We already have this data in the `flags` for each user, so no need to
send this set/list in the event dictionary.
The `flags` in the event dict represent the after-message-update state,
so we can't avoid sending `prior_mention_user_ids`.
There is still no need for mock_template to reach into the internals
of mock_cjs. Make it a normal caller of mock_cjs.
This is basically the same as 60f5a00c09
(#18804), because the same abstraction violation was since
reintroduced in the same way.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This is much faster than calling generate_presigned_url each time.
```
In [3]: t = time.time()
...: for i in range(250):
...: x = u.get_public_upload_url("foo")
...: print(time.time()-t)
0.0010945796966552734
```
Fixes#18915
This was very slow, causing performance issues. After investigating,
generate_presigned_url is the cheap part of this, but the
session.client() call is expensive - so that's what we should cache.
Before the change:
```
In [4]: t = time.time()
...: for i in range(250):
...: x = u.get_public_upload_url("foo")
...: print(time.time()-t)
6.408717393875122
```
After:
```
In [4]: t = time.time()
...: for i in range(250):
...: x = u.get_public_upload_url("foo")
...: print(time.time()-t)
0.48990607261657715
```
This is not good enough to avoid doing something ugly like replacing
generate_presigned_url with some manual URL manipulation, but it's a
helpful structure that we may find useful with further refactoring.
We turn off the eslint no-use-before-define for TypeScript files
because it does not work correctly for types. There is already
a typescript-eslint version of it that is enabled for TS.
We also update the error handler on window to use instanceof check
for ErrorEvent instead of checking the error property.
We also update the tippy.js mock in tests to expect a element
(zjquery FakeElement function) instead of zjquery instance, and get
rid of setting _tippy property itself to a noop function.
The plan for type annotating the page_params is to set it to
Record<string, unknown> for now and then annotate individual
properties on it as we use it in typescript modules.
We add a exclude pattern that makes sure we don't catch two edge
cases: a variable declaration `const style =` and setting a
variable ending in style such as `require_cmd_style =`. We don't add
and exclude pattern for let declaration because it will catch lines
that modify it later in the code.
(Removed other files from exclude list that no longer needed to be
excluded from this lint rule.)
We use a simpler approach here which is to let it be undefined if
nothing was passed and use that in the if condition. This has two
benefits. There is no edge case where the condition will evaluate to
false if 0 was passed and it is easier to type annotate.
The ‘t’ helper operates on text strings, not HTML. The ‘&’ works
fine, and is correctly escaped for output by Handlebars, like any text
string interpolated with ‘{{}}’.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Previously, it was possible for an unusual series of topic-edit
actions to result in Notification Bot reporting that a topic was
marked as resolved that had already been marked as resolved, etc.
A buggy client might send a message_edit request to change the topic
field, sending the current topic as the new value. Previously, we
would treat that as a normal request to edit the topic; now we act as
though the API request had not requested a topic change. In the
common case that only the topic was in the edit request, this now
results in an error that should help client implementations identify
their bug.
This fixes a bad interaction with the "unresolve topic" logic, which
assumed that upstream logic had verified that the topic was actually
changing.
We incorrectly include many realm settings in the data section of
'realm/update_dict' schema. It should only contain the settings
related to message edit, realm icon, realm logo and authentication
methods and not other settings, becausea all the other settings send
'realm/update' event and not 'realm/update_dict' event.
This commit only removes 'default_twenty_four_hour_time' and
'default_language', others will be removed separately.
Now, the markdown extension of curl_examples generates
all examples of all possible configurations with
their descriptions, and so we need to separate
executable curl commands from the rest of the raw
HTML.
This commit simply changes the indentation of the
block and replaces the command being tested
with each element of the commands array. This
was split for an easier review.
Now, the markdown extension of curl_examples generates
all examples of all possible configurations with
their descriptions, and so we need to separate
executable curl commands from the rest of the raw
HTML.
This commit adds a commands variable to store
all the curl commands in HTML using regex.
Now, include and exclude configuration
are fetched from openapi data, and only
one type can be encoded for every example.
This removes the need for the assertion to
test if both include and exclude are present
since at a time, only one can be present.
Now, all possible configurations for curl examples
are rendered directly from openapi data, and
the templates should just call the markdown
function once.
This commit adjusts all the templates by removing
hardcoded configurations and descriptions for
individual curl examples.
This commit adds support for using the
x-curl-examples-parameters parameter in OpenAPI
data to fetch curl examples configuration. This
also contains any descriptions necessary for each
example, and directly generates all possible
curl examples directly.
A follow-up commit is needed to modify the templates
accordingly.
As a goal of moving towards a common template,
we need to fetch curl examples' configurations
directly from openapi data instead of having them
hardcoded in templates. This commit introduces
x-curl-examples-parameters to store the configs
for the same.
* Have the `get_active_presence_idle_user_ids` function look at all the
user data, not just `private_message` and `mentioned`.
* Fix a couple of incorrect `missedmessage_hook` tests, which did not
catch the earlier behaviour.
* Add some comments to the tests for this function for clarity.
* Add a helper to create `UserMessageNotificationsData` objects from the
user ID lists. This will later help us deduplicate code in the event_queue
logic.
This fixes a bug which earlier existed, that if a user turned on stream
notifications, and received a message in that stream which did not mention
them, they wouldn't be in the `presence_idle_users` list, and hence would
never get notifications for that message.
Note that, after this commit, users might still not get notifications in
the above scenarios in some cases, because the downstream logic in the
notification queue consumers sometimes erroneously skips sending
notifications for stream messages.
Since `flags` here could be iterated through multiple times
(to check for push/email notifiability), we use `Collection`.
Inspired by 871e73ab8f.
The other change here in the `event_queue` code is prep for using
the `UserMessageNotificationsData` class there.
We will later consistently use these functions to check for notifiable
messages in the message send and event_queue code.
We have these functions accept the `sender_id` so that we can avoid the
`private_message = message["type"] == "private" and user_id != sender_id`
wizardy.
Before this commit, we used to pre-calculate flags for user data and send
it to Tornado, like so:
```
{
"id": 10,
"flags": ["mentioned"],
"mentioned": true,
"online_push_enabled": false,
"stream_push_notify": false,
"stream_email_notify": false,
"wildcard_mention_notify": false,
"sender_is_muted": false,
}
```
This has the benefit of simplifying the logic in the event_queue code a bit.
However, because we sent such an object for each user receiving the event,
the string keys (like "stream_email_notify") get duplicated in the JSON
blob that is sent to Tornado.
For 1000 users, this data may take up upto ~190KB of space, which can
cause performance degradation in large organisations.
Hence, as an alternative, we send just the list of user_ids fitting
each notification criteria, and then calculate the flags in Tornado.
This brings down the space to ~60KB for 1000 users.
This commit reverts parts of following commits:
- 2179275
- 40cd6b5
We will in the future, add helpers to create `UserMessageNotificationsData`
objects from these lists, so as to avoid code duplication.
This is separate from the next commit for ease of testing.
To verify that the compatibility code works correctly, all message send
and event_queue tests from our test suite should pass on just this commit.
Moved the `delete_message` user-confirmation modal to
the `confirm_dialog` folder and renamed the modal to `confirm_delete_message.hbs`
to follow the common naming convention.
Moved `revoke_invite` user-confirmation modal to the
`confirm_dialog` folder and renamed the modal to
`confirm_revoke_invite.hbs` to follow the common naming convention.
Moved `resend_invite` user-confirmation modal to the
`confirm_dialog` folder and renamed the modal to
to `confirm_resend_invite.hbs` to follow the common naming convention.
Moved `emoji_settings_warning` modal to the `confirm_dialog`
folder and renamed the modal to `confirm_emoji_settings_warning.hbs`
to follow the common naming convention.
Moved `deactivation_user` modal to the `confirm_dialog`
folder within `/static/templates` and renamed the modal to
to `confirm_deactivate_user.hbs` to follow the
common naming convention.
Moved `deactivation_stream` user-confirmation modal to
the `confirm_dialog` folder and renamed the modal to
`confirm_deactivate_stream.hbs` to follow the common naming convention.
Moved `deactivate_realm` modal to the `confirm_dialog` folder
within `/static/templates` and renamed the modal to
`confirm_deactivate_realm.hbs` to follow the naming convention.