When you post to /json/users, we no longer
require or look at the short_name parameter,
since we don't use it in any meaningful way.
An upcoming commit will eliminate it from the
database.
This particular commit has been a long time coming. For reference,
!avatar(email) was an undocumented syntax that simply rendered an
inline 50px avatar for a user in a message, essentially allowing
you to create a user pill like:
`!avatar(alice@example.com) Alice: hey!`
---
Reimplementation
If we decide to reimplement this or a similar feature in the future,
we could use something like `<avatar:userid>` syntax which is more
in line with creating links in markdown. Even then, it would not be
a good idea to add this instead of supporting inline images directly.
Since any usecases of such a syntax are in automation, we do not need
to make it userfriendly and something like the following is a better
implementation that doesn't need a custom syntax:
`![avatar for Alice](/avatar/1234?s=50) Alice: hey!`
---
History
We initially added this syntax back in 2012 and it was 'deprecated'
from the get go. Here's what the original commit had to say about
the new syntax:
> We'll use this internally for the commit bot. We might eventually
> disable it for external users.
We eventually did start using this for our github integrations in 2013
but since then, those integrations have been neglected in favor of
our GitHub webhooks which do not use this syntax.
When we copied `!gravatar` to add the `!avatar` syntax, we also noted
that we want to deprecate the `!gravatar` syntax entirely - in 2013!
Since then, we haven't advertised either of these syntaxes anywhere
in our docs, and the only two places where this syntax remains is
our game bots that could easily do without these, and the git commit
integration that we have deprecated anyway.
We do not have any evidence of someone asking about this syntax on
chat.zulip.org when developing an integration and rightfully so- only
the people who work on Zulip (and specifically, markdown) are likely
to stumble upon it and try it out.
This is also the only peice of code due to which we had to look up
emails -> userid mapping in our backend markdown. By removing this,
we entirely remove the backend markdown's dependency on user emails
to render messages.
---
Relevant commits:
- Oct 2012, Initial commit c31462c278
- Nov 2013, Update commit bot 968c393826
- Nov 2013, Add avatar syntax 761c0a0266
- Sep 2017, Avoid email use c3032a7fe8
- Apr 2019, Remove from webhook 674fcfcce1
Our previous OpenAPI schema validator that we implemented ourselves
was useful training wheels for our understanding OpenAPI properly, and
was mostly correct. But given that we've finally reached the point
where our OpenAPI file accurately describes the API, it makes sense to
switch to use an official OpenAPI validator. We lose some ability to
do exclude rules for particular elements, but those were primarily
important for us when we had a lot of them.
As part of this change, we need to add `additionalProperties: false`
for all of our dictonaries/objects where we've documented every
parameter; otherwise the OpenAPI schema checker won't know that we
expect every parameter to be documented.
There is still some miscellaneous cleanup that
has to happen for things like analytics queries
and dead code in node tests, but this should
remove the main use of pointers in the backend.
(We will also still need to drop the DB field.)
The isort author accidentally fixed the performance regression in his
latest commit. Quickly upgrade isort before he notices his mistake.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
We send user_id of the referrer instead of email in the invites dict.
Sending user_ids is more robust, as those are an immutable reference
to a user, rather than something that can change with time.
Updates to the webapp UI to display the inviters for more convenient
inspection will come in a future commit.
After some discussion, everyone seems to agree that 3.0 is the more
appropriate version number for our next major release. This updates
our documentation to reflect that we'll be using 3.0 as our next major
release.
With this implementation of the feature of the automatic theme
detection, we make the following changes in the backend, frontend and
documentation.
This replaces the previous night_mode boolean with an enum, with the
default value being to use the prefers-color-scheme feature of the
operating system to determine which theme to use.
Fixes: #14451.
Co-authored-by: @kPerikou <44238834+kPerikou@users.noreply.github.com>
We can now invite new users as realm owners. We restrict only
owners to invite new users as owners both for single invite
and multiuse invite link. Also, only owners can revoke or resend
owner invitations.
This adds a new client_capability that clients such as the mobile apps
can use to avoid unreasonable network bandwidth consumed sending
avatar URLs in organizations with 10,000s of users.
Clients don't strictly need this data, as they can always use the
/avatar/{user_id} endpoint to fetch the avatar if desired.
This will be more efficient especially for realms with
10,000+ users because the avatar URLs would increase the
payload size significantly and cost us more bandwidth.
Fixes#15287.
This commit adds backend support for setting message_retention_days
while creating streams and updating it for an existing stream. We only
allow organization owners to set/update it for a stream.
'message_retention_days' field for a stream existed previously also, but
there was no way to set it while creating streams or update it for an
exisiting streams using any endpoint.
This commit removes is_old_stream property from the stream objects
returned by the API. This property was unnecessary and is essentially
equivalent to 'stream_weekly_traffic != null'.
We compute sub.is_old_stream in stream_data.update_calculated_fields
in frontend code and it is used to check whether we have a non-null
stream_weekly_traffic or not.
Fixes#15181.
This is designed to have no user-facing change unless the client
declares bulk_message_deletion in its client_capabilities.
Clients that do so will receive a single bulk event for bulk deletions
of messages within a single conversation (topic or PM thread).
Backend implementation of #15285.
This new endpoint returns a 'user' dictionary which, as of now,
contains a single key 'is_subscribed' with a boolean value that
represents whether the user with the given 'user_id' is subscribed
to the stream with the given 'stream_id'.
Fixes#14966.
The only clients that should use the typing
indicators endpoint are our internal clients,
and they should send a JSON-formatted list
of user_ids.
We now enforce this, which removes some
complexity surrounding legacy ways of sending
users, such as emails and comma-delimited
strings of user_ids.
There may be a very tiny number of mobile
clients that still use the old emails API.
This won't have any user-facing effect on
the mobile users themselves, but if you type
a message to your friend on an old mobile
app, the friend will no longer see typing
indicators.
Also, the mobile team may see some errors
in their Sentry logs from the server rejecting
posts from the old mobile clients.
The error messages we report here are a bit
more generic, since we now just use REQ
to do validation with this code:
validator=check_list(check_int)
This also allows us to remove a test hack
related to the API documentation. (We changed
the docs to reflect the modern API in an
earlier commit, but the tests couldn't be
fixed while we still had the more complex
semantics for the "to" parameter.)
This commit removes short_name and client_id fields from the user
objects returned by get_profile_backend because neither of them
had a purpose.
* short_name hasn't been present anywhere else in the Zulip API for
several years, and isn't set through any coherent algorithm.
* client_id was a forgotten 2013-era predecessor to the queue_id field
returned by the register_event_queue process.
The combination of these changes gets us close to having `get_profile`
have the exact same format as other endpoints fetching a user object.
Option to disable breadcrumb messages were given in both message edit
form and topic edit stream popover.
User now has the option to select which stream to send the notification
of stream edit of a topic via checkboxes in the UI.
This reimplements our Zoom video call integration to use an OAuth
application. In addition to providing a cleaner setup experience,
especially on zulipchat.com where the server administrators can have
done the app registration already, it also fixes the limitation of the
previous integration that it could only have one call active at a time
when set up with typical Zoom API keys.
Fixes#11672.
Co-authored-by: Marco Burstein <marco@marco.how>
Co-authored-by: Tim Abbott <tabbott@zulipchat.com>
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
Some UTF-8 characters (★ for example) are not displayed correctly, with
fonts-liberation. Puppeteer recommends[1] installing fonts-freefont-ttf in
their docs on running Puppeteer in docker.
Provisioning forward is sufficient. There's no need to remove the
new font and replace it with the old font, I think.
[1]: https://github.com/puppeteer/puppeteer/blob/master/docs/troubleshooting.md#running-puppeteer-in-docker
There's no reason to send data beyond the user `id` of the uploader,
and reason not to, as the previous model was both awkward when
`author=None` and resulted in unecessary parsing complexity for
clients.
Modified by tabbott to add the frontend changes and API documentation.
Fixes#15115.
When a user changes its avatar image, the user's avatar in popovers
wasn't being correctly updated, because of browser caching of the
avatar image. We added a version on the request to get the image in
the same format we use elsewhere, so the browser knows when to use the
cached image or to make a new request to the server.
Edited by Tim to preserve/fix sort orders in some tests, and update
zulip_feature_level.
Fixes: #14290
We remove the `owner` field from `page_params/realm_bots`
and bot-related events.
In the recent commit 155f6da8ba
we added `owner_id`, which we now use everywhere we need
bot owners for.
We also bump the `API_FEATURE_LEVEL` to 5 here. We
had already documented this in the prior commit to
add `owner_id`.
Note that we don't have to worry about mobile/ZT clients
here--we only deal with bot data in the webapp.
Popular email clients like Gmail will automatically linkify link-like
content present in an HTML email they receive, even if it doesn't have
links in it. This made it possible to include what in Gmail will be a
user-controlled link in invitation emails that Zulip sends, which a
spammer/phisher could try to take advantage of to send really bad spam
(the limitation of having the rest of the invitation email HTML there
makes it hard to do something compelling here).
We close this opportunity by structuring our emails to always show the
user's name inside an existing link, so that Gmail won't do new
linkification, and add a test to help ensure we don't remove this
structure in a future design change.
Co-authored-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
For privacy-minded folks who don't want to leak the
information of whether they're online, this adds an
option to disable sending presence updates to other
users.
The new settings lies in the "Other notification
settings" section of the "Notification settings"
page, under a "Presence" subheading.
Closes#14798.
The major PROVISION_VERSION bump would not be needed, but it was
missing in commit 5ab62a3514 (#14834),
so I’m doing it here.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
I imagine this can be improved in various ways, but I've initialized
this with all the **Changes** entries recorded in either zulip.yaml or
the rest of the API documentation, and I expect we'll be able to
iterate on this effectively.
It'll also be useful as a record of changes that we should remember to
document the API documentation as we document more endpoints that
currently don't discuss these issues.
While working on this, I fixed various issues where feature levels
could be mentioned or endpoints didn't properly document changes.
Includes this change:
* openapi/python_examples: Update get_single_user.
This updates get_single_user to pass keyword arguments to
get_user_by_id instead of passing a dictionary.
Which is required for CI to pass, as we indeed fixed the API of that
function (which had only been present with the wrong API for one release).
We have two different digest schemes to make
sure we keep the database up to date. There
is the migration digest, which is NOT in the
scope of this commit, and which already
used the mechanism we use for other tools.
Here we are talking about the digest for
important files like `populate_db.py`.
Now our scheme is more consistent with how we
check file changes for other tools (as
well as the aformentioned migration files).
And we only write one hash file, instead of
seven.
And we only write the file when things have
actually changed.
And we are explicit about side effects.
Finally, we include a couple new bot settings
in the digest:
INTERNAL_BOTS
DISABLED_REALM_INTERNAL_BOTS
NOTE: This will require a one-time transition,
where we rebuild both databases (dev/test).
It takes a little over two minutes for me,
so it's not super painful.
I bump the provision version here, even
though you don't technically need it (since
the relevant tools are actually using the
digest files to determine if they need to
rebuild the database). I figure it's just
good to explicitly make this commit trigger
a provision, and the user will then see
the one-time migration of the hash files
with a little bit less of a surprise.
And I do a major bump, not a minor bump,
because when we go in the reverse direction,
the old code will have to rebuild the
database due to the legacy hash files not
being around, so, again, I just prefer it
to be explicit.
Upgrade libthumbor in main zulip venv. This version drops support
for python 2 and runs on py>=3.6.
As such, it is our first commit taking advantage of our having dropped support
for Debian Stretch and Ubuntu Xenial, our previous Python 3.5-based platforms.
The purpose is to provide a way for (non-webapp) clients,
like the mobile and terminal apps, to tell whether the
server it's talking to is new enough to support a given
API feature -- in particular a way that
* is finer-grained than release numbers, so that for
features developed after e.g. 2.1.0 we can use them
immediately on servers deployed from master (like
chat.zulip.org and zulipchat.com) without waiting the
months until a 2.2 release;
* is reliable, unlike e.g. looking at the number of
commits since a release;
* doesn't lead to a growing bag of named feature flags
which the server has to go on sending forever.
Tweaked by tabbott to extend the documentation.
Closes#14618.
This guarantees that we don’t accidentally upgrade one without the
other, which could happen for example due to different third-party
version constraints between the two.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
When creating a webhook integration or creating a new one, it is a pain to
create or update the screenshots in the documentation. This commit adds a
tool that can trigger a sample notification for the webhook using a fixture,
that is likely already written for the tests.
Currently, the developer needs to take a screenshot manually, but this could
be automated using puppeteer or something like that.
Also, the tool does not support webhooks with basic auth, and only supports
webhooks that use json fixtures. These can be fixed in subsequent commits.
Add sgrep (sgrep.dev) to tooling and include simple rule as
proof of concept. Included rule detects use of old django render
function.
Also added a rule that looks for if-else statements where both
code paths are identical.
This makes it relatively easy for a system administrator to
temporarily override these values after a desktop app security
release that they want to ensure all of their users take.
We're not putting this in settings, since we don't want to encourage
accidental long-term overrides of these important-to-security values.
python 3.8 support for python-api-bindings was fixed in commit
63bc9b8a4f
so upgraded python-api-bindings to tag 0.6.3 which included this fix.
Bumped PROVISION_VERSION.
importlib-metadata and importlib-resources are dependent packages for jsonschema
and cfn-lint respectively. They are built-in modules in later versions
of python (3.8, 3.7). When update-locked-requirements is run within python3.7 or
3.8 they will generate difference in locked files so we build these modules separately
to avoid such conflicts.
We now restrict emails on the zulip realm, and now
`email` and `delivery_email` will be different for
users.
This change should make it more likely to catch
errors where we leak delivery emails or use the
wrong field for lookups.
We had a bunch of ugly hacks to monkey patch things due to upstream
being temporarily unmaintained and not merging PRs. Now the project is
active again and the fixes have been merged and included in the latest
version - so we clean up all that code.
This gives them cache-compatible URLs, and also avoids some extra
copies of the sprite sheet images.
Comments on the Octopus emoji added by tabbott.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
This commit changes the calculation of the
background-size parameter that we use to
render emojis from sprite sheets.
In particular, it now makes the parameter
match the sizes of our latest sprite
sheets from Twitter/Google.
This should fix the geometry aspect of #13959,
but we also need to fix some issues with the
cache being sticky.
There is also some minor cleanup:
- Remove obsolete -moz/-webkit CSS.
- Remove needless precision in percentages.
- Fix the transposed nrows/ncols names.
- Add extensive commenting.
Finally, we add a minor bump to the provision
number. This commit should be merged in the
same series as the other fix for this issue,
which will probably have a major bump, and we'll
need to rebase this appropriately.
Django 2.2.x is the next LTS release after Django 1.11.x; I expect
we'll be on it for a while, as Django 3.x won't have an LTS release
series out for a while.
Because of upstream API changes in Django, this commit includes
several changes beyond requirements and:
* urls: django.urls.resolvers.RegexURLPattern has been replaced by
django.urls.resolvers.URLPattern; affects OpenAPI code and related
features which re-parse Django's internals.
https://code.djangoproject.com/ticket/28593
* test_runner: Change number to suffix. Django changed the name in this
ticket: https://code.djangoproject.com/ticket/28578
* Delete now-unnecessary SameSite cookie code (it's now the default).
* forms: urlsafe_base64_encode returns string in Django 2.2.
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/2.2/ref/utils/#django.utils.http.urlsafe_base64_encode
* upload: Django's File.size property replaces _get_size().
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/2.2/_modules/django/core/files/base/
* process_queue: Migrate to new autoreload API.
* test_messages: Add an extra query caused by .refresh_from_db() losing
the .select_related() on the Realm object.
* session: Sync SessionHostDomainMiddleware with Django 2.2.
There's a lot more we can do to take advantage of the new release;
this is tracked in #11341.
Many changes by Tim Abbott, Umair Waheed, and Mateusz Mandera squashed
are squashed into this commit.
Fixes#10835.
webpack optimizes JSON modules using JSON.parse("{…}"), which is
faster than the normal JavaScript parser.
Update the backend to use emoji_codes.json too instead of the three
separate JSON files.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
The “Smileys & People” category has been split into “Smilys & Emotion”
and “People & Body”.
Also, fix generate_sha1sum_emoji to read the emoji-datasource-google
version from yarn.lock, since package.json only gives a version range.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
The alt text of the leading images were displayed as preview
content in inbox by email clients like gmail. Since the leading
images were used mostly for decoration this made the preview
content gibberish. It's fine to set the alt attributes to empty
from accessibility point of view since the old alt attributes
did't added any meaningful information.
responses is an module analogous to httpretty for mocking external
URLs, with a very similar interface (potentially cleaner in that it
makes use of context managers).
The most important (in the moment) problem with httpretty is that it
breaks the ability to use redis in parts of code where httpretty is
enabled. From more research, the module in general has tendency to
have various troublesome bugs with breaking URLs that it shouldn't be
affecting, caused by it working at the socket interface layer. While
those issues could be fixed, responses seems to be less buggy (based
on both third-party reports like ckan/ckan#4755 and our own experience
in removing workarounds for bugs in httpretty) and is more actively
maintained.
Zulip has had a small use of WebSockets (specifically, for the code
path of sending messages, via the webapp only) since ~2013. We
originally added this use of WebSockets in the hope that the latency
benefits of doing so would allow us to avoid implementing a markdown
local echo; they were not. Further, HTTP/2 may have eliminated the
latency difference we hoped to exploit by using WebSockets in any
case.
While we’d originally imagined using WebSockets for other endpoints,
there was never a good justification for moving more components to the
WebSockets system.
This WebSockets code path had a lot of downsides/complexity,
including:
* The messy hack involving constructing an emulated request object to
hook into doing Django requests.
* The `message_senders` queue processor system, which increases RAM
needs and must be provisioned independently from the rest of the
server).
* A duplicate check_send_receive_time Nagios test specific to
WebSockets.
* The requirement for users to have their firewalls/NATs allow
WebSocket connections, and a setting to disable them for networks
where WebSockets don’t work.
* Dependencies on the SockJS family of libraries, which has at times
been poorly maintained, and periodically throws random JavaScript
exceptions in our production environments without a deep enough
traceback to effectively investigate.
* A total of about 1600 lines of our code related to the feature.
* Increased load on the Tornado system, especially around a Zulip
server restart, and especially for large installations like
zulipchat.com, resulting in extra delay before messages can be sent
again.
As detailed in
https://github.com/zulip/zulip/pull/12862#issuecomment-536152397, it
appears that removing WebSockets moderately increases the time it
takes for the `send_message` API query to return from the server, but
does not significantly change the time between when a message is sent
and when it is received by clients. We don’t understand the reason
for that change (suggesting the possibility of a measurement error),
and even if it is a real change, we consider that potential small
latency regression to be acceptable.
If we later want WebSockets, we’ll likely want to just use Django
Channels.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
Since we don’t support downgrading from master to any 2.0.x release,
we shouldn’t set a ZULIP_VERSION that might lead someone to mistake
any such downgrade for an upgrade. ZULIP_VERSION should always be at
least a minor version ahead of LATEST_RELEASE_VERSION, except on the
release branch.
`.dev` is a decreasing suffix that sorts before `alpha`, `beta`, `rc`
according to PEP 440/`packaging.version.Version`.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
For a long time, we've been only doing the zxcvbn password strength
checks on the browser, which is helpful, but means users could through
hackery (or a bug in the frontend validation code) manage to set a
too-weak password. We fix this by running our password strength
validation on the backend as well, using python-zxcvbn.
In theory, a bug in python-zxcvbn could result in it producing a
different opinion than the frontend version; if so, it'd be a pretty
bad bug in the library, and hopefully we'd hear about it from users,
report upstream, and get it fixed that way. Alternatively, we can
switch to shelling out to node like we do for KaTeX.
Fixes#6880.
`source-map` provides its own types, so with TypeScript configured
with `--moduleResolution node`, we don’t need the obsolete
`@types/source-map` package.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
Send the `csrftoken` and `sessionid` cookies with `SameSite=Lax`.
This adds a layer of defense against CSRF attacks and matches the new
default in Django 2.1:
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/2.1/releases/2.1/#samesite-cookies
This can be reverted when we upgrade to Django ≥ 2.1.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
It happens that commonmark, python-jose, and python-twitter don’t
actually use future on Python 3, and moto uses aws-xray-sdk in such a
way that it doesn’t use future, but this was a weird game to be
playing just to remove one dependency, and it caused CI failures after
new releases of future, so let’s just include it.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
The reason that `pip-tools` running on Python 3 didn’t detect the
right requirements for `thumbor` on Python 2 is simply that some of
them are conditional on the Python version.
As for the requirements that had been manually added as a workaround:
`backports-abc` and `singledispatch` are now correctly detected, while
`backports.ssl-match-hostname` was vendored into `urllib3` some time
ago and `certifi` is no longer necessary.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
Also move it to dev.in.
Other notes for posterity: this should have been installed with a
pinned commit hash, and could have been installed directly from the
upstream Git repository, even on Python 3.7, as long as Cython was
installed as well.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
Otherwise Bootstrap doesn’t get minified, and also the minification
state is incorrectly reflected in the webpack cache.
The Terser plugin is used by default; we need to include it explicitly
to avoid removing it.
Switch from cssnano to clean-css because it’s noticeably faster.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
It’s about as fast as node-sass (faster, according to their
benchmarks) and more flexible. Autoprefixer is neat: we can now go
delete all our -moz-, -webkit-, etc. lines and have them autogenerated
as necessary based on .browserslistrc.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
We no longer use tsearch_extras, and the camo patch is irrelevant on
systemd systems (Xenial and newer). So we no longer need to
provide/install a PPA at all.
Closes#13027.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
Now that we're implemented tsearch_extras in pure postgres, we no
longer need a custom extension. This should help us considerably, as
it means we no longer need to ship custom apt packages at all.
Fixes#467.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
As predicted in https://www.kb.cert.org/vuls/id/319816/, a malicious
worm is beginning to spread across the npm ecosystem through package
postinstall scripts. Only instead of direct self-replicating code,
the replication vector is the temptation to monetize postinstall
scripts by polluting the console logs with paid advertisements. The
effect will be the same unless we all put a stop to this while we
still can.
Apply the recommended VU#319816 workaround, which is to disable
lifecycle scripts when installing npm packages. The only fallout is:
* node-sass can’t run because it uses compiled native code; we replace
it with Dart Sass.
* phantomjs-prebuilt doesn’t download the binary at install time; we
tell it to download it in run-casper.
* ttf2woff2 transparently falls back from native code to an Emscripten
build.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
It doesn't require scripts to install, allowing us to migrate yarn to
the more secure --ignore-scripts option.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
These are not the latest versions, but pip-tools 3.9.0 or 4.0.0 fails
to resolve dependencies from Git URLs:
pip._internal.exceptions.DistributionNotFound: No matching distribution found for zulip==0.6.1_git (from -r requirements/common.in (line 135))
while pip 19.2 breaks pip-tools 3.8.0:
TypeError: __init__() got an unexpected keyword argument 'find_links'
Fixes#10802.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
zerver/openapi/python_examples.py:105: error: Argument 1 to "get_user_presence" of "Client" has incompatible type "str"; expected "Dict[str, Any]"
zerver/openapi/python_examples.py:563: error: Argument 1 to "add_reaction" of "Client" has incompatible type "Dict[str, object]"; expected "Dict[str, str]"
zerver/openapi/python_examples.py:576: error: Argument 1 to "remove_reaction" of "Client" has incompatible type "Dict[str, object]"; expected "Dict[str, str]"
zerver/worker/queue_processors.py:587: error: Argument "client" to "extract_query_without_mention" has incompatible type "EmbeddedBotHandler"; expected "ExternalBotHandler"
These were only missed because mypy daemon mode requires us to set
`follow_imports = skip` for the `zulip` package.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
The original seems to be unmaintained
(johnsensible/django-sendfile#65). Notably, this fixes a bug in the
filename parameter, which perviously showed the Python 3 repr of a
byte string (johnsensible/django-sendfile#49).
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
tools/linter_lib/pyflakes.py:35: error: Argument 3 to "run_pyflakes" has incompatible type "List[Tuple[bytes, bytes]]"; expected "List[Tuple[str, str]]"
tools/linter_lib/custom_check.py:110: error: Argument "rules" to "RuleList" has incompatible type "List[Dict[str, Any]]"; expected "List[Rule]"
tools/linter_lib/custom_check.py:214: error: Argument "rules" to "RuleList" has incompatible type "List[Dict[str, Any]]"; expected "List[Rule]"
tools/linter_lib/custom_check.py:214: error: Argument "shebang_rules" to "RuleList" has incompatible type "List[Dict[str, Any]]"; expected "List[Rule]"
tools/linter_lib/custom_check.py:502: error: Argument "rules" to "RuleList" has incompatible type "List[Dict[str, Any]]"; expected "List[Rule]"
tools/linter_lib/custom_check.py:502: error: Argument "shebang_rules" to "RuleList" has incompatible type "List[Dict[str, Any]]"; expected "List[Rule]"
tools/linter_lib/custom_check.py:519: error: Argument "rules" to "RuleList" has incompatible type "List[Dict[str, Any]]"; expected "List[Rule]"
tools/linter_lib/custom_check.py:706: error: Argument "rules" to "RuleList" has incompatible type "List[Dict[str, Any]]"; expected "List[Rule]"
tools/linter_lib/custom_check.py:728: error: Argument "rules" to "RuleList" has incompatible type "List[Dict[str, Any]]"; expected "List[Rule]"
tools/linter_lib/custom_check.py:738: error: Argument "rules" to "RuleList" has incompatible type "List[Dict[str, Any]]"; expected "List[Rule]"
tools/linter_lib/custom_check.py:779: error: Argument "rules" to "RuleList" has incompatible type "List[Dict[str, Any]]"; expected "List[Rule]"
tools/linter_lib/custom_check.py:779: error: Argument "length_exclude" to "RuleList" has incompatible type "Set[str]"; expected "List[str]"
tools/linter_lib/custom_check.py:803: error: Argument "length_exclude" to "RuleList" has incompatible type "Set[str]"; expected "List[str]"
tools/linter_lib/custom_check.py:805: error: Unsupported operand types for + ("List[Rule]" and "List[Dict[str, Any]]")
tools/linter_lib/custom_check.py:819: error: Argument "rules" to "RuleList" has incompatible type "List[Dict[str, Any]]"; expected "List[Rule]"
These were missed the `zulint` package was missing PEP 561 type
annotation markers, and if it’d had them, mypy daemon mode would’ve
required us to set `follow_imports = skip` for it.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
Fixes#11209.
This requires changing how zadd is used in rate_limiter.py:
In redis-py >= 3.0 the pairs to ZADD need to be passed as a dictionary,
not as *args or **kwargs, as described at
https://pypi.org/project/redis/3.2.1/ in the section
"Upgrading from redis-py 2.X to 3.0".
The rate_limiter change has to be in one commit with the redis upgrade,
because the dict format is not supported before redis-py 3.0.
This replaces the two custom Google authentication backends originally
written in 2012 with using the shared python-social-auth codebase that
we already use for the GitHub authentication backend. These are:
* GoogleMobileOauth2Backend, the ancient code path for mobile
authentication last used by the EOL original Zulip Android app.
* The `finish_google_oauth2` code path in zerver/views/auth.py, which
was the webapp (and modern mobile app) Google authentication code
path.
This change doesn't fix any known bugs; its main benefit is that we
get to remove hundreds of lines of security-sensitive semi-duplicated
code, replacing it with a widely trusted, high quality third-party
library.
We had several patches to spectrum, but the only essential one
(0ea770fc18) had already been fixed upstream,
and another was just handling jQuery deprecation warnings for not yet removed features.
See #12749 for details.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
We don’t need a hacked copy anymore. We run the installed version out
of node_modules in development, and a Webpack-bundled version of that
in production.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
It seems like the de facto standard ES polyfill library these days,
and we already depend on it through simplebar.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
This is a dramatic redesign of the look and feel of our missed-message
emails, designed to decrease the feeling of clutter and just provide
the content users care about in a clear, visible fashion.
Given mini-css-extract-plugin can now do hot module replacement,
this commit also removed css-hot-loader. Not upgrading to 0.7.0
as that cause webpack to crash.
A function was written in `test_fixtures.py` to drop a test database
template if the corresponding database id doesn't belong to a file.
Alongside this fact, every file that is written is removed after 60
minutes. Meaning any potential database template can never exist
longer than one hour.
This follow-up work was added to deal with the potential race
conditions when running `test-backend`. Ensuring that all templates
are properly dealt with.
Essentially rewritten by tabbott for cleanliness.
Fixes the remainder of #12426.
We use `git describe --tags` to get information about the number of commit since
the last major version, and the sha of the current HEAD. This is added to the
ZULIP_VERSION when a deploy is done from `git`.
Modified heavily by punchagan to:
* to use git describe instead of `git log` and `wc`
* use a separate script to run the git describe command
* write the file with version info to var/ and remove it from the repo
Fixes#4685.
perfect-scrollbar replaces both the appearance and the behavior of the
scrollbar, and its emulated behavior will never feel native on most
platforms. SimpleBar customizes the appearance while preserving the
native behavior.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
The antialiasing decisions we made for the webapp should be constant
over the entire page, not limited to particular subsections or themes.
If we wanted antialiasing, we should do it on the entire page, not
individual random widgets. But it's not clear we actually want to do
it on the entire page. The `-moz-osx-font-smoothing: grayscale`
setting now happens by default in OSX Mojave (40% world market share
right now and growing), so there's no reason to override it. And
without retina displays, generally, subpixel rendering provides better
results than antialiasing (which overrides subpixel rendering).
Thanks to Anders Kaseorg for advice on this issue.
This commit leverages the ahocorasick algorithm to build a set of user_ids
that have their alert_words present in the message. It runs in linear time
of the order of length of the input message as opposed to number of
alert_words. This is after building a ahocorasick Automaton which runs
in O(number of alert_words in entire realm) which is usually cached.
This is a major upgrade, and requires some significant compatibility
work:
* Migrating the pattern-removal logic to use the Registry feature.
* Handling the removal of positional arguments in markdown extensions.
* Handling the removal of safe mode.
Refactoring in 4e1c058 was not correct since recipient_block
and message_content checked for if not condition while
recipient_header checked for if.
The naming of classes in 6077a33 was also not correct
semantically.
Broaden the type of the AbstractEnum __reduce_ex__ parameter to object; this
matches the parameter type specified in the latest enum.pyi file in typeshed.
Fixes#10996.
This adds a web flow and management command for reactivating a Zulip
organization, with confirmation from one of the organization
administrators.
Further work is needed to make the emails nicer (ideally, we'd send
one email with all the admins on the `To` line, but the `send_email`
library doesn't support that).
Fixes#10783.
With significant tweaks to the email text by tabbott.
This is largely inspired by requests from people not liking the
Google's new emojiset. A lot of people were requesting to revert
back to old blobs emojiset so we are re-enabling this feature
after making relevant infrastructure changes for supporting google's
old blob emojiset and re-adding support for twitter emojiset.
Fixes: #10158.
This will help us in reducing the size of the release tarball
significantly. I have refrained from changing the `EMOJISETS`
constant in the `emoji_setup_utils.py` as that controls the
emojisets that we want to support. Since we want to re-enable
the feature of changing emojisets sometime again in the future
that variable should be kept as it is as it controls several
other things like emoji scripts that we use to generate emoji
names. Changing it might cause hard to catch bugs.
`emoji-datasource` package v4.0.4 introduced the concept of qualified
and non-qualified emoji codes. As chat programs don't need to use
emoji representation selector, so we used migrated our infrastructure
to use non-qualified emoji codes. But we missed the fact that the
emoji file names in emoji farm are based on emoji data's 'unified'
field and the value of this field has changed. Consequently the image
file names must also have been changed. We used `emoji_code` while
converting the span tags to img tags while processing notifications.
But since now `emoji_code` refers to non-qualified code while image
file names are based on qualified code, we need to rename images
to correctly do the conversion. This commit just fixes this.
The autenticate function now follows the signature of
Django 2.0 https://github.com/django-auth-ldap/
django-auth-ldap/commit/27a8052b26f1d3a43cdbcdfc8e7dc0322580adae
Also AUTH_LDAP_CACHE_GROUPS is depricated in favor of
AUTH_LDAP_CACHE_TIMEOUT.
This commit closes a long pending issue which involved moving the
`EMOTICON_CONVERSION` mapping to build_emoji infrastructure so
that there is only one source of truth. This was pending from the
time when this feature was implemented.
This commit updates the `emoji-datasource` packages to version 4.0.4.
This update brings following changes to emoji infra:
1: Fix for the bleeding sprite sheets.
2: The category of some emojis has been changed. Categorywise breakup of
net gain or loss is as follows:
Travel & Places: 58 (gain)
Symbols: 47 (loss)
Smileys & People: 52 (gain)
Objects: 11 (loss)
Food & Drink: 3 (gain)
Animals and Nature: 46 (gain)
Activities: 9 (loss)
3: There were some changes in the image farm of the package which were
breaking our old emoji farm. I fixed them by modifying the remapped
emoji map.
Fixes: #8235.
We add this dependancy to thumbor for no use other than making an
import possible in one of the upcoming commits. Basically we wanted to
import LOCAL_UPLOADS_DIR from zproject.prod_settings or
zproject.dev_settings and prod_settings_template.py imports
django-auth-ldap (which depends on python-ldap and django).
This seems counterproductive, but it makes it possible for us to save
significant thumbor server startup time that would have been consumed
in `get-django-setting`, and once thumbor supports Python 3, we'll
probably be merging the virtualenvs anyway (in which case this change
would become a no-op).
This migrates Zulip to use a dramatically better set of names and
aliases for our emoji set, defined in emoji_names.py (which is in turn
manually generated from our hand-curated CSV file).
This should significantly improve the experience of using Zulip's
emoji picker and emoji typeahead for finding what one is looking for.
This commit moves all files previously under the 'app' bundle in
the Django pipeline to being compiled by webpack under the 'app'
entry point. In the process, it moves assets under the app entry
to a file called app.js that consumes all relevant css and js files.
This commit also edits the webpack config to be able to expose certain
variables for third party libraries that are currently required by
some modules. This is bad coding form and should be refactored to
requiring whatever dependencies a module may have; we're just
deferring that to the future to simplify the series of transitions we
need to do here. The variable exposure is done using expose-loader in
webpack.
The app/index.html template is edited to override the newly introduced
'commonjs' block in the base template. This is done as a temporary
measure so as not to disrupt other pages on the app during the transition.
It also fixes the value of the 'this' context that was being inferred
as window by third party libraries. This is done using imports-loader
in the webpack config. This is also messy and probably isn't how we
want things to work long term.
This commit improves the output that blueslip produces while
showing error stack traces on the front-end. This is done by
using a library called error-stack-parser to format the stack
traces.
This commit also edits the webpack config to use a different
devtool setting since the previous one did not support sourcemaps
within stack traces. It also removes a plugin that was obviated
by this change.
We flip the Stream "Rome" to be a web public stream. Also we add
attribute is_web_public in various stream dicts and in the
bulk_create_streams function of bulk_create.py responsible for
default stream creation in dev environment.
String.prototype.endsWith is not supported in ie11.
Adds string.prototype.endswith package to dependencies and places
it at `common` entry point in webpack.assets.json.
node -> v8.9.4
yarn -> 1.5.1
nvm -> 0.33.8
Also updates a test in timerender.js which depends on time
provided by node which is now changed in newer release.
Some changes have been made in circeci script, we just create ~/.config
directory and chown it to circleci user so installing new version of yarn
does not cause any ci failure on circleci during provision.
Fixes#8944.
Adds string.prototype.startswith package to dependencies and places
it at `common` entry point in webpack.assets.json. As common.js is
loaded on all code paths first, there is no need to place this package
into other entry points.
The pyldap fork was merged back into python-ldap, and released as
python-ldap 3.0.0; `pyldap` is now just a wrapper package that depends
on python-ldap.
Fixes#8912.
Update perfect-scrollbar to fix stutter space-scrolling in #8544. Also
reworked deprecated `element.perfectScrollbar` to `new
PerfectScrollbar(element)`. Lastly, updated provision version and
changed node module path to new path.
This also refactors perfect-scrollbar in help.js to work with updated
version of perfect-scrollbar. Because the update also changed
perfect-scrollbar's css selectors for all scrollbars in zulip, we
update those too.
Fixes#8544.
This commit fixes currupted yarn lockfile, which generated this warning:
```
warning Lockfile has incorrect entry for "d3-queue@2". Ignoring it.
warning Lockfile has incorrect entry for "inherits@2". Ignoring it.
warning Lockfile has incorrect entry for "request@2". Ignoring it.
warning Lockfile has incorrect entry for "rimraf@2". Ignoring it.
```
This commit switches our emoji infrastructure to use 256 color indexed
64px spritesheets. Earlier we were using non-indexed 32px spritesheets
which were blurry on high dpi displays. These indexed spritesheets not
only provide a crispier display but are also smaller in size.
This commit also removes the `emoji-datasource` package as a dependency
as all the data is now sourced from individual datasource packages.
Fixes: #7862.
Also adds a custom rule to eslint. Since the recommended way of extending
eslint is to create plugins as standalone npm packages, the separate rule
is published as 'eslint-plugins-empty-returns'.
Fixes#8669.
psycopg2 package contains both binary and source
currently.The binary would soon be only available
in psycopg2-binary. So currently installing psycopg2
will show a warning about the future migration of binary.
To avoid the warning we should only install the source.
https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CA%2Bmi_8bd6kJHL
TGkuyHSnqcgDrJ1uHgQWvXCKQFD3tPQBUa2Bw%40mail.gmail.com
We do the following here:
* Remove libjasper-dev from THUMBOR_VENV_DEPENDENCIES.
Reason: This dependancy wasn't really needed by us for using
thumbor. It was a dependancy for using open-cv as Imaging Engine
in thumbor but we use PIL (Pillow now) as Imaging Engine.
* Add zlib1g-dev, libfreetype6-dev to THUMBOR_VENV_DEPENDENCIES.
Reason: These are dependancies of Pillow which are required for it
Pillow to function. Since we use Pillow in thumbor as Imaging Engine
we need these. Stuff before this didn't break because we also use
Pillow in development Environment and have these dependancies
installed from VENV_DEPENDENCIES as well.
For now, this does nothing in a production environment, but it should
simplify the process of doing testing on the Thumbor implementation,
by integrating a lot of dependency management logic.
There's one migration required by this release:
* queue_processors: Stop passing state_handler to handle_message.
state_handler is now a property of bot_handler and thus, does
not need to be passed to bot_handler.handle_message().
The commit responsible is:
2a74ad11c5
Pointing these at the latest release, rather than the latest version
in master, allows us to make changes to the installer and document
them properly in master, without making the instructions confusingly
wrong for people who just go to the website or the GitHub repo page
and follow instructions to install.
We have been assigning locale to language code. Mostly code and locale
are same but for languages like zh-Hans, locale is zh_Hans and code is
zh-hans.
After this commit, compilemessages command should be run.
We need to parse rendered HTML content of messages while preparing
content for mobile push notifications and for doing so we need to
use lxml's HTML parser.
Emojis which are represented by a sequence of codepoints or emojis
with ZWJ are not included until we implement a mechanism for dealing
with their unicode versions.
Fixes: #6279.