Since we implemented EMAIL_ADDRESS_VISIBILITY_ADMINS, the intent is
that `delivery_only` should be used for accessing a user's actual
email address; with `email` used only in the Zulip API where we
haven't migrated to interacting with other users by ID.
This fixes a place we neglected to migrate.
Then, find and fix a predictable number of previous misuses.
With a small change by tabbott to preserve backwards compatibility for
sending `yes` for the `forged` field.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
The original/legacy emoji reactions endpoints made use of HTTP PUT and
didn't have an API that could correctly handle situations where the
emoji names change over time. We stopped using the legacy endpoints
some time ago, so we can remove them now.
This requires straightforward updates to older tests that were still
written against the legacy API.
Fixes#12940.
The function only used the user's realm anyway, so this is a cleaner
API.
This should also make it more convenient to permanently delete
messages manually, since one doesn't have to fetch a random user in
the realm in order to delete a message using the management shell.
No functional change.
This fixes two regressions in 1946692f9a.
The first bug was actually introduced much earlier, namely that we
were not sending a `bot_owner_id` field at all for bot users without
an owner. The correct behavior would have been send `None` for the
owner field.
The second bug was simply that we needed to update the webapp to look
for the `bot_owner_id` field, rather than an old email-address format
`bot_owner` field.
Thanks to Vinit Singh for reporting this bug.
When creating realm with the ldap backend, the registration flow didn't
properly handle some things - the user wouldn't be set as realm admin,
initial subscriptions and messages weren't created, and the redirect
wasn't happening properly in the case of subdomains.
The state of the FAKELDAP setup for the dev env has fallen behind the
backend changes and updates to fakeldap (which implemented
SCOPE_ONELEVEL searches), as well as having some other minor issues.
This commit restore it to a working state and now all three config modes
work properly.
This makes it possible to simlulate messages sent by specific clients,
rather than just "test suite". Relevant for sending messages where
`message.sent_by_human()` is True.
Rather than subtracting sets in multiple places, it's simpler/cleaner
to just check which users are in the set when processing them.
This refactoring be helpful when we extend the get_recipient_info
logic to handle wildcard mentions as well.
django_to_ldap_username is now able to find the correct ldap username in
every supported type of configuration, so we can remove these
conditionals and use django_to_ldap_username in a straight-forward
manner.
Having to account everywhere for both cases of having and not
having email search configured makes things needlessly complicated.
It's better to make the setting obligatory in configurations other than
LDAP_APPEND_DOMAIN.
Previously, we were using user_profile.email rather than
user_profile.delivery_email in all calculations involving Gravatar
URLs, which meant that all organizations with the new
EMAIL_ADDRESS_VISIBILITY_ADMINS setting enabled had useless gravatars
not based on the `user15@host.domain` type fake email addresses we
generate for the API to refer to users.
The fix is to convert these calculations to use the user's
delivery_email. Some refactoring is required to ensure the data is
passed through to the parts of the codebase that do the check;
fortunately, our automated tests of schemas are effective in verifying
that the new `sender_delivery_email` field isn't visible to the API.
Fixes#13369.
Previously, we weren't properly passing through the value of the
client_gravatar flag from the caller, resulting in buggy results if
the caller passed client_gravatar=False to do_test().
We happened to not have any uses of this before, but we're about to
add one.
Apparently, the refactor months ago that introduced finalize_payload
wasn't applied to the outgoing webhook code path, resulting in message
dicts with an unexpected format with no avatar_url and some extra
values that were intended to be internal details not relevant to
external clients.
Because this API is not widely used, we expect there to be little to
no impact of converting this back to matching the `get_messages`
interface, as it once was and has always been intended to be.
The one somewhat tricky detail is that we include both the `content`
and `rendered_content` fields, rather than asking the client to pick
which they want via the `apply_markdown` flag, because there is no
place for the client to configure that setting.
Previously, we skipped setting the list of subscribers to the channel,
which could result in problems if any messages had been posted there
in the past (e.g. because the channel used to have members, but now
doesn't). It could be correct to skip importing dead channels
altogether, but probably simpler is to just set an empty subscriber list.
Previously, our logic to handle Mattermost's "replies" feature didn't
copy the right fields for private messages, where `channel_members` is
included on the message body rather than a `channel` name.
As discussed in the comment, ideally these checks should be added
completely automatically, rather than needing to be manually added
every time we add a new setting. But hopefully the example code for
all of the similar enums that this provides will at least provide some
help.
By adding some additional plumbing (through PreregistrationUser) of the
full_name and an additional full_name_validated option, we
pre-populate the Full Name field in the registration form when coming
through a social backend (google/github/saml/etc.) and potentially skip
the registration form (if the user would have nothing to do there other
than clicking the Confirm button) and just create the account and log
the user in.
The main purpose of this is to make that name change happen in
/server_settings. external_authentication_methods is a much better, more
descriptive name than social_backends from API perspective.
These are returned through the API, at the /server_settings
endpoint. It's better to just return the list of dicts with a guarantee
of being sorted in the correct order, than to clutter things with the
sort_order field.
This small block of code was over-indented. It should be run in this
part of the function unconditionally, not inside an "else" block.
We obviously want it to run regardless of whether
request.POST.get('from_confirmation')
is True or not.
Needed so that the google entry in social_backends in /server_settings
shows the new url rather than the legacy accounts/login/google/ url as
the login url.
This legacy endpoint was designed for the original native Zulip mobile
apps, which were deprecated years ago in favor of the React Native
app.
It was replaced by /server_settings for active use years ago, so it's
safe to remove it now.
The code comment explains this issue in some detail, but essentially
in Kubernetes and Docker Swarm systems, the container overlayer
network has a relatively short TCP idle lifetime (about 15 minutes),
which can lead to it killing the connection between Tornado and
RabbitMQ.
We fix this by setting a TCP keepalive on that connection shorter than
15 minutes.
Fixes#10776.
This is following the change to the /users endpoint where we allow
an optional parameter "include_custom_profile_fields" which would
allow the client to request for users' custom profile fields along
with their other standard data.
The previous example no longer gives a good enough idea of what the user
can expect when the `include_custom_profile_fields` boolean parameter is
set to true.
The url scheme is now /accounts/login/social/saml/{idp_name} to initiate
login using the IdP configured under "idp_name" name.
display_name and display_logo (the name and icon to show on the "Log in
with" button) can be customized by adding the apprioprate settings in
the configured IdP dictionaries.
login_context now gets the social_backends list through
get_social_backend_dicts and we move display_logo customization
to backend class definition.
This prepares for easily adding multiple IdP support in SAML
authentication - there will be a social_backend dict for each configured
IdP, also allowing display_name and icon customization per IdP.
This changes the way django_to_ldap_username works to make sure the ldap
username it returns actually has a corresponding ldap entry and raise an
exception if that's not possible. It seems to be a more sound approach
than just having it return its best guess - which was the case so far.
Now there is a guarantee that what it returns is the username of an
actual ldap user.
This allows communicating to the registration flow when the email being
registered doesn't belong to ldap, which then will proceed to register
it via the normal email backend flow - finally fixing the bug where you
couldn't register a non-ldap email even with the email backend enabled.
These changes to the behavior of django_to_ldap_username require small
refactorings in a couple of other functions that call it, as well as
adapting some tests to these changes. Finally, additional tests are
added for the above-mentioned registration flow behavior and some
related corner-cases.
Instead of mocking the _LDAPUser class, these tests can now take
advantage of the test directory that other ldap are using. After these
changes, test_query_email_attr also verifies that query_ldap can
successfully be used to query by user email, if email search is
configured.
Fixes#11878
Instead of a confusing mix of django_auth_backed applying
ldap_to_django_username in its internals for one part of the
translation, and then custom logic for grabbing it from the email
attribute of the ldapuser in ZulipLDAPAuthBackend.get_or_build_user
for the second part of the translation,
we put all the logic in a single function user_email_from_ldapuser
which will be used by get_or_build of both ZulipLDAPUserPopulator and
ZulipLDAPAuthBackend.
This, building on the previous commits with the email search feature,
fixes the ldap sync bug from issue #11878.
If we can get upstream django-auth-ldap to merge
https://github.com/django-auth-ldap/django-auth-ldap/pull/154, we'll
be able to go back to using the version of ldap_to_django_username
that accepts a _LDAPUser object.
With this, django_to_ldap_username can take an email and find the ldap
username of the ldap user who has this email - if email search is
configured.
This allows successful authenticate() with ldap email and ldap password,
instead of ldap username. This is especially useful because when
a user wants to fetch their api key, the server attempts authenticate
with user_profile.email - and this used to fail if the user was an ldap
user (because the ldap username was required to authenticate
succesfully). See issue #9277.
This fixes a collection of bugs surrounding LDAP configurations A and
C (i.e. LDAP_APPEND_DOMAIN=None) with EmailAuthBackend also enabled.
The core problem was that our desired security model in that setting
of requiring LDAP authentication for accounts managed by LDAP was not
implementable without a way to
Now admins can configure an LDAPSearch query that will find if there
are users in LDAP that have the email address and
email_belongs_to_ldap() will take advantage of that - no longer
returning True in response to all requests and thus blocking email
backend authentication.
In the documentation, we describe this as mandatory configuration for
users (and likely will make it so soon in the code) because the
failure modes for this not being configured are confusing.
But making that change is pending work to improve the relevant error
messages.
Fixes#11715.
The value of realm attribute in confirmation object used to be empty
before. We are not currently using the realm attribute of reactivation
links anywhere. The value of realm stored in content_object is currently
used.
We currently have code to calculate the value of realm_icon_url,
admin_emails and default_discount in two diffrent places. With
the addition of showing confirmation links it would become three.
The easiest way to deduplicate the code and make the view cleaner
is by doing the calculations in template. Alternatively one can
write a function that takes users, realms and confirmations as
arguments and sets the value of realm_icon_url, admin_emails and
default_discount appropriately in realm object according to the
type of the confirmation. But that seems more messy than passing
the functions directly to template approach.
Most of the failures were due to parameters that are not intended to
be used by third-party code, so the correct fix for those was the set
intentionally_undocumented=True.
Fixes#12969.
MigrationsTestCase is intentionally omitted from this, since migrations
tests are different in their nature and so whatever setUp()
ZulipTestCase may do in the future, MigrationsTestCase may not
necessarily want to replicate.
new_name and description params should be valid JSON
strings. The format of these params are marked as
json so that the curl example genenrator can convert
them into json strings.
Previously, the logic for determining whether to provide an LDAP
password prompt on the registration page was incorrectly including it
if any LDAP authentication was backend enabled, even if LDAP was
configured with the populate-only backend that is not responsible for
authentication (just for filling in name and custom profile fields).
We fix this by correcting the conditional, and add a test.
There's still follow-up work to do here: We may still end up
presenting a registration form in situations where it's useless
because we got all the data from SAML + LDAP. But that's for a future
issue.
This fixes a bug reported in #13275.
This is a follow-up to b69213808a.
We now actually send messages from the notification_bot, which
is the real usecase for this code.
Also, this cleans up the code and removes needless asserts like
`assertNotEqual(zulip_realm, lear_realm)` making the test easier
to read.