This requires part 1 (which can take hours to run but generally
doesn't require downtime) to be completed first.
This portion of the migration will require the server to be completely
down for a brief period; for chat.zulip.org with 250M UserMessage
rows, it took about 60s to run; that time will vary depending on
hardware details like whether the server has an SSD, but fundamentally
shouldn't be long.
Our upgrade-zulip and upgrade-zulip-from-git tools can apply this
migration correctly; nothing special needs to be done.
Fixes#13040.
As part of adding support for more than 2B UserMessage rows in a Zulip
server, we need to change UserMessage.id (a field we don't access but
is needed by Django) from an int to a bigint. This commit is a series
of migrations which create a `bigint_id` column and populates it correctly.
This migration will take a long time to run; on chat.zulip.org (a
server with a lot of history), it took about 4 hours to complete.
How to migrate with minimal downtime:
1. Run `upgrade-zulip-from-git` through this commit. It will install
migration 0238 and then more or less hang while applying migration
0239. Once migration 0238 is completed, however, your server should
be able to be started back up safely while migration 0239 is running.
2. Run `/home/zulip/deployments/next/scripts/restart-server` in a
separate terminal to get Zulip running again.
3. When the `upgrade-zulip-from-git` command finishes, it will
automatically re-restart the Zulip server, leaving you in a consistent
state and ready to do part 2 of the migration.
A useful `manage.py shell` query for checking the state after this
commit is consistent is this:
assert UserMessage.objects.exclude(bigint_id=F("id")).count() == 0
Part of #13040.
Previously, several of our URL patterns accidentally did not end with
`$`, and thus ended up controlling just the stated URL, but actually a
much broader set of URLs starting with it.
I did an audit and fixed what I believe are all instances of this URL
pattern behavior. In the process, I fixed a few tests that were
unintentionally relying on the behavior.
Fixes#13082.
Historically, Zulip's implementation of wildcard mentions never
triggered either email or push notifications, instead being limited to
desktop notifications and the "mentions" counter.
We fix this just by plumbing the "wildcard_mentioned" flag through our
system.
Implements much of
https://github.com/zulip/zulip/issues/6040#issuecomment-510157264.
We're also now ready to seriously work on #3750.
We added default ToS for the development environment a few months
back; as a side effect, we now need to accept ToS when going through
the development environment registration flow, including for our
one-click account creation buttons.
After a new user joins an active organization, it isn't obvious what
to do next; this change causes there to be recent unread messages in
the stream sidebar for the user to click on to get a feel for what's
happening in the organization and experiment with Zulip.
Fixes#6512.
This commit wraps up the major work that we held back when upgrading
py-markdown 2.6.11 to 3.0.1. Since we were making our custom changes
to the link syntax, at the time we stuck to using the old method of
parsing links. This lays the groundwork for further changes to our
link and image link handling, and brings us on par with upstream.
Also, we now better document the ways in which our link handling is
different from upstream.
Previously, the unread_msgs data structure accounting (used for both
the web and mobile apps to determine the "Unread mentions" count
displayed in the UI) did not include wildcard mentions at all.
We fix this by adding the logic required to include properly that
data, with tests. As discussed in #6040, it makes sense to include
muted streams and topics for the purpose of this calculation.
Fixes part of #6040.
Apparently, get_active_presence_idle_user_ids, which is carefully
optimized to only fetch data for users who might actually need
notification processing, was only considering PMs and direct mentions,
not wildcard mentions or alert words.
This caused some pretty weird failure modes when working on adding
support for broader mention notifications, because users who had one
of these types of notifications would be treated as never
presence-idle, which was just confusing.
This is part of adding support for notifications for wildcard mentions
and alert words; it's worth merging this as an early commit because
the consequence of not doing this are very difficult to debug.
Rather than continually resetting the contents of an existing event
queue, we allocate a new one for each subtest.
We also fix a rather confusing bundle of comments.
We add an ensure_users function and use it in tests which have
hard-coded user ids, to make it clear to which users the ids refer to
and have it verified.
This makes it easier to see what's happening
in these tests and to keep track of any renumberings of user ids due to
changes in how we populate the database.
Hopefully this does a better job of spurring people to action, and also
suggests a self-service fix if they don't (i.e. contacting the person that
invited them).
Add ability to search entire message history of all public streams at
once. It includes all subscibed, non subscribed public streams messages
and even historical public stream messages sent before user had joined
an organization or stream.
Fixes#8859.
Instead of having a hard-coded url, it seems better to replace it with
get_gravatar_url - which returns the correct url, without breaking if
the email/id of the example user changes.
One occasionally finds that a 1580 character string of SQL queries
might not most readably be presented on a single line.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
Send the config_options for each supported incoming webhook bot along
with the initial state (not present in apply_events since this is
mostly just static data).
Without disturbing the flow of the existing code for configuring
embedded bots too much, we now use the config_options feature to
allow incoming webhook type bot to be configured via. the "/bots"
endpoint of the API.
This is a prep commit to allow us to validate user provided bot
config data using the same function for incoming webhook type
bots alongside embedded bots (as opposed to creating a new
function just for incoming webhook bots).
In integrations.py we have a class called Integration which we then usually
subclass and then use to define the meta-data for all of our integrations.
Now, we want to allow all of our bots, specifically incoming webhook bots,
to be configured (i.e. we should let the user provide BotConfigData).
For this we create a new instance member of the Integration class called
config_options which will be a list of tuples containing the displayable
integration name, the configuration key form of the integration name and
the validator that it's value is supposed to adhere to.