Using an if block when {!event-filtering-additional-feature.md!}
is used implied that we plan to have this in all webhook doc .md
files.
But, it actually makes sense to only use this macro when the
webhook integration actually supports event filtering.
The returns plugin hasn’t been updated for mypy ≥ 1.6. This
annotation is more limited in that it only supports a fixed number of
positional arguments and no keyword arguments, but is good enough for
our purposes.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This is preparatory work towards adding a Topic model.
We plan to use the local variable name as 'topic' for
the Topic model objects.
Currently, we use *topic as the local variable name for
topic names.
We rename local variables of the form *topic to *topic_name
so that we don't need to think about type collisions in
individual code paths where we might want to talk about both
Topic objects and strings for the topic name.
This kind of payload that's loaded from json in the body of the request
is not only used for webhooks, but also in the push bouncer, and may get
used elsewhere too - so a general name is better.
The type annotation for functools.partial uses unchecked Any for all
the function parameters (both early and late). returns.curry.partial
uses a mypy plugin to check the parameters safely.
https://returns.readthedocs.io/en/latest/pages/curry.html
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This converts most webhook integration views to use @typed_endpoint instead
of @has_request_variables, rewriting REQ parameters. For these
webhooks, it simply requires switching the decorator, rewriting the
type annotation of payload/message to WebhookPayload[WildValue], and
removing the REQ default that defines the to_wild_value converter.
This is a follow up to #24673, we want to modify every webhook events to
follow the same pattern and consistency where branch name should only
show on opened and merged events.
This is a prep commit to help make the changes to make changes to pull
event message easier. Our Bitbucket has been using a custom template to
render the reviewers. This means that values are fixed to how the templates
like it. These changes will allow `get_pull_request_event_message` to
support reviewer and allow for a easier and flexible adjustment to these
messages if needed.
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>
Updates `git-webhook-url-with-branches.md` (and two files that use
that file as an include link) for some of the follow-ups from #22315
to the Markdown parser. With this fix, all integrations docs that
reference this file as an include link should render the url as a
div element with `.codehilite` class.
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.
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.
It looks like this ritual was born when a type comment wasn’t working
because it was mistyped without the colon.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>'
We were trying to share the same format string between
the two different versions of bitbucket, but this only
creates confusion, as the two versions are only close
enough to be confusing.
The format string might be the same, but the semantics
are different, as well as the eventual outputs.
For example, the {username} piece here is simple in version
2, but in version 3 we append a url to the user's name.
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 we're not passing in expected_topic or expected_message
to check_webhook, it's better to just call send_webhook_payload,
since we'll want to explicitly check our messages
anyway.
This preps us to always require those fields for
check_webhook, which can prevent insidious testing no-ops.
This forces us to be a bit more explicit about testing
the three key values in any stream message, and it
also de-clutters the code a bit. I eventually want
to phase out do_test_topic and friends, since they
have the pitfall that you can call them and have them
do nothing, because they don't actually require
values to be be passed in.
I also clean up the code a bit for the tests that
have two new messages arriving.
Almost all webhook tests use this helper, except a few
webhooks that write to private streams.
Being concise is important here, and the name
`self.send_and_test_stream_message` always confused
me, since it sounds you're sending a stream message,
and it leaves out the webhook piece.
We should consider renaming `send_and_test_private_message`
to something like `check_webhook_private`, but I couldn't
decide on a great name, and it's very rarely used. So
for now I just made sure the docstrings of the two
sibling functions reference each other.