When a server doesn't submit a remote realm info which was
previously submitted, we mark it as locally deleted.
If such a realm has paid plan attached to it, we should investigate.
This commit adds logic to send an email to sales@zulip.com for
investigation.
This commit updates default for delete_own_message_policy
setting to "Everyone" as it is helpful to allow everyone
to delete their own messages in a new organization where
users might be using Zulip for the first time.
This commit updates default for move_messages_between_streams_policy
setting to "Members and above" as it is helpful to allow members
to move messages between streams in new organizations where users
might be using Zulip for first time.
The presence of `len(messages)` outside the transaction caused the
full resultset to be fetched outside of the transaction. This should
ideally be inside the transaction, and also only need be the count.
However, also note that the process of counting matching rows, and
then executing a second query which embeds the same query, is
susceptible to phantom reads, where a query with the same conditions
returns different resultsets, under PostgreSQL's default transaction
isolation of "read committed." While this is possible to resolve by
pulling the returned IDs into a Python list, it would not address the
issue that concurrent updates which change the resultset would make
the overall algorithm still incorrect.
Add a comment clarifying the conditions under which the algorithm is
correct. A more correct algorithm would walk the UserMessage rows
which are unread and in the stream, but this requires a
whole-UserMessage index which would be quite large for such an
infrequent use case.
This makes no immediate reloads the default for runtornado, matching
the production configuration, and changes the development incantation
to be the one to specify the departure from the norm, with
--immediate-reloads.
LoggingCountStats with a daily duration and that are directly stored
on the RealmCount table (not via aggregation in process_count_stat),
can be in a state, after the hourly cron job to update analytics
counts, where the logged value will be live-updated later, because
the end time for the stat is still in the future.
As these logging counts are designed to be used on the self-hosted
installation for either debugging or rate limiting, sending these
partial/incomplete counts to the bouncer has low value.
Due to the channel_map_to_topics URL parameter in the Slack webhook,
it was not migrated to use the check_send_webhook_message.
By using check_send_webhook_message, any topic parameter in the
webhook URL will be prioritized over mapping Slack channels to
topics, e.g. when channel_map_to_topics is true. This is because
the default behaviour for incoming webhooks is to send a default
topic as a parameter to check_send_webhook_message in case there
is no topic specified in the URL.
In contrast, we can override the stream passed in the URL when
channel_map_to_topics is false by passing the Slack channel name
to check_send_webhook_message. The default behaviour for incoming
webhooks is to send a direct message if there is no specified
stream in the URL, so a default stream is not generally passed
to check_send_webhook_message.
Fixes#27601.
This commit adds a realm-level setting named
'zulip_update_announcements_stream' that configures the
stream to which zulip updates should be posted.
Fixes part of #28604.
- Adds instructions for downloading a zuliprc file for a bot or for
yourself.
- Updates the button label to "Download zuliprc", since that's the
filename it downloads.
Fixes#28881.
The previous logic incorrectly used the server-level number of users
even when a (presumably smaller) realm-level count was available.
Fixes a bug introduced in 2e1ed4431a.
This commit renames the realm-level setting
'signup_notifications_stream' to 'signup_announcements_stream'.
The new name reflects better what the setting does.
This commit renames the realm-level setting 'notifications_stream'
to 'new_stream_announcements_stream'.
The new name reflects better what the setting does.
5c96f94206 mistakenly appended, rather than prepended, the edit to
the history. This caused AssertionErrors when attempting to view the
history of moved messages, which check that the `last_edit_time`
matches the timestamp of the first edit in the list.
Fix the ordering, and update the `edit_history` for messages that were
affected. We limit to only messages edited since the commit was
merged, since that helps bound the affected messages somewhat.
RemoteRealm customer takes precedence over RemoteServer
in general. But if an inactive plan is associated with
RemoteRealm and an active plan with RemoteServer, the
ACTIVE plan takes precendence.
Co-authored-by: Prakhar Pratyush <prakhar@zulip.com>
Previously, in DM disabled org messaging to bot was not working when
starting new conversation and adding bot as recipient because of not
updating on recipient change. And secondly, self messaging was not
allowed.
This commit ensures that the DM to bot and self are allowed irrespective
of dm restrictions.
tests: Verify DMs adhere to DM restriction policy.
Fixes#28412
Signed-off-by: sayyedarib <sayyedaribhussain4321@gmail.com>
The widening of the time between when a process is marked for
reload (at Tornado startup) and when it sends reload events makes it
unlikely-to-impossible that a single `/` request will span both of
them, and thus hit the WebReloadClientError corner case.
Remove it, as it is not worth the complication. The bad behaviour it
is attempting to prevent (of a reload right after opening `/`) was
always still possible -- if the `/` request completed right before
Tornado restarted -- so it is not clear that it was ever worth the
complication.
Collapsing was done incorrectly, as 65c400e06d added `zulip_version`
and `zulip_feature_level`, but did not update the virtual event logic
to copy those new values into the virtual event.
However, it is unlikely that a server will be upgraded multiple times
in quick enough succession for this to ever be relevant. Remove the
logic, which is additional complication for little or no gain.
Commit bd6471f0e3 (#28691) added this
reference to the old name, even though it had already been renamed in
commit b220d29fed (#17775), presumably
because that had failed to update the OpenAPI description.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Having a non-identity `cache_transformer` is no different from running
it on every row of the query_function. Simplify understanding of the
codepath used in caching by merging the pieces of code.
Rather than pass around a list of message objects in-memory, we
instead keep the same constructed QuerySet which includes the later
propagated messages (if any), and use that same query to pick out
affected Attachment objects, rather than limiting to the set of ids.
This is not necessarily a win -- the list of message-ids *may* be very
long, and thus the query may be more concise, easier to send to
PostgreSQL, and faster for PostgreSQL to parse. However, the list of
ids is almost certainly better-indexed.
After processing the move, the QuerySet must be re-defined as a search
of ids (and possibly a very long list of such), since there is no
other way which is guaranteed to correctly single out the moved
messages. At this point, it is mostly equivalent to the list of
Message objects, and certainly takes no less memory.
Rather than use `bulk_update()` to batch-move chunks of messages, use
a single SQL query to move the messages. This is much more efficient
for large topic moves. Since the `edit_history` field is not yet
JSON (see #26496) this requires that PostgreSQL cast the current data
into `jsonb`, append the new data (also cast to `jsonb`), and then
re-cast that as text.
For single-message moves, this _increases_ the SQL query count by one,
since we have to re-query for the updated data from the database after
the bulk update. However, this is overall still a performance
improvement, which improves to 2x or 3x for larger topic moves. Below
is a table of duration in seconds to run `do_update_message` to move a
topic to a new stream, based on messages in the topic, for before and
after this change:
| Topic size | Before | After |
| ---------- | -------- | ------- |
| 1 | 0.1036 | 0.0868 |
| 2 | 0.1108 | 0.0925 |
| 5 | 0.1139 | 0.0959 |
| 10 | 0.1218 | 0.0972 |
| 20 | 0.1310 | 0.1098 |
| 50 | 0.1759 | 0.1366 |
| 100 | 0.2307 | 0.1662 |
| 200 | 0.3880 | 0.2229 |
| 500 | 0.7676 | 0.4052 |
| 1000 | 1.3990 | 0.6848 |
| 2000 | 2.9706 | 1.3370 |
| 5000 | 7.5218 | 3.2882 |
| 10000 | 14.0272 | 5.4434 |
This applies access restrictions in SQL, so that individual messages
do not need to be walked one-by-one. It only functions for stream
messages.
Use of this method significantly speeds up checks if we moved "all
visible messages" in a topic, since we no longer need to walk every
remaining message in the old topic to determine that at least one was
visible to the user. Similarly, it significantly speeds up merging
into existing topics, since it no longer must walk every message in
the new topic to determine if the user could see at least one.
Finally, it unlocks the ability to bulk-update only messages the user
has access to, in a single query (see subsequent commit).
This is a preparatory commit that refactors the check_update_message
method to extract the checks containing whether a user can edit the
message or not into a separate method -validate_message_content_edit,
so that it can be re used later.
This logic was apparently missed when we implemented private streams
with shared history; the correct check is to look at whether the user
can access message history in the stream, which used to be equivalent
to whether it's a private stream.
The problem was that earlier this was just an uncaught JsonableError,
leading to a full traceback getting spammed to the admins.
The prior commit introduced a clear .code for this error on the bouncer
side, meaning the self-hosted server can now detect that and handle it
nicely, by just logging.error about it and also take the opportunity to
adjust the realm.push_notifications_... flags.
This commit removes the stale 'email_gateway' parameter
from 'do_send_messages' function.
This should have been removed in 6c473ed75f,
when the call to 'build_message_send_dict' was removed
from 'do_send_messages'.
This error message didn’t make sense for the check as written, and our
OpenAPI document already provides the expected format for our 200
responses.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Real requests would not validate against the previous version. There
seems to be no consistent way to determine whether a string parameter
should be coerced to an integer for validation against an allOf
schema (which works at the level of JSON objects, not strings).
See also https://github.com/python-openapi/openapi-core/issues/698.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
The endpoint was lacking validation that the authentication_methods dict
submitted by the user made sense. So e.g. it allowed submitting a
nonsense key like NoSuchBackend or modifying the realm's configured
authentication methods for a backend that's not enabled on the server,
which should not be allowed.
Both were ultimately harmless, because:
1. Submitting NoSuchBackend would luckily just trigger a KeyError inside
the transaction.atomic() block in do_set_realm_authentication_methods
so it would actually roll back the database changes it was trying to
make. So this couldn't actually create some weird
RealmAuthenticationMethod entries.
2. Silently enabling or disabling e.g. GitHub for a realm when GitHub
isn't enabled on the server doesn't really change anything. And this
action is only available to the realm's admins to begin with, so
there's no attack vector here.
test_supported_backends_only_updated wasn't actually testing anything,
because the state it was asserting:
```
self.assertFalse(github_auth_enabled(realm))
self.assertTrue(dev_auth_enabled(realm))
self.assertFalse(password_auth_enabled(realm))
```
matched the desired state submitted to the API...
```
result = self.client_patch(
"/json/realm",
{
"authentication_methods": orjson.dumps(
{"Email": False, "Dev": True, "GitHub": False}
).decode()
},
)
```
so we just replace it with a new test that tests the param validation.
- Renames "Bots and integrations" to "Bots overview" everywhere
(sidebar, page title, page URL).
- Adds a copy of /api/integrations-overview (symbolic link) as the
second page in the Bots & integrations section, titled
"Integrations overview".
Fixes#28758.
We use Alertmanager as an aggregation place for example for failing CI pipelines,
and `graph` does not always reflect the source of the alert. It's called `source` originally
and I think it should stay this way.
Creates an incoming webhook integration for Patreon. The main
use case is getting notifications when new patrons sign up.
Fixes#18321.
Co-authored-by: Hari Prashant Bhimaraju <haripb01@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Sudipto Mondal <sudipto.mondal1997@gmail.com>