This matches page_params.unsubbed_info, plus it sets up to
add something like page_params.stream_dict without being confusing.
(imported from commit 2d40deb779e5c7a488d6952560b4119094bbc0d8)
If you make a stream private/public from the Streams page
(which admins can do now), then we now correctly redraw
the swatch to have/not have the lock icon.
(imported from commit 35eb4ba12ad152e43b40f1bcf2c5db784a965dee)
If a user is not allowed to create new streams, then do not
show the "Create new stream" UI at the top of the settings page.
(imported from commit b97626938d8b612317c2189f7eca0d4bd27fc274)
Inputs are given a tabindex of -1 in the handlebars templates, this is
added and removed in the show and hide events of the bootstrap collapse.
(imported from commit 2c54c39edc396d3d18330df4583d901690dd71fa)
See #2137. When you add a person to a stream on the Streams page,
the autocomplete will now match on the person's full name, not just
their email.
(imported from commit b250ea0dc61d54f7f2f330ef0616935d43234597)
This is the UI piece that finishes the features to let admins
make streams private or public.
(imported from commit 1a193165a6304dc358982e9850a75965fb3a03fd)
UserProfile.show_admin was intended to be a check for users that have
administrative rights in other realms, which we've harmlessly but
erroneously been using to check if they are an admin in their realm.
Use the more straightforward check instead, with a more intuitive
name.
(imported from commit d81050c7dbbb19e59c5e31750be303a4630e1456)
Nobody uses it, and it causes confusion. (How is it different from 'Home'?)
For now, leave in the ability to get to the narrow, although we may
ultimately want to do away with it as well.
(imported from commit 35b3f27e39c4de3391bc5571b32f7242a29f4cfa)
The Streams page should only show active public realms, even though
a user might have info about a "retired" stream in their browser.
I regressed this in 69b83d769 for "retired" streams. A retired
stream is a stream that no longer has subscribers. The bug
scenario here was that you could create a stream, regret it,
unsubscribe yourself, and then the stream never went away from
the Streams page.
This diff tries to be a little more explicit about building the
list of streams for the Streams page. Basically you have two
sources:
* Get only the subscribed streams from the internal
data structures.
* Get the unsubscribed streams by calling the back end
for all public streams, and subtract out the subscribed
streams.
I tested the following scenarios:
normal stream with me: in Streams
normal stream without me: in Streams
my invite-only: in Streams
their invite-only with me: in Streams
their invite-only without me: not in Streams
retired stream: not in Streams (but message colors are good)
See the email "custom query to get public stream names" for some
related discussion.
(imported from commit bc9224e68797b26b795399941117faa9d6858b39)
We want to deprecate reload_subscriptions(), which was kind
of a big hammer to use when only a single stream is being
renamed. Now we call stream_list.rename_stream() to update
the sidebar.
(imported from commit a77d09c0433d9b605b7baa7d7c61183bc8c37ba9)
For a large domain like HS, we were pulling back about 100k of
text with subscriber emails when we opened the Streams page.
This was unnecessary, as the subscribers aren't shown until
you expand the stream, and there's already an AJAX call.
(imported from commit 69b83d769030d87318acefc364ac6ff3a2ec3605)
Use the stream_data API to set up subscribers, so we don't
leak the data structure details into subs.js
(imported from commit e95616f2eb535ecf0e1cef35a143a71ad88de5bc)
people_list and people_dict include the feedback bot and anyone you've
cross-realm PM'd with. Useful for autocomplete, but not for admin and
stream settings views.
Fixes the UI part of Trac #1772.
(imported from commit cdefd4e86980447aad5190e7fc8ae3666d66e3c3)
This is the last step in getting a consistent client-side picture of who
is on a stream (provided non-MIT realm, and provided the local user is
subscribed to that stream).
(imported from commit 8bca722f169860ad4c1c92fdcb70d62c60f70fed)
When creating a new stream, this option lets you announce its
creation to everyone who you didn't explicitly add.
(imported from commit ae4140b4268b73e8b4bb54f5a6eea12fe07cd110)
This was caused by a branch I was working on conflicting with the
stream_data.js split.
(imported from commit 995dcf1412114bd36404b8c7ef66eb6f1e89648a)
This changes the mit.edu access rules from:
* Susbcriber list and inviting users to streams are unavailable
to
* Susbcriber lists and inviting users to streams are only available
for invite-only streams
streams must still be made invite-only manually.
This both cuts down on the amount of code that is different between
the mit.edu user experience and the standard one, as well as paving
the way for us to invite-only streams for zcrypt.
(imported from commit 24e0e85428608c05c89eeea349338dd392e5489a)
I haven't filed an issue about this since I just quickly found and
tracked down the bug, but the STR were:
1. Subscribe to stream foo
2. Hide foo from your home view
3. Unsubscribe from stream foo
4. Unhide other subscribed streams you've hidden from home view, if any
The "All messages" link would stay, although it should go away in this
case. The apparent cause was an incorrect assumption (when implementing
this feature) that the stream_info dict only contains subscribed
streams; in fact, we also populate it with streams you used to subscribe
to.
(imported from commit 67f95c8c8a211a4943a2de394919d15a0d5435d0)
There are also one or two places we don't need to use it for security
purposes, but we do so for consistencey.
(imported from commit aa111f5a22a0e8597ec3cf8504adae66d5fb6768)
Instead of splicing up a cloned copy of stream_assignment_colors
every time somebody uses a color, we just rebuild a hash
of used_colors from our subscribed streams when we need to assign
a color, and we avoid calling into stream_color.pick_color() when
a stream already has a color.
This change has a slight functional impact in the situation where
a user unsubscribes some streams during their session, because
we weren't "reclaiming" colors before on unsubscription, but the
simple approach gets that for free.
(imported from commit adf360365bdf1ae9db99c533a0bde62d91f5dfe8)
This is a pure refactoring that mostly just moves code from
subs.js to the new stream_color.js and updates module references
accordingly. In order to prevent introducing some exports,
update_stream_color was given an additional "sub" parameter
and update_stream_sidebar_swatch_color was given an "id"
parameter.
Killed off unused initial_color_fetch var.
(imported from commit b7644ce67f50d31fb46f564d758d661eea776aa6)
Code prior to this commit was functionally working, but semantically
flawed — returning false does not short-circuit _.each like it does with
$.each. It now uses _.every, as suggested by Steve.
In addition I renamed the function to be more descriptive, added a
comment, and eliminated needless double negation.
(imported from commit b0666dfa01b2677b4eaf577fe9ced90ed0db2438)
In a few cases the $.each was doing something imperatively that was
terser and easier to understand by using a different Underscore method,
so a few of these I rewrote.
Some code was using the fact that jQuery sets `this` in the callback to
be the item; I rewrote those to use an explicit parameter.
Some code was using $(some selector).each(callback). I converted these
to _.each($(some selector), callback).
One function, ui.process_condensing, was written to be a jQuery $.each
callback despite being in a totally different module from code using it.
I noticed this and updated the function's args.
(imported from commit bf5922a35f257c168cc09ec1d077415d6ef19a03)