Add 3 new Markdown emoji tests for newlines, emphasis, and links. The
goal of these tests is to ensure that Markdown operations concerning
emoji are preformed in proper order, with emoji being added correctly
based on other Markdown operations.
See suggestion here: https://git.io/flF5W.
The slash in command is stripped in the backend,
rather than in the client to make the client code
cleaner.
This would make client code cleaner in the slash
commands which include parameters.
This bug is caused by the conversion of newlines to `<br>` statements,
since `>` is not allowed as a character around an emoticon during
translation.
Also, add a new test case for preventing this bug from occurring in the
future.
Fix#9763.
We're adding more stream types, e.g. splitting private streams into
with/without shared history, adding publicly-archived streams, adding
announce-only streams, etc. So maintaining this text is going to get more
complicated over time.
Also, the right place to explain this stuff is in the stream header, or near
the z-in-a-circle.
This commit also adds translation tags to the messages.
In records the IDs like the realm_id and user_profile_id
of 'records.json' should be integers. This was missing in the
S3 backend and this commit fixes that.
Added tests for this as well.
For the S3 backend uploads, 'attachment_path' should be
saved with the 's3_path' of the record, as the original
'path' is changed while exporting files from s3. (See
function 'export_files_from_s3' in export.py for reference.)
For the emojis, In 'records.json', the record should contain
the attribute 'file_name', which was missing in the S3 backend.
This commit adds this attribute, as well as tests for the
records of uploads, avatars and emojis in both local and S3 backend.
Move the zcommands from '/views/messages.py' to
'/lib/zcommand'.
Also, move the zcommand tests from '/tests/test_messages.py'
to '/tests/test_zcommand'.
This is one of those weird webhooks where the
download-python-bindings.md macro doesn't work, because the user
only needs the bindings to run the one-time Trello script to register
the webhook and that script can be run from anywhere and doesn't need
to be "hosted" anywhere.
This results in a significant optimization in the performance of
re-provisioning Zulip if all that you're doing is rebasing onto a
newer version of master (which just adds new migrations).
The change carries some risk of generating unpleasant-to-debug
situations, because if we merge a buggy migration and then later fix
it, some clients may not have a properly migrated database (and also,
this changes how populate_db commutes with migrations). But it seems
worth it, given how much time is currently wasted by not having this.
Fixes: #9512.
In this commit we are adding run_generate_fixtures_if_required,
a new function which is meant to de-duplicate a bit of code
between test-server and test-backend which is essentially
responsible for rebuilding the test database if that was required.
In this commit we are essentially just refactoring the function
is_template_database_current to be called template_database_status
and adjusting the return values accordingly.
This is essentially a preparatory commit for the upcoming commits
which will essentially enable us to not throw away entire DB and
rebuild from scratch if only running migrations could do the job.
This fixes two issues:
* Our guest users feature gave guest users access to public stream
attachments even if they couldn't access the public stream.
* After a user joins a private stream with our new shared history
feature, they couldn't see images uploaded before they joined.
The tests need to check for a few types of issues:
* The actual access control permissions.
* How many database queries are used in the various
cases for that second model, especially with multiple messages
referencing an attachment. This function gets called a lot, and we
want to keep it fast.
Fixes#9372.
This new implementation model is a lot cleaner and should extend
better to the non-oauth backend supported by python-social-auth (since
we're not relying on monkey-patching `do_auth` in the OAuth backend
base class).
This adds a common function `access_user_by_id` to access user id
within same realm, complete with a full suite of unit tests.
Tweaked by tabbott to make the test much more readable.
We've for a long time had the behavior that a bot mentioned in a
stream message receives the notification, regardless of whether the
bot was actually subscribed to the stream.
Apparently, this behavior also triggered if you mentioned a bot in a
private message (i.e. the bot would be delievered the private message
and would probably respond unhelpfully in a new group private message
thread with the PMs original recipients plus the bot).
The fix for this bug is simple: To exclude this feature for private
messages.
What was happening before is that we built the webpack bundles in
tools/minify-js with nicely hashed filenames, and then `manage.py
collectstatic` was extending these filenames with a second hash
through the use of storage.
Removing the first one didn't seem ideal, but would probably have
worked, but seems confusing for people only familiar with webpack
(ideally, we want the Django toolchain piece to be increasingly
invisible as we replace it).
And we can't exclude the webpack bundles from being processed by
storage, since we need these bundles to be included in the manifest.
So, instead, we set the hash function to be a no-op for the bundle
files.
Fixes significant portions #5971.
More work is required to deal with versioning for some of the
image/font assets.
The new can_access_all_realm_members function is meant to act as a
base function for guest users and Zephyr realm users regarding the
accessibility of the information of other users in the realm.
This fixes an issue where if you make #announce (the default
announcement stream) announce-only, then creating a new stream will
throw an exception (because notification-bot can't send there).
Fixes#9636.
These two slash commands now use zcommand to talk to
the server, so we have no Message overhead, and if you're
on a stream, you no longer spam people by accident.
The commands now also give reasonable messages
if you are already in the mode you ask for.
It should be noted that by moving these commands out of
widget.py, they are no longer behind the ALLOW_SUB_MESSAGES
setting guard.
This adds a /ping command that will be useful for users
to see what the round trip to the Zulip server is (including
only a tiny bit of actual server time to basically give a
200).
It also introduce the "/zcommand" endpoint and zcommand.js
module.
This is a performance optimization: Rather than copying these files
into the `prod-static` directory and then deleting them, we just don't
copy them over in the first place.
For styles, it might have once been the case that this did something,
but we've moved them all to being managed by webpack some time ago.
For the js directory, I think it was never useful to copy and then
delete them; these files were always compiled via tools/minify-js,
and the raw JS files weren't needed, anyway.
In a few commits before this one, we just added de-duplicated
generic fixtures that apply to multiple API tests. The tests
needed to be modified to accommodate that change.
This should help make it explicit whenever we add a new table to Zulip
that we need to correctly categorize it for whether it will be
included in the data export, or not.
The user can now specify the value while creating a stream.
An admin can later change it via `Change stream permissions`
modal. Add is_announcement_only to subscription type text.
For some reason in my original version I was sending both
content and data to the client for submessage events,
where data === JSON.parse(content). There's no reason
to not just let the client parse it, since the client
already does it for data that comes on the original
message, and since we might eventually have non-JSON
payloads.
The server still continues to validate that the payload
is JSON, and the client will blueslip if the server
regressses and sends bad JSON for some reason.
We now have a simple algorithm: First, look at the URL path
(e.g. /de/, which is intended to be an override). Second, look at the
language the user has specified in their settings.
I spend a lot of time on this. One of our users had reported that
this webhook wasn't working at all. So I tested this with a local
ngrok instance and made sure that it was working. I also took this
opportunity to rewrite the docs for this, which were quite outdated.
With a few changes by Rishi Gupta!
This adds a common function `access_bot_by_id` to access bot id within
same realm. It probably fixes some corner case bugs where we weren't
checking for deactivated bots when regenerating API keys.
Fixes the avatar/emoji part of #8177.
Does not address the issue with uploaded images, since we don't do
anything with them.
Also adds 3 images with different orientation exif tags to
test-images.
We don't want to keep around a declaration of
PRIVATE_STREAM_HISTORY_FOR_SUBSCRIBERS forever, so we should just move
this to a getattr; if the user has set it on their server, we'll use
the value; otherwise, we just use False.
Previously, if you had LDAPAuthBackend enabled, we basically blocked
any other auth backends from working at all, by requiring the user's
login flow include verifying the user's LDAP password.
We still want to enforce that in the case that the account email
matches LDAP_APPEND_DOMAIN, but there's a reasonable corner case:
Having effectively guest users from outside the LDAP domain.
We don't want to allow creating a Zulip-level password for a user
inside the LDAP domain, so we still verify the LDAP password in that
flow, but if the email is allowed to register (due to invite or
whatever) but is outside the LDAP domain for the organization, we
allow it to create an account and set a password.
For the moment, this solution only covers EmailAuthBackend. It's
likely that just extending the list of other backends we check for in
the new conditional on `email_auth_backend` would be correct, but we
haven't done any testing for those cases, and with auth code paths,
it's better to disallow than allow untested code paths.
Fixes#9422.
This is the analog of the last commit, for the password reset flow.
For these users, they should be managing/changing their password in
the LDAP server.
The error message for users doing the wrong thing here is nonexistent
isn't great, but it should be a rare situation.
Previously, if both EmailAuthBackend and LDAPAuthBackend were enabled,
LDAP users could set a password using EmailAuthBackend and continue to
use that password, even if their LDAP account was later deactivated.
That configuration wasn't supported at all before, so this doesn't fix
a pre-existing security issue, but now that we're making that a valid
configuration, we need to cover this case.
This should have no effect for now, but it'll make things a bit
simpler in case we make future changes to support public streams
without history public to subscribers (and other organization
members).
Significantly tweaked by tabbott because:
* Argparse was already handling the early checks
* Splitting the bottom loop into two loops means we validate all the
input before trying to run actual import code on anything.
* The argparse documentation was confusing about whether the paths
should be files or directories.
This reflects the changes to the default URL publicly
displayed to the user. It also changes the default
URL of the default test server outgoing webhook, which
prevented the test server flaskbotrc from working out
of the box.
Export of RealmEmoji should also include the image
file of those emojis.
Here, we export emojis both for local and S3 backend
in a method with is similar to attachments and avatars.
Added tests for the same.
In 'zerver_reaction', the emoji_code should be updated
with the RealmEmoji allocated id when the 'reaction_type'
is 'realm_emoji'. Hence we add an extra field 'reaction_field'
in 're_map_foreign_keys', to process the above mentioned
condition.
This adds the fields `trigger` and `service_email`
to each message event dispatched by outgoing webhook bots.
`trigger` will be used by the Botserver to determine if
a bot is mentioned in the message.
`service_email` will be used by the Botserver to determine
by which outgoing webhook bot the message should be handled.
This should make it easier for us to iterate on a less-dense Zulip.
We create two classes on body, less_dense_mode and more_dense_mode, so
that it's easy as we refactor to separate the two concepts from things
like colors that are independent.
API users, particularly bots, can now send a field
called "widget_content" that will be turned into
a submessage for the web app to look at. (Other
clients can still rely on "content" to be there,
although it's up to the bot author to make the
experience good for those clients as well.)
Right now widget_content will be a JSON string that
encodes a "zform" widget with "choices." Our first
example will be a trivia bot, where users will see
something like this:
Which fruit is orange in color?
[A] orange
[B] blackberry
[C] strawberry
The letters will be turned into buttons on the webapp
and have canned replies.
This commit has a few parts:
- receive widget_content in the request (simply
validating that it's a string)
- parse the JSON in check_message and deeply
validate its structure
- turn it into a submessage in widget.py
This commit adds a view which will be used to process login requests,
adds an AuthenticationTokenForm so that we can use TextField widget for
tokens, and activates two factor authentication code path whenever user
tries to login.
This should significantly improve the user experience for creating
additional accounts on zulipchat.com.
Currently, disabled in production pending some work on visual styling.
This is intended to support our upcoming feature to support copying a
user's customization settings from an existing account that user owns
in another organization.
We essentially stop running create_realm_internal_bots during
every provisioing and move its operations to run from populate db.
In fact to speed things up a bit we actually make populate db call the
funcs which create_realm_internal_bots calls behind the scenes.
Fixes: #9467.
We extract the entire operations of the management command to a
function create_if_missing_realm_internal_bots in the
zerver/lib/onboarding.py. The logic for determining if there are any realm
internal bots which have not been created is extracted to a function
missing_any_realm_internal_bots in actions.py.
This isn't a complete long-term fix, in that ideally we'd be doing
this check at the view layer, but various structural things make that
annoying, and we'll want this test either way.
This improves test coverage for a lot of our webhooks that relied
on ad-hoc methods to handle unexpected event types.
Note that I have deliberately skipped github_legacy, it isn't
advertised and is officially deprecated.
Also, I have refrained from making further changes to Trello, I
believe further improvements to test coverage should be covered
in separate per-webhook commits/PRs.
UnexpectedWebhookEventType is a generic exception that we may
now raise when we encounter a webhook event that is new or one
that we simply aren't aware of.
We've had this sort of logic for GCM for a long time; it's worth
adding for APNS as well.
Writing this is a bit of a reminder that I'm not a fan of how our unit
tests for push notifications work.
We add conditional infinite sleep to this delivery job as a means to
handle case of multiple servers in service to a realm running this
job. In such a scenerio race conditions might arise leading to
multiple deliveries for same message. This way we try to match the
behaviour of what other jobs do in such a case.
Note: We should eventually do something to make such jobs work
while being running on multiple servers.
This revised GitHub auth backend test is inspired by the end-to-end
flow model of the Google auth backend test. My hope is that we will
be able to migrate the rest of the important cases in the GitHub auth
backend tests to this model and then delete what is now
GitHubAuthBackendLegacyTest.
The next step after that will be to merge the GitHub and Google auth
tests (since actually, the actual test functions are basically
identical between the two).
Apparently, the bug here was that we were aliasing the user_profile
variable, so that the results depended on what the last iteration in
the loop landed on.
Since this is a logged-out view, need to actually write code for the
case of deactivated realms.
The change to get_active_user is more for clarity; the Django password
reset form already checks for whether the user is active earlier.
If a user's account has been deactivated, we want to provide a special
error message that makes clear what's going on.
Future work is to provide some administrative controls on whether a
user should be able to re-activate their account.
This query was incorreclty not checking whether a user was deactivated
before managing their subscriptions.
This isn't an important bug, but should prevent some weird corner
cases (like trying to send a notification PM to a deactivated user,
which fails).
We've for a long time been plagued by run-dev.py needing to be
restarted every time one does a rebase that has merge conflicts,
because the Tornado process restarts itself into a syntax error and
crashes.
This fixes the Tornado autoreload process to check explicitly for
whether files actually syntax-check before trying to actually reload
the Tornado process to run that code.
There are a few things that are a bit janky:
* Ideally, this would go into Tornado upstream
* We removed the `_watched_files` feature, which we weren't using.
* Ideally, we'd use something other than `importlib.reload` that just
does the syntax-check without adjusting the state within our current
process.
Fixes#4351.
Slow queries during backend tests sends messages to Error Bot
which affects the database state causing the tests to fail.
This fixes the occasional flakes due to that.
We ask our users to enable Snapshot notifications in Zulip via
Slack! But our Slack integration isn't exactly super robust and
I checked and our librato implementation isn't super smart about
handling snapshot payloads that come in via Slack.
Overall, this seems like a very poor solution, asking the user
to set up Slack in order to get the notifications in Zulip. So, I
thought we should get rid of at least the docs that suggest doing
this.
I also read librato/view.py and it wasn't clear to me how Slack
is supposed to act as an intermediate service here in a reliable
manner, which is another reason to not advertise this.
This should help avoid confusing error messages for anyone
accidentally running this twice.
In particular, this also makes it easier to run Zulip inside
Kubernetes, since one doesn't need to worry about duplicate calls.
The only slash command implemented in this initial
version is an extremely crippled version of a
"/stats" slash command that reports that you are
running 1 server.
Makes announce stream `is_announcement_only` for the dev db for easier
manual testing. The default value for `is_announcement_only` in
`bulk_create_streams` is False.
Most of this is just asserting that the sub_dict return value from
access_stream_by_id is not None in the cases where it shouldn't be,
but additionally, we also need to pass a function into
validate_user_access_to_subscribers_helper (in this case, just `lambda:
True` works fine)
While maybe these don't all belong in this test file, the overall
effect is that we now have quite good test coverage on
analytics/views.py.
It'd be nice to add some more assert statements for specific values
being present in the pages, but since we're not really working on that
part of the product, it's not a priority yet.
We're never going to add tests for this block, which is fundamentally
well-tested code from Django with a since line changed which is hard
to screw up (long-polling will not work at all without it). The hope
is to remove it entirely and replace it with a cleaner monkey-patch,
but until then, unit tests for it would be redundant.
This has a cool structure, but it's written against the long-dead
South API, and we can always pull it out of the Git history if we want
to use this approach in the future.
This module doesn't exist, and never did; the name appears to be a
mistaken variant of the module that really does contain ZulipTestCase.
So, fix the import to use the real name.
This would never have worked at runtime, which is why it's in an
`if False:`. It's also an example of the kind of error that can be
hidden by `ignore_missing_imports`; we'd have caught the issue
immediately if we hadn't had a blanket application of that flag
in place.
Refactor custom fields creation and deletion tests to assert
if created/deleted field exist or not, instead of asserting
total count of all realm fields.
- do_change_is_admin now raises AssertionError when a non-admin
permission is given.
- adds test to test_users to ensure admin asserts on invalid
permission values.