Apparently, these confused the puppet template parser, since they are
somewhat similar to its syntax, resulting in errors trying to use
these templates. It's easy enough to just remove the example
content from the base postgres config file.
The "Short/Long Text" option for custom profile fields wasn't properly
capitalized (i.e. "Text" should have been all lowercase), and also
wasn't properly tagged for translation.
For the sake of consistency, the change to proper capitalization has
also been applied to the models and any tests involving this feature.
Due to a bug in Django, it complained about the models having changed
and thus not being consistent with the migrations. That isn't actually
true (since the database stores the numeric values for each key), but
the migrations have been modified to avoid this error. This does not
affect the migrations' behaviour in any way.
This should help prevent problems with folks introducing new code that
doesn't match our whitespace style.
There's a couple things I don't like about this configuration:
* How it handles multi-line JS lists (i.e. the [] syntax)
* That we ended up having to turn off indentation on a half-dozen
files that apparently don't use our standard IIFE indentation style.
* That we have it completely turned off for the node tests; ideally,
we'd just have slightly different rules around the IIFE identation story.
But otherwise, this works pretty well, and should catch a pretty wide
range of indentation regressions.
This puts all of this config in one place, and also needs a lot fewer
lines to describe it; which, combined, makes it a lot clearer what our
normal config actually is. (I'd been looking at this script for a few
minutes without realizing that we have `--disallow-untyped-defs` *on*
by default, not off.)
Experimenting with different values is still easy; just comment the
line in the config.
This works for other text boxes as well, but compose is the main one
that one would want to do a search from.
It's possible we'll find after doing this that "getting back into
compose" becomes a problem, but I guess we can handle that when the
time comes.
We can't really do this in the zulip manifests (since it's sorta a
sysadmin policy decision), but these scripts can cause significant
load when Nagios logs into a server (because many of them take 50ms or
more of work to run). So we just get rid of them.
This is preparation for enabling an eslint indentation configuration.
90% of these changes are just fixes for indentation errors that have
snuck into the codebase over the years; the others are more
significant reformatting to make eslint happy (that are not otherwise
actually improvements).
The one area that we do not attempt to work on here is the
"switch/case" indentation.
This fixes exceptions when sending PMs in development (where we were
trying to connect to the localhost push bouncer, which we weren't
authorized for, but even if we were, it wouldn't work, since there's
no APNS/GCM certs).
At the same time, we also set and order of operations that ensures one
has the opportunity to adjust the server URL before submitting
anything to us.
It makes sense to refactor out the last_reminder logic out of
send_pm_if_empty_stream and have a generic function that can send
rate-limited PM notifications to a bot owner and can be used by
methods other than send_pm_if_empty_stream.
This makes a few important cleanup changes:
* Using the more standard data-field-id name for the ID value.
* Using $(e.target).closest() rather than `.parent`, which is more
robust to future changes in markup.
It seems unlikely we're going to add support for additional older
Debian-based distributions, so it makes sense to just use an else
statement. This should save a bit of busywork every time we add a new
distro.
Mostly, this involves adding the big block at the bottom and making
10 a variable so that it's easier to compare different versions of
these.
I did an audit of the configuration changes between 9.6 and 10, so
this should be fine, but it hasn't been tested yet.
This fixes adding the Ubuntu repositories for Debian, as well as makes
sure that we install the debian-archive-keyring package on Debian,
which is only priority important (and thus might be missing).
Most of this was straightforward.
Most functions that were grabbed verbatim and whole from
the original class still have one-line wrappers.
Many functions are just-the-data versions of functions that
remain in MessageList: see add, append, prepend, remove as
examples. In a typical pattern the MessageList code becomes
super simple:
prepend: function MessageList_prepend(messages) {
var viewable_messages = this.data.prepend(messages);
this.view.prepend(viewable_messages);
},
Two large functions had some minor surgery:
triage_messages =
top half of add_messages +
API to pass three lists back
change_message_id =
original version +
two simple callbacks to list
For the function update_muting_and_rerender(), we continue
to early-exit if this.muting_enabled is false, and we copied
that same defensive check to the new function
named update_items_for_muting(), even though it's technically
hidden from that codepath by the caller.
For a commit that was just merged I had the "back-out" case
at the wrong nesting level. It was a pretty obscure failure
scenario that never came up in practice, but basically if you
were starting at a message that was not in your narrow, but
we did have some messages in your narrow, we would try to
go near the old message instead of talking to the server to
find the next unread message in that narrow.
Barring a few minor edge cases, when we now do a narrow
that is based on a sidebar-like search (e.g. stream/topic,
no extra conditions), we now go directly to either the
first unread message we know about locally or the last
message if we're all caught up.
We of course used to do this in master until recently; this behavior
was broken by Tim's narrowing refactor branch (ending with
26ac1d237b) which moved us to always
using the select_first_unread flag, by default (fixing issues where if
you clicked around while your pointer was behind, you'd land in the
wrong place).
We now have arguably the best of both worlds:
* The pointer is not considered when computing narrowing positioning
* We only go to the server for sidebar clicks if the data isn't
available in the browser.