This is a preparatory commit that refactors the check_update_message
method to extract the checks containing whether a user can edit the
message or not into a separate method -validate_message_content_edit,
so that it can be re used later.
This logic was apparently missed when we implemented private streams
with shared history; the correct check is to look at whether the user
can access message history in the stream, which used to be equivalent
to whether it's a private stream.
The problem was that earlier this was just an uncaught JsonableError,
leading to a full traceback getting spammed to the admins.
The prior commit introduced a clear .code for this error on the bouncer
side, meaning the self-hosted server can now detect that and handle it
nicely, by just logging.error about it and also take the opportunity to
adjust the realm.push_notifications_... flags.
This commit removes the stale 'email_gateway' parameter
from 'do_send_messages' function.
This should have been removed in 6c473ed75f,
when the call to 'build_message_send_dict' was removed
from 'do_send_messages'.
This error message didn’t make sense for the check as written, and our
OpenAPI document already provides the expected format for our 200
responses.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Real requests would not validate against the previous version. There
seems to be no consistent way to determine whether a string parameter
should be coerced to an integer for validation against an allOf
schema (which works at the level of JSON objects, not strings).
See also https://github.com/python-openapi/openapi-core/issues/698.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
The endpoint was lacking validation that the authentication_methods dict
submitted by the user made sense. So e.g. it allowed submitting a
nonsense key like NoSuchBackend or modifying the realm's configured
authentication methods for a backend that's not enabled on the server,
which should not be allowed.
Both were ultimately harmless, because:
1. Submitting NoSuchBackend would luckily just trigger a KeyError inside
the transaction.atomic() block in do_set_realm_authentication_methods
so it would actually roll back the database changes it was trying to
make. So this couldn't actually create some weird
RealmAuthenticationMethod entries.
2. Silently enabling or disabling e.g. GitHub for a realm when GitHub
isn't enabled on the server doesn't really change anything. And this
action is only available to the realm's admins to begin with, so
there's no attack vector here.
test_supported_backends_only_updated wasn't actually testing anything,
because the state it was asserting:
```
self.assertFalse(github_auth_enabled(realm))
self.assertTrue(dev_auth_enabled(realm))
self.assertFalse(password_auth_enabled(realm))
```
matched the desired state submitted to the API...
```
result = self.client_patch(
"/json/realm",
{
"authentication_methods": orjson.dumps(
{"Email": False, "Dev": True, "GitHub": False}
).decode()
},
)
```
so we just replace it with a new test that tests the param validation.
- Renames "Bots and integrations" to "Bots overview" everywhere
(sidebar, page title, page URL).
- Adds a copy of /api/integrations-overview (symbolic link) as the
second page in the Bots & integrations section, titled
"Integrations overview".
Fixes#28758.
We use Alertmanager as an aggregation place for example for failing CI pipelines,
and `graph` does not always reflect the source of the alert. It's called `source` originally
and I think it should stay this way.
Creates an incoming webhook integration for Patreon. The main
use case is getting notifications when new patrons sign up.
Fixes#18321.
Co-authored-by: Hari Prashant Bhimaraju <haripb01@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Sudipto Mondal <sudipto.mondal1997@gmail.com>
This commit updates the API to check the permission to subscribe other
users while creating multi-use invites. The API will raise error if
the user passes the "stream_ids" parameter (even when it contains only
default streams) and the calling user does not have permission to
subscribe others to streams.
We did not add this before as we only allowed admins to create
multiuse invites, but now we have added a setting which can be used
to allow users with other roles as well to create multiuse invites.
Extends the description of the authentication_methods realm setting
in the /api/get-events and /api/register-queue endpoints to clarify
the recommended use of the object is for implementing server settings
UI, and to note the data returned by the /api/server-settings
endpoint should be used for implementing authentication UI.
It is possible to have multiple users with the same email address --
for instance, when two users are guests in shared channels via two
different other Slack instances.
Combine those Slack user-ids into one Zulip user, by their user-id;
otherwise, we run into problems during import due to duplicate keys.
1e5c49ad82 added support for shared channels -- but some users may
only currently exist in DMs or MPIMs, and not in channel membership.
Walk the list of MPIM subscriptions and messages, as well as DM users,
and add any such users to the set of mirror dummy users.
This leads to significant speedups. In a test, with 100 random unique
event classes, the old code processed a batch of 100 rows (on average
66-ish unique in the batch) in 0.45 seconds. Doing this in a single
query processes the same batch in 0.0076 seconds.
The previous query suffered from bad corner cases when the user had
received a large number of direct messages but sent very few,
comparatively. This mean that the first half of the UNION would
retrieve a very large number of UserMessage rows, requiring fetching a
large number of Message rows, merely to throw them away upon
determining that the recipient was the current user.
Instead of merging two queries of "last 1k received" + "last 1k sent",
we instead make better use of the UserMessage rows to find "last 1k
sent or received." This may change the list of recipients, as large
disparities in sent/received messages may result in pushing the
most-recently-sent users off of the list. These are likely uncommon
edge cases, however -- and the disparity is the whole reason for the
performance problem.
This also provides more correct answers. In the case where a user's
1001'th message sent was to person A today, but my most recent message
received was from them yesterday, the previous plan would show the
message I received yesterday message-id as the max, and not the more
recent message I sent today.
While we could theoretically raise the `RECENT_CONVERSATIONS_LIMIT` to
more frequently match the same recipient list as previously, this
increases the cost of the most common cases unreasonably. With a
1000-message limit, the common cases are slightly faster, and the tail
latencies are very much improved; raising `RECENT_CONVERSATIONS_LIMIT`
would increase the result similarity to the old algorithm, at the cost
of the p50 and p75.
| | Old | New |
| ------ | ------- | ------- |
| Mean | 0.05287 | 0.02520 |
| p50 | 0.00695 | 0.00556 |
| p75 | 0.05592 | 0.03351 |
| p90 | 0.14645 | 0.08026 |
| p95 | 0.20181 | 0.10906 |
| p99 | 0.30691 | 0.16014 |
| p99.9 | 0.57894 | 0.19521 |
| max | 22.0610 | 0.22184 |
On the whole, however, the much more bounded worst case are worth the
small changes to the resultset.
This is preparatory work towards adding a Topic model.
We plan to use the local variable name as 'topic' for
the Topic model objects.
Currently, we use *topic as the local variable name for
topic names.
We rename local variables of the form *topic to *topic_name
so that we don't need to think about type collisions in
individual code paths where we might want to talk about both
Topic objects and strings for the topic name.
Earlier, after a successful POST request on find accounts page
users were redirected to a URL with the emails (submitted via form)
as URL parameters. Those raw emails in the URL were used to
display on a template.
We no longer redirect to such a URL; instead, we directly render
a template with emails passed as a context variable.
Fixes part of #3128