The --insecure option ("insecure=true" in .zuliprc) disables
verification entirely, similar to other tools like curl.
The --cert_bundle ("cert_bundle=<file>" in .zuliprc) allows
a file to be specified containing the CA certificates to verify
against.
When using self-signed certificates, the server's public key
can be used as the only cerificate in the file.
This change incidentally fixes an issue where the "site" parameter
in .zuliprc was ignored when specifying --user and --api-key on
the command line.
Fixes: #104
Prior to adding reply-to-missed-message-email functionality, adding
automated tests for simpler case - incoming stream messages. Added
to new file test_email_mirror.py.
Also removed the "if not body" code from process_stream_message that
will never run because of an upstream ZulipEmailForwardError exception.
Previously these users' names were being set to 1-element lists
containing the name, not the names themselves. This bug caused
existing users to have their people module state (e.g. @-mentions,
etc.) to break whenever a new user joined.
Fixes#222.
The tests to recognize a misbehaving/unpredictable worker task use
the words 'flaky' and 'freaking out' in personifying the system
behavior. This terminology isn't inclusive of people with
mental health issues or mood disorders, so this change updates
the wording to have less personification and more objective system
description. (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1925070/)
New users will no longer get desktop and audible notifications for all streams
by default.
This also updates the `day1` follow-up email to let users know they can
customize how and when Zulip notifies them of new messages.
Lastly, this adds a `changelog.md` file, following the conventions from
keepachangelog.com, to track changes for new releases.
This fixes some issues that we've had where commands will fail is
confusing ways after the database is rebuilt because data from before
the database was dropped is still in the memcached cache.
get_realm is better in two key ways:
* It uses memcached to fetch the data from the cache and thus is faster.
* It does a case-insensitive query and thus is more safe.
This addresses a few issues:
* The LDAP authentication integration now creates an account a new
Zulip account if the user authenticated correctly but didn't have a
Zulip account.
* The previous code didn't correctly disable the LDAP group
permissions functionality. We're not using groups support from the
Django LDAP extension and not doing so can cause errors trying to
fetch data from LDAP.
Huge thanks to @toaomatis for the initial implementation of this.
Fixes#72.
Previously we only did this when new human users were created via the
login process, which meant the management command to create a user did
not add the user to default streams (for example) and any future code
that might want to register a new Zulip user (such as the LDAP
integration) would need to import views/__init__.py in order to
properly set this up.
For reasons I don't understand, it appears that in Travis CI we're now
seeing errors using Casper that seem to correspond to a compatibility
issue introduced in PhantomJS 2, even though we're still using 1.9.8.
The solution for that compatability issue of patching casper's
bootstrap.js to get arguments from system.args at a slightly different
time than before seems to work in our setting as well, and that's what
this implements.
Probably the right long-term solution involves upgrading both
phantomjs and Casper to the latest versions.
This fixes a problem where the emoji_dump tool was not generating the
black-and-white emoji. The issue is that Pillow compiled without
libfreetype cannot extract those emoji (and gives an error of the form
"The _imagingft C module is not installed"), and if libfreetype-dev
isn't installed, pip will happily build and install Pillow without
libfreetype.
The do_send_missedmessage_events_reply_in_zulip function in the email
mirror didn't support EMAIL_GATEWAY_PATTERN that wasn't of the form
%s@example.com (which resulted in replies to missed message emails failing
to be parsed).
* Removes the hardcoding of an old version of Virtualbox (and doesn't
specify the version to avoid getting stale again over time).
* Flips around the langauge to assume you don't have Vagrant already.
* Makes clear that the first-time installation is a lot slower than
future runs will be.
Fixes#5.
Apparently it isn't supposed to work reliably with the container-based
infrastructure that we're using and empirically it's causing build
failures.
Thanks to @mijime for tracking this down.