This commit changes the assignee info to the correct one.
Earlier, the current assignee info of the issue was used
to create the message but when an issue was unassigned
this would give incorrect information if there are still
assignees left on the issue. Now, it uses the details of
the user who has been unassigned from the issue.
This commit removes the description from the Issue Assigned
event message that is sent by the Github Integration.
Previously when an issue was assigned, the message also had the
description of the issue, which is redundant as the description
has been already sent through the issue created event. After
this commit, the description no longer appears in the message.
Fixes#24554
This commit passes the body of the PR Review as the message to
the helper function that generates the message to be sent by the
GitHub Integration.
Previously when a PR Review was done the message sent would just
include the link of the review but the message didn't include the
body the review. After this commit, the message also includes the
body of the review.
Fixes#24676
Previously, the assignee message would stick around in the middle of the
event message. This doesn't look as good as if we put it to the end of
the event message. These changes does just that and move the assignee
messages towards the end of the event message to make it look better
and cleaner for the readers.
Previously, some call sites for the function provided optional
arguments as positional arguments. These changes will allow the
arguments to be passed as keyword arguments to the function and
fix up the call sites of the function to pass keyword arguments
instead.
Previously, some call sites for the function provided optional
arguments as positional arguments. These changes will allow the
arguments to be passed as keyword arguments to the function and
fix up the call sites of the function to pass keyword arguments
instead.
Previously when Github bot receives an update pull request event,it
will produce the following message:
user updated PR #1 Start writing unit tests from test to main
"from test to main" is improper and causes unnecessary confusion.
These changes will update the logic to remove the phrase from
update events. These changes will also include the org: prefix to
the branch names to keep it consistent with Github and further
reduce confusions on branch names.
Fixes#24536.
The list of supported events for filtering itself does not document what
each of the events does. Adding a link to GitHub's documentation would
be a pointer to get people started. But ideally we need to establish a
better system to document the events in general.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
This unifies the length of the shortened SHA our integrations generate,
and ensures that they are long enough for projects of various sizes with
a chosen value defined in get_short_sha.
Fixes#23475
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
7 characters are not enough for large projects, so we change
it to reasonably longer. As an example, The Linux kernel needs
at least 11 characters of sha in its shortened form to identify
a revision. We pick 11 so it should work for most of the projects.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
markdown-include is GPL licensed.
Also, rewrite it as a block processor, so that it works correctly
inside indented blocks.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Adds request as a parameter to json_success as a refactor towards
making `ignored_parameters_unsupported` functionality available
for all API endpoints.
Also, removes any data parameters that are an empty dict or
a dict with the generic success response values.
We recently ran into a payload in production that didn't contain
an event type at all. A payload where we can't figure out the event
type is quite rare. Instead of letting these payloads run amok, we
should raise a more informative exception for such unusual payloads.
If we encounter too many of these, then we can choose to conduct a
deeper investigation on a case-by-case basis.
With some changes by Tim Abbott.
We add discussion id and url in the comments and highlighted title to
the body of disscussion message to make it more meaningful and accessible.
Fixes#19938.
We aim to use Zulip topics thoughtfully in displaying messages from
discussions, as well as linking to the discussion in every message so
that it's easy to view them.
Fixes#19938.
Since FIXTURE_DIR_NAME is the name of the folder that contains the view
and tests modules of the webhook and another folder called "fixtures" that
store the fixtures, it is more appropriate to call it WEBHOOK_DIR_NAME,
especially when we want to refer to the view module using this variable.
Move `get_setup_webhook_message` to
`zerver/lib/webhooks/common.py` so multiple integrations can use this
rather than just those which import `zerver/lib/webhooks/git.py`. Also
added the documentation for this.
I have added a documentation page for the GitHub Actions integration to
`/integrations/doc/github-actions` with a link to the Zulip GitHub
Actions repository.
Tweaked by tabbott to add cross-links with the main GitHub integration.
This change updates the GitHub Integration webhook
get_opened_or_update_pull_request_body method so that
the description is only printed if it actually changes.
If the update event is a result of some other
attribute update, such as an asignee change, then the
description is not included in the message sent to
the zulip stream.
Fixes#16345
This clears it out of the data sent to Sentry, where it is duplicative
with the indexed metadata -- and potentially exposes PHI if Sentry's
"make this issue public" feature is used.
Any exception is an "unexpected event", which means talking about
having an "unexpected event logger" or "unexpected event exception" is
confusing. As the error message in `exceptions.py` already explains,
this is about an _unsupported_ event type.
This also switches the path that these exceptions are written to,
accordingly.
8e10ab282a moved UnexpectedWebhookEventType into
`zerver.lib.exceptions`, but left the import into
`zserver.lib.webhooks.common` so that webhooks could continue to
import the exception from there.
This clutters things and adds complexity; there is no compelling
reason that the exception's source of truth should not move alongside
all other exceptions.
If there are unsupported keys, we still log an error,
but we now also send a message to the stream. (This
is a good tradeoff for the github webhook, since users
can just turn off notifications if they find it spammy.
Also, we intend to support "repository" soon.)
This is a bit of an experiment to see how this plays
in the field:
* will customers notice the change?
* will Sentry reports look any different?
The main thing fixed here is that we weren't turning
on our keys into a list. And then I refined the message
a bit more, including sorting the keys.
I also avoid the unnecessary "else".