Note that a pretty common use case for this is a realm admin sending this to
everyone after an import from HipChat or Slack. So this adds the realm_name
to the title (so that there is something they might recognize) and kept the
wording generic enough to accommodate the user not having clicked anything
to get this email.
Also strengthens the tests a bit to better test the complicated template
logic.
This is somewhat hacky, in that in order to do what we're doing, we
need to parse the HTML of the rendered page to extract the first
paragraph to include in the open graph description field. But
BeautifulSoup does a good job of it.
This carries a nontrivial performance penalty for loading these pages,
but overall /help/ is a low-traffic site compared to the main app, so
it doesn't matter much.
(As a sidenote, it wouldn't be a bad idea to cache this stuff).
There's lots of things we can improve in this, largely through editing
the articles, but we can deal with that over time.
Thanks to Rishi for writing all the tests.
This change lets us eliminate the need for new authentication backends
to edit get_auth_backends_data, since we're just computing it from the
official registry in zproject/backends.py. Should save a few lines of
work whenever we add a new auth backend, and make that more accessible
to new contributors.
This adds a new realm_logo field, which is a horizontal-format logo to
be displayed in the top-left corner of the webapp, and any other
places where we might want a wide-format branding of the organization.
Tweaked significantly by tabbott to rebase, fix styling, etc.
Fixing the styling of this feature's loading indicator caused me to
notice the loading indicator for the realm_icon feature was also ugly,
so I fixed that too.
Fixes#7995.
Support for extended mention syntax was added as a part of
commit fbe99b812ee8fbca7257a5b7156c57a6cd74195b in the
python-zulip-api repository. The relevant function,
extract_query_without_mention now relies on the client's ID
in order to check for the extended syntax. Since the
EmbeddedBotHandler has no user_id attribute, the latest
python-zulip-api release broke a test in the main repo.
This is a simple change to our validation, to allow multiple copies of
the main linkifier syntax, which lets us support things like generic
GitHub URLs.
Fixes#10914.
Apparently, when we renamed these files to no longer have a .txt
extension, we accidentally removed them from the set of strings for
translation, because `manage.py makemessages` by default only
processes .txt and .html files under the templates/ directory.
Fix this by adding a .txt extension.
It appears that our i18n logic was only using the recipient's language
for logged-in emails, so even properly tagged for translation and
translated emails for functions like "Find my team" and "password
reset" were being always sent in English.
With great work by Vishnu Ks on the tests and the to_emails code path.
The previous version was also doing almost the same thing.
But checking for DEVELOPMENT_LOG_EMAILS would allow us
to control the call of send_email by altering the value
of DEVELOPMENT_LOG_EMAILS in tests.
This form isn't actively used, which is how it ended up broken, but it
basically didn't display its content properly at all.
Convert it to use our standard white-box framework.
This still doesn't look great in various ways, but it's at least not
obviously totally busted now.
The previous logic for soft deactivation ended up doing a giant
transaction in the case that there were thousands of users to
deactivate; this was messy and potentially buggy.
The batched transactions were useful for RealmAuditLog management,
however. So the right solution is to do reasonably sized batches
(e.g. 100 users).
Apparently, our do_batch_update method (used, e.g., in a pgroonga
migration) was using semi-invalid syntax that was removed in postgres
10.
Thanks to Ilya Evseev for the report.
Fixes#11063.
This should make it possible for blueslip error reports to be sent on
our logged-out portico pages, which should in turn make it possible to
debug any such issues as they occur.
This checks if push_notification_enabled() is set to false in
handle_push_notification and adds an early return statement.
This is a significant performance optimization for our unit tests
because the push notifications code path does a number of database
queries, and this migration means we don't end up doing those queries
the hundreds of times we send PMs or mentions in our tests where we're
not trying to test the push notifications functionality.
This should also have a small message sending scalability improvement
for any Zulip servers without push notifications enabled.
Tweaked by tabbott to fix a few small issues.
Fixes#10895.
While reviewing #11012, I discovered a nondeterministic result for
test_signup, which I tracked down to specifically this triple of tests
failing when run in this order:
test-backend GCMSuccessTest \
zerver.tests.test_push_notifications.TestAPNs.test_get_apns_client \
zerver.tests.test_signup.LoginTest.test_register
with a query count mismatch like this:
expected length: 73
actual length: 79
Comparing the list of queries, it's clear that test_register was
seeing `push_notifications_enabled()` returning True in this test order.
It's not clear why GCMSuccessTest was required here (it was!), but
further debugging determined the problem was that
`test_get_apns_client` left the _apns_client initialization system in
a state where get_apns_client would return a non-None value, resulting
in push_notifications_enabled() returning True for future tests.
The immediate fix is to just reset the `_apns_client` and
`_apns_client_initializedstate` state properly after the test runs;
but arguably we should do a larger refactor to make this less
fragile.
The previous migration code path was broken in two ways:
* ScheduledEmail objects generally contain a `None` value for
whichever of `to_user_id` and `to_email` isn't in use; this could
result in us sending a [None] to send_email(), which doesn't make
sense.
* We were calling handle_send_email_format_changes in the wrong order
with respect to the JSON loading process.
Thanks to Tom Daff for the report!
Our list of allowed characters in realm filter patterns has long been
too string; fix this by extending the pattern.
Also, extend the tests to have examples of actual strings one would
use with the patterns, for clarity.
Fixes#10953, fixes#6835.
Technically, we will only need to process deactivated users for the
purpose of reactivating them (and can ignore, e.g., name changes).
But it's simplest to just process them unconditionally.
This should make life a lot more convenient for organizations that use
the LDAP integration and have their avatars in LDAP already.
This hasn't been end-to-end tested against LDAP yet, so there may be
some minor revisions, but fundamentally, it works, has automated
tests, and should be easy to maintain.
Fixes#286.
Fixes a bug in import_realm where secondary attributes like message
visibility weren't being set, and also makes bugs like this less likely in
the future.
Also, putting the plan_type change at the end of import_realm, so that
future restrictions to LIMITED realms don't affect the import process.
Apparently, Django's get_current_site function (used, e.g., in
django-two-factor to look up the domain to use in QR codes) first
tries to use the Sites framework, and if unavailable, does the right
thing (namely, using request.get_host()).
We don't use the Sites framework for anything in Zulip, so the correct
fix is to just remove it.
Fixes#11014.
The Slack import process would incorrectly issue
CustomProfileFieldValue entries with a value of "" for users who
didn't have a given CustomProfileField (especially common for the
"skype" and "phone" fields). This had no user-visible effect, but
certainly added some clutter in the database.
We should rate-limit users when our rate limiter deadlocks trying to
increment its count; we also now log at warning level (so it doesn't
send spammy emails) and include details on the user and route was, so
that we can properly investigate whether the rate-limiting on the
route was in error.
The code paths for accessing user-uploaded files are both (A) highly
optimized so as to not require a ton of work, and (B) a code path
where it's totally reasonable for a client to need to fetch 100+
images all at once (e.g. if it's the first browser open in a setting
with a lot of distinct senders with avatars or a lot of image
previews).
Additionally, we've been seeing exceptions logged in the production
redis configuration caused by this code path (basically, locking
failures trying to update the rate-limit data structures).
So we skip running our current rate limiting algorithm for these views.
Now that we've styled this feature properly, this makes it possible to
copy various user-preferences type profile data in production when
making a new account with the same email address as an existing
account.
This styles the avatar and username that show when the registering
user is importing their settings from an existing Zulip account.
Tweaked by tabbott to fix the test/linter failures, a bit of styling,
and tag strings for translation.
Apparently, while the main code path through
login_or_register_remote_user was correctly calling
remote_user_to_email(username) to get a proper email address for
situations where auth username != email (i.e. when SSO_APPEND_DOMAIN
is set), we neglected to do so in the mobile_flow_otp corner case.
Fixes#11005.
Broaden the type of the AbstractEnum __reduce_ex__ parameter to object; this
matches the parameter type specified in the latest enum.pyi file in typeshed.
Fixes#10996.
Also, add a new notification sound, "ding". It comes from
https://freesound.org, where the original Zulip notification sound comes
from as well. In the future, new sounds can be added by adding audio
files to the `static/audio/notification_sounds` directory.
Tweaked significantly by tabbott:
* Avoided removing static/audio/zulip.ogg, because that file is
checked for by old versions of the desktop app.
* Added a views check for the sound being valid + tests.
* Added additional tests.
* Restructured the test_events test to be cleaner.
* Removed check_bool_or_string.
* Increased max length of notification_sound.
* Provide available_notification_sounds in events data set if global
notifications settings are requested.
Fixes#8051.
A key part of this is the new helper, get_user_by_delivery_email. Its
verbose name is important for clarity; it should help avoid blind
copy-pasting of get_user (which we'll also want to rename).
Unfortunately, it requires detailed understanding of the context to
figure out which one to use; each is used in about half of call sites.
Another important note is that this PR doesn't migrate get_user calls
in the tests except where not doing so would cause the tests to fail.
This probably deserves a follow-up refactor to avoid bugs here.
This is preparatory work for settings controlling who can see user
emails; it includes the API-level support for editing it, but no code
to actually enforce the policy.
We've had a long stream of bugs existed because only one of these two
code paths was tested (usually the local uploads backend). By
deduplicating these functions, we ensure that this category of bugs no
longer happens.
Following my recent refactor, this is just a straightforward merge,
with code for one or the other backend ending up inside an if
statement.
Previously, we were incorrectly importing avatar PNGs to a filename
without the .png extension, resulting in them effectively not being
imported.
This was mitigated by the fact that we imported the originals and ran
the appropriate `ensure_` functions, but still a bug.
Apparently, there was a bug in notify_bot_owner_on_invalid_json, where
we didn't reraise the JsonableError.
We fix this with a refactoring that makes the exception layering
clearer as well.
In a quick scan of today's nginx logs on chat.zulip.org, there
were 20 distinct user-agents that begin with 'ZulipMobile/'.
Here's a representative sampling of them, such that the rest
were all boringly similar to one of these.
First, to make room for these without an excess of copy-paste and
overlong lines, convert this test to a data-oriented style. The
existing, synthetic cases appear in the new data followed by the
seen-in-the-wild cases.
Happily, the code being tested passes all these new cases unchanged.