This allows us to revoke MultiUseInvites by changing their .status
instead of deleting them (which has been deleting the helpful tracking
information on PreregistrationUsers about which MultiUseInvite they came
from).
The previous error page was inadequate for serving the two different
scenarios where we show errors in realm_creations, in particular
containing a misleading sentence about realm creation being disabled
(even in the case where it was actually enabled and the user simply had
an expired link).
This adds a helper based on testing patterns of using the "queries_captured"
context manager with "assert_length" to check the number of queries
executed for preventing performance regression.
It explains the rationale of checking the query count through an
"AssertionError" and prints the queries captured as assert_length does,
but with a format optimized for displaying the queries in a more
readable manner.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
These used to only be shown conditional on the
{% if password_auth_enabled %} in the template. Meaning that if you had
an org with email auth disabled and a deactivated user tried to log in,
they wouldn't see the error shown and get confused.
This switches the position of where these error will be shown (above the
login+password form instead of below it), but it looks fine.
These were useful as a transitional workaround to ignore type errors
that only show up with django-stubs, while avoiding errors about
unused type: ignore comments without django-stubs. Now that the
django-stubs transition is complete, switch to type: ignore comments
so that mypy will tell us if they become unnecessary. Many already
have.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Our seat count calculation is different for guest user than normal users
(a number of initial guests are free, and additional marginal guests are
worth 1/5 of a seat) - so these checks we apply when a user is being
invited or signing up need to know whether it's a guest or non-guest
being added.
Commit b945aa3443 (#22604) incorrectly
assumed that Django would run the extra EmailField validators if basic
email address validation passed. Actually, it runs all validators
unconditionally and collects all failures. So email_is_not_disposable
needs to catch email address parsing errors.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
`context_data` is only available on `SimpleTemplateResposne`, we can't
narrow `TestHttpResponse` to it because the latter is not in fact a
subtype of `HttpResponse`.
Differently, `redirect_chain` is an attribute that only appears on the
test response when the test client method is called with `follow=True`.
`TestHttpResponse` does not have that by defalut, either.
The occurence of these two cases are rare enough throughout the codebase
and we can't get around that without aggressively overloading the test client
or refactoring `_MonkeyPatchedWSGIResponse` in the upstream.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
Type inference does not work when the default value of `REQ` is
non-optional while `ResultT` is optional. Mypy tries to unify
`json_validator` with `Validator[int]` in `invite_users_backend` instead
of the desired `Validator[Optional[int]]` because of the presence of the
default value `settings.INVITATION_LINK_VALIDITY_MINUTES`, which is
inferred to be an `int`. Mypy does not resort to a less specific type but
instead gives up early.
This issue applies to invite_users_backend and generate_multiuse_invite_backend
in zerver.views.invite.
There might be a way that we can add an overload to get around this, but
it's probably not worth the complexity until it comes up again more frequently.
We do in fact allow `invite_expires_in_minutes` to be `None` in places
like `do_invite_users`, `invite_users_backend`, etc, and we have
`settings.INVITATION_LINK_VALIDITY_MINUTES` as the default for them. So
it makes sense to allow having an optional value for this setting. And
since there isn't a way to independently set the value of this constant,
we move it to a different place.
TODO:
This is a temporary fix that should be refactored when the bug is fixed.
The encountered mypy issue: https://github.com/python/mypy/issues/13234
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
Fixes#21266.
We want to tie the prereg_user to the MultiUseInvite directly rather
than to the MultiUserInvite's confirmation object, because the latter is
not possible. This is because the flow is that after going through the
multiuse invite link, the PreregistrationUser is created together with a
Confirmation object, creating a confirmation link (via
create_confirmation_link) to which then the user is redirected to finish
account creation. This means that the PreregistrationUser is already
tied to a Confirmation, so that attribute is occupied.
Before this, a link still couldn't be re-used because it would trip up
exception further down user creation codepaths, but that was still a
bug. check_prereg_key is supposed to correctly validate the key - and
trigger an error page being returned if a key (or for any other reason,
the attached PreregistrationUser object) is reused.
test_validate_email_not_already_in_realm needs to be adjusted, because
it was actually re-using a key.
Items in `django.core.mail.outbox` are by default typed as the less
general `EmailMessage` type. Before accessing the attribute
`alternatives`, we need to narrow the type to `EmailMultiAlternatives`.
Then narrow the tuple value we want to access to `str` before using
it in `assertIn` or `self.normalize_string`.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
We no longer need to access the internal `LANGUAGE_CODE` attribute by
using `django.utils.translation.get_language`.
A test case overriding the translation is added to ensure the password
reset form sending to users requested from a wrong domain is properly
translated.
This is a part of django-stubs refactorings.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
Sometimes (e.g. when moving an old realm out of the way of an import
into that name) we do *not* wish to add a redirect realm. Add a flag
to support that.
Since `HttpResponse` is an inaccurate representation of the
monkey-patched response object returned by the Django test client, we
replace it with `_MonkeyPatchedWSGIResponse` as `TestHttpResponse`.
This replaces `HttpResponse` in zerver/tests, analytics/tests, coporate/tests,
zerver/lib/test_classes.py, and zerver/lib/test_helpers.py with
`TestHttpResponse`. Several files in zerver/tests are excluded
from this substitution.
This commit is auto-generated by a script, with manual adjustments on certain
files squashed into it.
This is a part of the django-stubs refactorings.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
Django caches some information on HttpRequest objects, including the
headers dict, under the assumption that requests won’t be reused.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This commit changes the code to always pass delivery_email
field in the user's own object in 'realm_users'.
This commit also fixes the events sent by notify_created_user.
In the "realm_user/add" event sent when creating the user,
the delivery_email field was set according to the access
for the created user itself as the created user was passed as
acting_user to format_user_row. But now since we have changed
the code to always allow the user themselves to have access
to the email, this bug was caught in tests and we fix the person
object in the event to have delivery_email field based on whether
the user receiving the event has access to email or not.
We want to avoid logging this kind of potentially sensitive information.
Instead, it's more useful to log ids of the matching accounts on
different subdomains.
This commit reads the browser locale during user registration, and
sets it as default language of user if it is supported by Zulip.
Otherwise, it is set to realm's default language.
This commit changes the invite API to accept invitation
expiration time in minutes since we are going to add a
custom option in further commits which would allow a user
to set expiration time in minutes, hours and weeks as well.
This commit adds users to the appropriate system user group
based on their role. We also change the user groups when
changing role of the user.
We also add migration to add existing users to the appropriate
user groups.
This commit adds update_users_in_full_members_system_group which
is currently used to update the full members group on changing
role of a user. This function will be modified in next commit such
that it can be used to update full members group on changing
waiting_period_threshold setting of realm.
create_preregistration_user is a footgun, because it takes the realm
from the request. The calling code is supposed to validate that
registration for the realm is allowed
first, but can sometimes do that on "realm" taken from something else
than the request - and later on calls create_preregistration_user, thus
leading to prereg user creation on unvalidated request.realm.
It's safer, and makes more sense, for this function to take the intended
realm as argument, instead of taking the entire request. It follows that
the same should be done for prepare_activation_url.
In these tests, the code ends up with a logged in session when it's
undesired - later on these tests make requests to a different subdomain
- where a logged in session is not supposed to exist. This leads to an
unintended, strange situation where request.user is a user from the old
subdomain but the request itself is to a *different* subdomain. This
throws off get_realm_from_request, which will return the realm from
request.user.realm - which is not what these tests want and can lead to
these tests failing when some of the production code being tested
switches to using get_realm_from_request instead of
get_realm(get_subdomain).
The codepaths for joining an organization via a multi-use invitation
(accounts_home_from_multiuse_invite and maybe_send_to_registration)
weren't validating whether
the organization the invite was generated for matches the organization
the user attempts to join - potentially allowing an attacker with access
to organization A to generate a multi-use invite and use it to join
organization B within the same deployment, that they shouldn't have
access to.
The database value for expiry_date is None for the invite
that will never expire and the clients send -1 as value
in the API similar to the message retention setting.
Also, when passing invite_expire_in_days as an argument
in various functions, invite_expire_in_days is passed as
-1 for "Never expires" option since invite_expire_in_days
is an optional argument in some functions and thus we cannot
pass "None" value.