The bots do not exist in the user table to look up their active
status, and attempting to import them into the analytics table will
result in duplicate rows.
Replaced HUDDLE attribute with DIRECT_MESSAGE_GROUP using VS Code search,
part of a general renaming of the object class.
Fixes part of #28640.
Co-authored-by: JohnLu2004 <JohnLu10212004@gmail.com>
Only affects zulipchat, by being based on the BILLING_ENABLED setting.
The restricted backends in this commit are
- AzureAD - restricted to Standard plan
- SAML - restricted to Plus plan, although it was already practically
restricted due to requiring server-side configuration to be done by us
This restriction is placed upon **enabling** a backend - so
organizations that already have a backend enabled, will continue to be
able to use it. This allows us to make exceptions and enable a backend
for an org manually via the shell, and to grandfather organizations into
keeping the backend they have been relying on.
This commit adds a realm-level setting named
'zulip_update_announcements_stream' that configures the
stream to which zulip updates should be posted.
Fixes part of #28604.
This commit renames the realm-level setting
'signup_notifications_stream' to 'signup_announcements_stream'.
The new name reflects better what the setting does.
This commit renames the realm-level setting 'notifications_stream'
to 'new_stream_announcements_stream'.
The new name reflects better what the setting does.
This commit creates a RealmAuditlog entry with a new event_type
'RealmAuditLog.REALM_IMPORTED' after the realm is reactivated.
It contains user count data (using realm_user_count_by_role)
stored in extra_data.
This helps to have an accurate user count data for the billing
system if someone tries to signup just after doing an import.
This is a rename of the previous
enqueue_register_realm_with_push_bouncer_if_needed but is clearer
about the fact that this will also upload audit logs if available.
This commit moves constants for system group names to a new
"SystemGroups" class so that we can use these group names
in multiple classes in models.py without worrying about the
order of defining them.
This commit renames permissions_configuration variable to
permission_configuration since the object contains config for
a single permission setting and thus permission_configuration
seems like a better name.
This commit does the backend changes required for adding a realm
setting based on groups permission model and does the API changes
required for the new setting `Who can create multiuse invite link`.
`remove_denormalized_recipient_column_from_data` removes the
`recipient` data from `zerver_userprofile`, but did not remove it from
`zerver_userprofile_mirrordummy`, which was later appended to the list
of `zerver_userprofile` objects. This led to failure when inserting,
as the mirrordummy objects still tried to reference their previous
`recipient_id`s.
Move the merging of the two sets earlier, before we call
`remove_denormalized_recipient_column_from_data`.
This tracks user group membership changes when the realm is first set
up, either through an import or not. This happens when we add users to
the system user groups by their roles.
For an imported realm, we do extra handling when the data doesn't include
user groups. This gets audited as well.
Django seems to have an aggressive check on the type of a field when
setting it through an relation, requiring the argument to be a UserGroup in
our case.
Reference:
02966a30dd/django/db/models/base.py (L537-L546)
Make the import of `Realm`, `Stream` and `UserGroup` objects be
done in single transaction, to make the import process in general
more atomic.
This also removes the need to temporarily unset the Stream references
on the Realm object. Since Django creates foreign key constraints
with `DEFERRABLE INITIALLY DEFERRED`, an insertion of a Realm row can
reference not-yet-existing Stream rows as long as the row is created
before the transaction commits.
Discussion - https://chat.zulip.org/#narrow/stream/101-design/topic/New.20permissions.20model/near/1585274.
We now set tos_version to "-1" for imported users and the ones
created using API or using other methods like LDAP, SCIM and
management commands. This value will help us to allow users to
change email address visibility setting during first login.
The comment was outdated, currently we import UserProfiles before
realm_tables - because some models in realm_tables have a dependency on
UserProfile.
Also makes sense to elaborate a bit more in the comment that it's just
an outline of the ordering, not an exhaustive list.
Fixes#25414.
We add Attachment.scheduled_messages relation to track ScheduledMessages
which reference the attachment.
The import bits can be done after merging this, by updating #25345.
This implements the core of the rewrite described in:
For the backend data model for UserPresence to one that supports much
more efficient queries and is more correct around handling of multiple
clients. The main loss of functionality is that we no longer track
which Client sent presence data (so we will no longer be able to say
using UserPresence "the user was last online on their desktop 15
minutes ago, but was online with their phone 3 minutes ago"). If we
consider that information important for the occasional investigation
query, we have can construct that answer data via UserActivity
already. It's not worth making Presence much more expensive/complex
to support it.
For slim_presence clients, this sends the same data format we sent
before, albeit with less complexity involved in constructing it. Note
that we at present will always send both last_active_time and
last_connected_time; we may revisit that in the future.
This commit doesn't include the finalizing migration, which drops the
UserPresenceOld table.
The way to deploy is to start the backfill migration with the server
down and then start the server *without* the user_presence queue worker,
to let the migration finish without having new data interfering with it.
Once the migration is done, the queue worker can be started, leading to
the presence data catching up to the current state as the queue worker
goes over the queued up events and updating the UserPresence table.
Co-authored-by: Mateusz Mandera <mateusz.mandera@zulip.com>
So far, we've used the BitField .authentication_methods on Realm
for tracking which backends are enabled for an organization. This
however made it a pain to add new backends (requiring altering the
column and a migration - particularly troublesome if someone wanted to
create their own custom auth backend for their server).
Instead this will be tracked through the existence of the appropriate
rows in the RealmAuthenticationMethods table.
Black 23 enforces some slightly more specific rules about empty line
counts and redundant parenthesis removal, but the result is still
compatible with Black 22.
(This does not actually upgrade our Python environment to Black 23
yet.)
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
On multi-realm systems this results in traversal of all messages in
all realms and returns a massive payload of 1 row per stream on
the server, not the intended one row per realm.
This guarantees that the Realm is always non-None when we hit the
codepath is_static_or_current_realm_url via
do_change_stream_description, so that we can properly skip rewritting
some images.
Fixes#19405
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
On my data (about 10 million messages in 1600 streams) this used to take
about 40 hours, while the improved statement completes in roughly 30
seconds.
The old solution had postgres go through the entire table until the
first match for each stream. Thus, the time spent scanning the table
got longer and longer for each stream because postgres always started at
the beginning (and somehow it did not use any indices) and had to skip
over all rows until it found the first message from the stream that is
was looking for each time.
This new statement just performans a bulk operation, scanning the table
only once and then inserts the results directly into the destination
table.
Slightly more verbose inforation about this change can be found in:
https://chat.zulip.org/#narrow/stream/31-production-help/topic/Import.20Rocketchat.20data/near/1408867
Signed-off-by: Florian Pritz <bluewind@xinu.at>
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>
This commit adds the OPTIONAL .realm attribute to Message
(and ArchivedMessage), with the server changes for making new Messages
have this set. Old Messages still have to be migrated to backfill this,
before it can be non-nullable.
Appropriate test changes to correctly set .realm for Messages the tests
manually create are included here as well.
This commit sets can_remove_subscribers_group to admins system
group while creating streams as it will be the default value
of this setting. In further we would provide an option to set
value of this setting to any user group while creating streams
using API or UI.
We change the import order to import UserGroup objects before
Stream such that we can set can_remove_subscribers_group correctly.
We do not import UserGroupMembership objects here along with
UserGroup since UserProfile objects are not imported and
GroupGroupMembership are also imported later as these are not
required before.
We do not need direct_members and direct_subgroups field of
UserGroup objects in the export data since we already have
UserGroupMembership and GroupGroupMembership object data.
While importing we keep these fields empty when creating
UserGroup objects and direct_members and direct_subgroups
fields will get set when UserGroupMembership and
GroupGroupMembership objects are created.
This change will also help us in further changes when we
will change the order of importing to import UserGroup
objects just after Realm objects.