We set the class name to be same as the one used in move topic
to stream popover so that a single class can be used to control
the look of both dropdowns.
The commit:
1. Adds the new field as nullable.
2. Adds code that'll create new Confirmation with the field set
correctly.
3. For verifying validity of Confirmation object this still uses the old
logic in get_object_from_key() to keep things functioning until we
backfill the old objects in the next step.
Thus this commit is deployable. Next we'll have a commit to run a
backfill migration.
An integer or no argument is supposed to be passed.
These weren't caught by mypy because booleans are integers in python,
see https://github.com/python/mypy/issues/1757
Extracted by tabbott from the original pull request, with additional
changes to document the surprising margin-top in our current
implementation and avoid a bit of unnecessary CSS.
On our Markdown help docs, ordered lists that aren't encapsulated
in tabs don't have custom CSS that tells them how to display
themselves with proper indentation. An example of a doc that has
this issue is /help/saml-authentication. This commit adds some CSS
that targets such ordered lists.
This will be used to check if the narrow being requested by
spectator requires authentication without requesting the server.
Having this check locally, makes this process look snappy to
the user and doesn't result in 404s in the browser log.
For spectators, without sending any request to the server,
check locally if the hash requires authentication or which
shows a feature that requires authentication;
if it does, we show login_to_access modal to the user.
We will use this modal for any narrow / hash or other UI element that
requires an actual account to use, to provide something reasonable to
occur when a user clicks on those things.
aioapns already has a retry loop. By default it retries forever on
ConnectionError and ConnectionClosed, so our own retry loop would
never be reached. Remove our retry loop, and configure aioapns to
retry APNS_MAX_RETRIES times on ConnectionError like the previous
version did. It still retries forever on ConnectionClosed; that’s not
configurable but probably fine.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This utilizes the generic `BaseNotes` we added for multipurpose
patching. With this migration as an example, we can further support
more types of notes to replace the monkey-patching approach we have used
throughout the codebase for type safety.
The motive of adding `BaseNotes` was to support monokey patching
temporary attributes to objects (such as `.trigger` on `Message`) when
working on the django-stubs migration in #18777.
This way, we no longer have to manually keep the upload path code in
sync with the upload path code in zerver/lib/upload.py.
This was originally suggested in
https://github.com/zulip/zulip/pull/19478#issuecomment-911479530.
This change fixes a bug when importing into a server using the local
file uploads backend, where the `import_realm.py` copy wasn't using
our standard 256-directory approach to avoid putting too many files in
a single directory.
de04f0ad67 changed now notifications recipients were calculated, in
a manner that caused them to be sent when they should not have been.
ac70a2d2e1 was supposed to resolve this, but appears to have been
insufficient, as all three of these cases have been observed to still
happen.
Add safety checks immediately before notification, until the
underlying logic error can be sussed out.
This information can be gleaned from the stacktrace, but making it
explicit in the stringification makes it much easier to differentiate
types of errors at a glance, particularly in Sentry.
We move the emojiset_choices method from UserProfile class to
UserBaseSettings class because emojiset_choices exists in
UserBaseSettings class and this would be used for realm-level
settings as well along with existing user-level settings.
We rename the user group in the example for 'GET /user_groups'
with is_system_group=True, to be 'Moderators' as is_system_group
will be set to True for role-based user groups only.
The default is kept as no retries. Since retries with exponential
backoff are a good thing to make easy, the int form defaults to
setting a backoff_factor.
Unfortunately, urllib3 retry backoff does not implement jitter.
Switching this to use the `backoff` library[1] rather than urllib3's
native Retry is left as future extension.
[1] https://pypi.org/project/backoff/
This adds the X-Smokescreen-Role header to proxy connections, to track
usage from various codepaths, and enforces a timeout. Timeouts were
kept consistent with their previous values, or set to 5s if they had
none previously.
We ideally will also add a /help/ page explaining these with an
example, but it seems appropriate to make the labels frame it around
what sort of emails we actually intend to send (newsletters with
updates about Zulip, not a "drip campaign").
This commits removes some unnecessary checks for `self.md.zulip_message`,
which were put there historically, as earlier we used to add the additional
properties like mentions_user_ids, alert_words, etc. to Message dict
only. These were later moved to MessageRenderingResult class in commit
75cea329b but the checks weren't removed.
This is important because while rendering the messages imported from
other chat tools (like Rocket.Chat), the Message dict is not passed to
the markdown, due to which the checks for `self.md.zerver_message` fails
and hence, things like user mentions, stream/topic mentions are not
rendered in the imported messages properly.
The `user_activity_interval` worker calls:
```python3
last = UserActivityInterval.objects.filter(user_profile=user_profile).order_by("-end")[0]
`````
Which results in a query like:
```sql
SELECT "zerver_useractivityinterval"."id", "zerver_useractivityinterval"."user_profile_id", "zerver_useractivityinterval"."start", "zerver_useractivityinterval"."end" FROM "zerver_useractivityinterval" WHERE "zerver_useractivityinterval"."user_profile_id" = 12345 ORDER BY "zerver_useractivityinterval"."end" DESC LIMIT 1
```
For users which have at least one matching row, this results in a
query plan like:
```
Limit (cost=0.56..711.38 rows=1 width=24) (actual time=0.078..0.078 rows=1 loops=1)
-> Index Scan Backward using zerver_useractivityinterval_7f021a14 on zerver_useractivityinterval (cost=0.56..1031399.46 rows=1451 width=24) (actual time=0.077..0.078 rows=1 loops=1)
Filter: (user_profile_id = 12345)
Rows Removed by Filter: 98
Planning Time: 0.059 ms
Execution Time: 0.088 ms
```
But for users that have just been created, with no matching rows, this
is considerably more expensive:
```
Limit (cost=0.56..711.38 rows=1 width=24) (actual time=10798.146..10798.146 rows=0 loops=1)
-> Index Scan Backward using zerver_useractivityinterval_7f021a14 on zerver_useractivityinterval (cost=0.56..1031399.46 rows=1451 width=24) (actual time=10798.145..10798.145 rows=0 loops=1)
Filter: (user_profile_id = 12345)
Rows Removed by Filter: (count of every single row in the table, redacted)
Planning Time: 0.053 ms
Execution Time: 10798.158 ms
```
Regular vacuuming can force the use of the index on `user_profile_id`
as long as there are few enough users, which is fast -- however, at
some point, the query planner decides that is insufficiently specific,
always chooses the effective-whole-table-scan.
Add an index on `(user_profile_id, end)`, which is expected to be
sufficiently specific that it is used even with large numbers of user
profiles.
Ref #19250.