spammy.
random_api_key, the function we use to generate random tokens for API
keys, has been moved to zerver/lib/utils.py because it's used in more
parts of the codebase (apart from user creation), and having it in
zerver/lib/create_user.py was prone to cyclic dependencies.
The function has also been renamed to generate_api_key to have an
imperative name, that makes clearer what it does.
Now reading API keys from a user is done with the get_api_key wrapper
method, rather than directly fetching it from the user object.
Also, every place where an action should be done for each API key is now
using get_all_api_keys. This method returns for the moment a single-item
list, containing the specified user's API key.
This commit is the first step towards allowing users have multiple API
keys.
This renames Realm.restricted_to_domain field to
emails_restricted_to_domains, for greater clarity as to what it does
just from seeing the setting name, without having to look it up.
Fixes part of #10042.
As detailed in the documentation changes, this simplifies the
development workflow for doing UI work on the /stats pages.
The cost is a ~10% increase the time it takes to run `populate_db`,
which doesn't happen very often (and for most purposes manifests as a
1% increase in the time it takes to rebuild the database from scratch).
The only changes visible at the AST level, checked using
https://github.com/asottile/astpretty, are
zerver/lib/test_fixtures.py:
'\x1b\\[(1|0)m' ↦ '\\x1b\\[(1|0)m'
'\\[[X| ]\\] (\\d+_.+)\n' ↦ '\\[[X| ]\\] (\\d+_.+)\\n'
which is fine because re treats '\\x1b' and '\\n' the same way as
'\x1b' and '\n'.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
This reflects the changes to the default URL publicly
displayed to the user. It also changes the default
URL of the default test server outgoing webhook, which
prevented the test server flaskbotrc from working out
of the box.
We essentially stop running create_realm_internal_bots during
every provisioing and move its operations to run from populate db.
In fact to speed things up a bit we actually make populate db call the
funcs which create_realm_internal_bots calls behind the scenes.
Fixes: #9467.
Previously, the stream colors index i was accidentally a function only
of the user, so each user got the same color for all their streams.
This should provide a lot nicer-looking development environment
experience.
Makes announce stream `is_announcement_only` for the dev db for easier
manual testing. The default value for `is_announcement_only` in
`bulk_create_streams` is False.
We flip the Stream "Rome" to be a web public stream. Also we add
attribute is_web_public in various stream dicts and in the
bulk_create_streams function of bulk_create.py responsible for
default stream creation in dev environment.
Apparently, this bot account was not properly being tagged as an API
super user in the test database; resulting in incorrect behavior if we
tried to send to a private stream in a test.
(Note that there seems to also be a similar issue in production, that
we don't understand the cause of; that is unrelated).
Issue #2088 asked for a wrapper to be created for
`create_stream_if_needed` (called `ensure_stream`) for the 25 times that
`create_stream_if_needed` is called and ignores whether the stream was
created. This commit replaces relevant occurences of
`create_stream_if_needed` with `ensure_stream`, including imports.
The changes weren't significant enough to add any tests or do any
additional manual testing.
The refactoring intended to make the API easier to use in most cases.
The majority of uses of `create_stream_if_needed` ignored the second
parameter.
Fixes: #2088.
To ensure that we have some basic data for custom profile settings,
in the `populate_db` data set, remove `options['test_suite']` check
for adding intial custom profile data.
This commit migrates realm emoji to be addressed by their `id` rather
than their name. This fixes a long standing issue which was causing
an error on uploading an emoji with same name as a deactivated realm
emoji.
Fixes: #6977.
This commit adds a generic function called check_send_webhook_message
that does the following:
* If a stream is specified in the webhook URL, it sends a stream
message, otherwise sends a PM to the owner of the bot.
* In the case of a stream message, if a custom topic is specified
in the webhook URL, it uses that topic as the subject of the
stream message.
Also, note that we need not test this anywhere except for the
helloworld webhook. Since helloworld is our default example for
webhooks, it is here to stay and it made sense that tests for a
generic function such as check_send_webhook_message be tested
with an actual generic webhook!
Fixes#8607.
This makes it easier to work on features that depend on messages
having been sent in the past (E.g. the date parts of recipient bars).
The new feature only works with --threads=1; since with the ~100
default messages that populate_db generates, the multi-threaded
feature shouldn't have significant performance impact (and it would be
tricky to make increasing timestamps work with the multi-threaded
model), it's reasonable to just set the default number of threads to 1
for now and have this timestamp-spreading feature only supported with
--threads=1.
Fixes#8277.
We'd rather this work be just executed immediately, rather than
queued, since queued events can confuse the queue workers if the
database is dropped and recreated repeatedly.
The 'simple' realm was super broken and confusing for new users. We
should replace this with having an easy way to make a new realm in
development, done properly.
Fixes#6116.
While it might be useful to have created welcome-bot earlier in a
certain sense, it's definitely not a good idea in this populate_db
implementation, because doing so threw off the random initial
assignment of users to streams and thus broke the casper tests.
This makes the standard checkboxes 7% darker and makes the disabled
ones about 12% darker + 7% darker than they were before, to
increase visibility.
Fixes: #6331.
Create a generator script to pull lines from a play, enhancing
random lines with emoji, Markdown and other flair.
With numerous contributions from Rein Zustand and Tim Abbott to finish
the project.
Fixes: #1666.
This system hasn't been in active use for several years, and had some
problems with it's design. So it makes sense to just remove it to declutter
the codebase.
Fixes#5655.
Once we implement org_type-specific features, it'll be easy to change a
corporate realm to a community realm, but hard to go the other way. The main
difference (the main thing that makes migrating from a community realm to a
corporate realm hard) is that you'd have to make everyone sign another terms
of service.
Change `from django.utils.timezone import now` to
`from django.utils import timezone`.
This is both because now() is ambiguous (could be datetime.datetime.now),
and more importantly to make it easier to write a lint rule against
datetime.datetime.now().
This fixes an issue where one would get errors of the form:
`ValueError: unsupported pickle protocol: 3`
in a `run-dev.py` server run against Python 2 if you ran `provision`.
Provision currently runs `populate_db` with Python 3, storing Python 3
based data in memcached, which then can't be read by Python 2.
The realm with string_id of "simple" just has three users
named alice, bob, and cindy for now. It is useful for testing
scenarios where realms don't have special zulip.com exception
handling.
This old helper has for years been used only by populate_db, and got
buggy (as of a recent refactoring). So we just call do_send_messages
directly instead.
Fixes the provisioning error we currently get in Travis CI.
Finishes the refactoring started in c1bbd8d. The goal of the refactoring is
to change the argument to get_realm from a Realm.domain to a
Realm.string_id. The steps were
* Add a new function, get_realm_by_string_id.
* Change all calls to get_realm to use get_realm_by_string_id instead.
* Remove get_realm.
* (This commit) Rename get_realm_by_string_id to get_realm.
Part of a larger migration to remove the Realm.domain field entirely.
First step in cleaning up populate_db.create_streams and
bulk_create.bulk_create_streams. Part of a series of commits to remove
Realm.domain from populate_db.
We are prone to case-sensitivity bugs, so I added AARON and ZOE.
Also, for good measure, I insert them in non-alphabetical order
to try to drive out bugs from non-consistent sorting of user ids.
This adds a couple new tools that can be used to determine whether a
particular change in Zulip's backend markdown processor would impact
the rendering of historical messages, without a human actually looking
at the message content. This is a useful way to verify whether a
change to our markdown syntax is likely to create problems.
[commit message and code tweaked by tabbott]
Previously, we set restrict_to_domain and invite_required differently
depending on whether we were setting up a community or a corporate
realm. Setting restrict_to_domain requires validation on the domain of the
user's email, which is messy in the web realm creation flow, since we
validate the user's email before knowing whether the user intends to set up
a corporate or community realm. The simplest solution is to have the realm
creation flow impose as few restrictions as possible (community defaults),
and then worry about restrict_to_domain etc. after the user is already in.
We set the test suite to explictly use the old defaults, since several of
the tests depend on the old defaults.
This commit adds a database migration.
Does a database migration to rename Realm.subdomain to
Realm.string_id, and makes Realm.subdomain a property. Eventually,
Realm.string_id will replace Realm.domain as the handle by which we
retrieve Realm objects.
This is a preliminary step towards eliminating the realm.domain field
in favor of realm.subdomain. Includes a database migration to create
these for existing realms.
The command to render old messages now looks for all messages
not matching the bugdown version, and it no longer directly calls
into model code. We should still be extremely cautious about
using this code.
This adds support for running a Zulip production server with each
realm on its own unique subdomain, e.g. https://realm_name.example.com.
This patch includes a ton of important features:
* Configuring the Zulip sesion middleware to issue cookier correctly
for the subdomains case.
* Throwing an error if the user tries to visit an invalid subdomain.
* Runs a portion of the Casper tests with REALMS_HAVE_SUBDOMAINS
enabled to test the subdomain signup process.
* Updating our integrations documentation to refer to the current subdomain.
* Enforces that users can only login to the subdomain of their realm
(but does not restrict the API; that will be tightened in a future commit).
Note that toggling settings.REALMS_HAVE_SUBDOMAINS on a live server is
not supported without manual intervention (the main problem will be
adding "subdomain" values for all the existing realms).
[substantially modified by tabbott as part of merging]
[Substantially revised by tabbott]
This probably still has some bugs in it, but having mostly complete
annotations for models.py will help a lot for the annotations folks
are adding to other files.
As documented in https://github.com/zulip/zulip/issues/441, Guardian
has quite poor performance, and in fact almost 50% of the time spent
running the Zulip backend test suite on my laptop was inside Guardian.
As part of this migration, we also clean up the old API_SUPER_USERS
variable used to mark EMAIL_GATEWAY_BOT as an API super user; now that
permission is managed entirely via the database.
When rebasing past this commit, developers will need to do a
`manage.py migrate` in order to apply the migration changes before the
server will run again.
We can't yet remove Guardian from INSTALLED_APPS, requirements.txt,
etc. in this release, because otherwise the reverse migration won't
work.
Fixes#441.
Previously, the UserProfile objects were created in the order
generated by a Set, which meant tests would randomly start failing if
the code that runs before this part of populate_db changed (and thus
caused the Set object used to pass users into bulk_create_users to
have a different order when enumerated).
This fixes the issue in two ways -- one by sorting the users inside
bulk_create_users, and second by attaching subscriptions to users
based on a deterministic ordering.
get_realm is better in two key ways:
* It uses memcached to fetch the data from the cache and thus is faster.
* It does a case-insensitive query and thus is more safe.
This commit loses some indexes, unique constraints etc. that were
manually added by the old migrations. I plan to add them to a new
migration in a subsequent commit.
(imported from commit 4bcbf06080a7ad94788ac368385eac34b54623ce)