This adds `normalize_body_for_import` to normalize messages from
third-party importers by removing NUL bytes and also updates import
test files data to test this.
Fixes#31930.
Currently, Slack messages containing hyperlinks
(e.g.,<http://foo.com|Foo!>) are converted like
normal links. This commit reformats Slack
hyperlinks into Zulip-friendly markdown
(e.g., [Foo!](http://foo.com)).
Part of #32165.
This is a prep commit to extract out the test cases
for 'test_is_same_server_message_link' in hash_util.test.js
as a test fixture.
This will help in reusing the same test cases in the node and
backend tests.
Also, it will help in making sure that the logic for
'is_same_server_message_link' is in sync, in both the
web client and server code.
To make better use of the limited characters in mobile push
notifications for messages quoting another message, we compress
the blockquotes and "user said" paragraphs to make space for the
actual message.
Fixes#28951.
If an invalid timezone (such as +32h) was provided, the
timestamp.astimezone call would throw an exception, causing the
message send to fail. Replace that with a user-facing error.
Fixes#19658.
Gitter broke their older API as part of being integrated
into Matrix.
Their announcement blog says:
"Anything left using the Gitter APIs will need to be
updated to use the Matrix API"
This commit drops the legacy Gitter import tool and
we plan to build a new one for Matrix in future.
`<time:1234567890123>` causes a "signed integer is greater than
maximum" exception from dateutil.parser; datetime also cannot handle
it ("year 41091 is out of range") but that is a ValueError which is
already caught.
Catch the OverflowError thrown by dateutil.
Earlier, for the push notifications having latex math
like "$$1 \oplus 0 = 1$$, the notification had the math
included multiple times.
This commit fixes the incorrect behavior by replacing
the KaTeX with the raw LaTeX source.
Fixes part of #25289.
This change adds support for importing guest users from a Mattermost
export file into Zulip. The function now checks the user's teams and
roles to determine whether the user is a guest on the team, and sets
the user's role accordingly. This ensures that the imported user data
includes the correct role for each user.
Fixes#23720.
The 'startinline' option is utilized in the `CodeHilite` instantiation
to indicate that the provided PHP code snippet should be highlighted
even if it doesn't start with the opening tag or marker of the
associated programming language (which will rarely be the case in
Zulip, since one discusses a section of a file much more often than a
whole file).
Fixes: https://chat.zulip.org/#narrow/stream/137-feedback/topic/php.20syntax.20highlighting.20should.20not.20require.20.60.3C.3Fphp.60.
Signed-off-by: Akshat <akshat25iiit@gmail.com>
Fixes#11767.
Previously multi-character emoji sequences weren't matched in the
emoji regex, so we'd convert the characters to separate images,
breaking the intended display.
This change allows us to match the full emoji sequence, and
therefore show the correct image.
In 2484d870b4 I created tests
using a fixture called narrow.json. I believe my intention
was to eventually use the fixture for similar tests on the
frontend, but that never happened.
Almost seven years later, I think it's time to just use
straightforward code in Python to test build_narrow_filter.
In particular, we want to move to dataclasses, so that would
create an addition nuisance for fixture-based tests. The
fixture was already annoying in terms of being an extra moving
part, being hard to read, and not being type-safe.
In order to avoid typos, I mostly code-generated the new
Python code by instrumenting the old test:
narrow_filter = build_narrow_filter(narrow)
+ print("###\n")
+ print(f"narrow_filter = build_narrow_filter({narrow})\n")
for e in accept_events:
message = e["message"]
flags = e["flags"]
@@ -610,6 +612,8 @@ class NarrowLibraryTest(ZulipTestCase):
if flags is None:
flags = []
self.assertTrue(narrow_filter(message=message, flags=flags))
+ print(f"self.assertTrue(narrow_filter(message={message}, flags={flags},))")
+ print()
for e in reject_events:
message = e["message"]
flags = e["flags"]
@@ -618,6 +622,8 @@ class NarrowLibraryTest(ZulipTestCase):
if flags is None:
flags = []
self.assertFalse(narrow_filter(message=message, flags=flags))
+ print(f"self.assertFalse(narrow_filter(message={message}, flags={flags},))")
+ print()
I then basically pasted the output in and ran black to format it.
Closes#20084
This is the flow that this implements:
1. A logged-in user clicks "Logout".
2. If they didn't auth via SAML, just do normal logout. Otherwise:
3. Form a LogoutRequest and redirect the user to
https://idp.example.com/slo-endpoint?SAMLRequest=<LogoutRequest here>
4. The IdP validates the LogoutRequest, terminates its own user session
and redirects the user to
https://thezuliporg.example.com/complete/saml/?SAMLRequest=<LogoutResponse>
with the appropriate LogoutResponse. In case of failure, the
LogoutResponse is expected to express that.
5. Zulip validates the LogoutResponse and if the response is a success
response, it executes the regular Zulip logout and the full flow is
finished.
Adds backend support for `is` operator with the `dm` operand. This
will deprecate the `is` operator with the `private` operand, but we
keep support for backwards-compatibility.
Note that there is some clean up of references to private messages
in the updated backend test. In commit 43ec7ed, the documentation
for `build_narrow_filter` wasn't updated for the rename of
`BuildNarrowFilterTest` to `NarrowLibraryTest`, so that's also
corrected in these changes.
The general API changelog and documentation updates will be done
in a final commit in the series of commits that adds support for
the various new direct message narrows.
Previously, we had an architecture where CSS inlining for emails was
done at provision time in inline_email_css.py. This was necessary
because the library we were using for this, Premailer, was extremely
slow, and doing the inlining for every outgoing email would have been
prohibitively expensive.
Now that we've migrated to a more modern library that inlines the
small amount of CSS we have into emails nearly instantly, we are able
to remove the complex architecture built to work around Premailer
being slow and just do the CSS inlining as the final step in sending
each individual email.
This has several significant benefits:
* Removes a fiddly provisioning step that made the edit/refresh cycle
for modifying email templates confusing; there's no longer a CSS
inlining step that, if you forget to do it, results in your testing a
stale variant of the email templates.
* Fixes internationalization problems related to translators working
with pre-CSS-inlined emails, and then Django trying to apply the
translators to the post-CSS-inlined version.
* Makes the send_custom_email pipeline simpler and easier to improve.
Signed-off-by: Daniil Fadeev <fadeevd@zulip.com>
So that we can stop using Tim's photo for tests, adds an open
license profile picture to use instead.
Updates tests that used `tim.png` to use the new example profile
picture, which is located in `static/images/test-images/avatars/`.
Updates the markdown test case that used `zulip-octopus.png` to
instead use an zulip logo that's also referenced in a frontend
puppeteer test, `static/images/logo/zulip-icon-128x128.png`.
76deb30312 changed this to not just be the URL, but rather a
prefixed hash of the URL, but failed to update this location which
wrote to it. This meant that this pre-population step was writing to
the wrong keys in the durable cache, and thus ineffective.
Then, da33b72848 switched the cache to be in-memory, making this
write to the wrong keys in an in-process memory store. There is no
way to pre-fill this sort of cache, except at server start-up.
Finally, and most fundamentally, 8c0c9ca7a4 then disabled
`inline_url_embed_preview` by default, making the code entirely moot.
Remove the triply-unnecessary code.
This commit ensures that all markdown fixtures have unique
test names by rewriting the names of some of them and adding
a test in `test_markdown.py`.
Earlier this was over-writing the value for same keys in
`load_markdown_tests` in `test_markdown.py`.
This resolves the issues reported in #20108, major chunk of which were
due to the incomplete support for importing the livechat streams/messages
in the tool. So, it's best not to import any livechat streams/messages for
now until a complete support for importing the same is developed.
This commit adds functionality to import messages from the
Discussions having direct channels as their parent. As we don't
have topics in the PMs, the messages are imported in interleaved
form in the imported direct channels/PMs.
This was completely unsupported earlier and would have resulted in
an error.
This parallels fe25517295, but for mobile notifications. It also
adds a test, which verifies that such content does not crash either
mobile or email notifications.
While the STREAM_LINK_REGEX and STREAM_TOPIC_LINK_REGEX
identifies the stream and topic mentions in the content
correctly (tested by printing out the matches), the
stream/topic mentions are still not linked to the
corresponding streams/topics for imported messages, as
a `zulip_message` instance is required for linking these
mentions to actual streams/topics (see `StreamPattern`
class in `markdown/__init__.py`) which is not provided
while processing the markdown for imported messages.
This reverts commit 1965584eec.
This syntax has a bad interaction with table syntax and needs to be
rethought.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This commit allows to import the following from rocketchat:
* All users
* All public/private channels
* All teams and its public/private channels
* All discussion rooms as topics in their parent channel
* All the messages in all the channels
* All private conversations
* Reactions on messages (except for custom emojis)
* Mentions in messages (except @all, @here mentions)