When there was a race during bulk insertion of UserTopic
rows, it resulted in Integrity error.
We update the 'last_updated' and 'visibility_policy'
columns for conflicting rows.
We also removed the separate update query to update
visibility_policy because now the new SQL query can
handle the updates too. This leads to have fewer round
trips to the database.
In the 'bulk_set_user_topic_visibility_policy_in_database' function,
the 'duplicate_request' variable wasn't improving any readability.
This commit cleans up that variable.
This commit replaces the local 'is_same_server_message_link'
function used in 'get_mobile_push_content' with the
'is_same_server_message_link' lib function.
The lib function is the same logically but uses urllib instead
of regex for parsing and is backed by tests, hence more robust.
This prep commit adds a lib function 'is_same_server_message_link'.
This will be currently used while compressing quote and reply
in push notifications and later can be used at other places.
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.
This was discussed in the review of #29999:
https://github.com/zulip/zulip/pull/29999#discussion_r1620818568
The previous way of handling wasn't entirely correct, as unnecessary
events were omitted, with a bad guarantee of even being in the correct
order.
This is an improvement as now the function detects that it ended up
doing nothing and can skip sending an event.
The race condition is hard to make up in an automated test, but we can
hackily simulate it by injecting a side_effect which will create a
conflicting UserPresence row when the function requests a cursor. Aside
of that, the actual race was simulated in manual testing to verify the
expected behavior.
Before this commit, 3 DB queries were actually needed for "realm"
event type but the test mentioned 1 because, the related stream
setting fields were already fetched when testing the case for all
event types above it.
So, when testing the query count for only "realm" event type the
cached realm object was used and no extra queries were made for
the stream settings.
This commit updates the test to refetch the realm before testing
each event type separately, so that we test the actual query count.
This commit updates code to prefetch realm group settings like
"can_create_public_channel_group" only when computing settings
for "/register" response by refetching the realm object with
select_related instead of fetching those settings in UserProfile
query.
This change is done because we do not need to prefetch these
settings for every UserProfile object and for most of the cases
where these settings are actually accessed, we can afford extra
query like when checking permission to create streams. But we
cannot afford one query extra for each setting when computing
these settings for "/register" response, so we re-fetch the
realm object with select_related leading to only one extra
query.
The query count changes in tests are -
- Query count increases by 1 when calling fetch_initial_state_data
for computing can_create_public_streams because Realm object from
UserProfile does not have prefetched setting fields.
- Query count increases by one in test_subs where streams are
created which is as expected due to the setting not being prefetched.
- Query count increases by 2 in tests in test_home.py where one
query is to refetch the realm object and one for computing
can_create_public_streams as mentioned above.
This commit makes passing realm mandatory to fetch_initial_state_data.
This is a prep commit for refetching the realm object with
select_related for group setting fields so that extra queries
can be avoided when computing "/registe" response.
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.
Extracts code for generating the events table strings to a separate
function and uses templates so that the HTML is clearer.
Updates events table classes for CSS to start with "api-" for
clarity.
Creates a dataclass for getting the data needed for an individual
event's documentation and uses that dataclass in a separate
function for generating the strings for each event's documentation.
Uses templates for parts of event documentation with HTML and CSS,
and updates CSS classes to have clearer names.
Updates the self-hosted and Zulip Cloud billing articles for features
that have been added to billing management such as paying by invoice,
adding billing contact information, viewing past invoices, etc.
Revises text to be cleaner and clearer in some places.
More consistently uses bold (when not linked) for plan names.
Fixes a few errors or omissions in existing instructions.
Co-authored-by: Alya Abbott <alya@zulip.com>
The general format for our bold "Changes:" notes are to have the
most recent one start with the "Changes:" text and the older notes
following that with paragraph breaks for each note.
Sending to a topic based on the number of firing alerts makes no
sense, and leads to conversations and alerts scattered randomly across
topics based on how on fire the alerting is.
Send a separate message for each alert in the Grafana webhook payload,
with the alert's name as its topic; if no alert name can be found,
fall back to the alert's fingerprint. Also include all alert values
in the body of the message, along with links to the alert generator,
silence, and image, if available.
Co-authored-by: Alex Vandiver <alexmv@zulip.com>
Currently we send a notification to the topic if it has been resolved
or unresolved even if there is an immediate event of resolving and
then unresolving or vice-versa. This adds a setting of
RESOLVE_TOPIC_UNDO_GRACE_PERIOD_SECONDS under which if a topic has
been unresolved after being resolved immediately and the last message
was the notification of resolving, then delete the last message and
don't send a new notification and vice-versa.
We use the new message.type field to precisely identify relevant
messages.
Fixes#19181.
Co-authored-by: Mateusz Mandera <mateusz.mandera@zulip.com>
This commit removes create_public_stream_policy setting
since public channel creation permissions are now handled
by group-based setting.
We still pass "realm_create_public_stream_policy" in
"/register" response though for older clients with its
value being set depending on the value of group based
setting. If we cannot set its value to an appropriate
enum corresponding to the group setting, then we set
it to "Members only" considering that server will not
allow the users without permissions to create public
channels but the client can make sure that UI is
available to the users who have permission.
This was a bug, where in the realm.presence_disabled (synonymous to
being a zephyr mirror realm) case we would return None. We have decided
on the convention of using only integers here, and -1 representing lack
of data.
Migrate all `ids` of anything which does not have a foreign key from
the Message or UserMessage table (and would thus require walking
those) to be `bigint`. This is done by removing explicit
`BigAutoField`s, trading them for explicit `AutoField`s on the tables
to not be migrated, while updating `DEFAULT_AUTO_FIELD` to the new
default.
In general, the tables adjusted in this commit are small tables -- at
least compared to Messages and UserMessages.
Many-to-many tables without their own model class are adjusted by a
custom Operation, since they do not automatically pick up migrations
when `DEFAULT_AUTO_FIELD` changes[^1].
Note that this does multiple scans over tables to update foreign
keys[^2]. Large installs may wish to hand-optimize this using the
output of `./manage.py sqlmigrate` to join multiple `ALTER TABLE`
statements into one, to speed up the migration. This is unfortunately
not possible to do generically, as constraint names may differ between
installations.
This leaves the following primary keys as non-`bigint`:
- `auth_group.id`
- `auth_group_permissions.id`
- `auth_permission.id`
- `django_content_type.id`
- `django_migrations.id`
- `otp_static_staticdevice.id`
- `otp_static_statictoken.id`
- `otp_totp_totpdevice.id`
- `two_factor_phonedevice.id`
- `zerver_archivedmessage.id`
- `zerver_client.id`
- `zerver_message.id`
- `zerver_realm.id`
- `zerver_recipient.id`
- `zerver_userprofile.id`
[^1]: https://code.djangoproject.com/ticket/32674
[^2]: https://code.djangoproject.com/ticket/24203
These models have no external references, and are among the larger
tables. Migrate them to bigints, starting with `useractivityinterval`
which is less likely to be being touched.
This table, while it does not contain a large number of rows, consumes
a primary key for every message send and update. Since it is not
referenced by any other table, the migration is simple; and since it
does not contain many rows at any time, it should be fast.
We immediately navigate the user to the conversation they just
sent a message to if they are not already in the appropriate
conversation view.
This commit adds a first-time banner to explain the same.
Fixes#29575.
4430ab9cbe changed this, assuming that all servers would send
`realm_url` -- however, only servers running that commit do. Update
to accept either `realm_url` or `realm_uri` payload properties.