This commit migrates all of our webhooks to use
check_send_webhook_message, except the following:
beeminder: Rishi wanted to wait on this one.
teamcity: This one is slightly more work.
yo: This one is PM-only. I am still trying to decide whether we
should have a force_private argument or something in
check_send_webhook_message.
facebook: No point in migrating this, will be removed as part of
#8433.
slack: Slightly more work too with the `channel_to_topics` feature.
Warrants a longer discussion.
This commit migrates all webhooks to use check_send_stream_message
instead of check_send_message. The only two webhooks that still
use check_send_message are our yo and teamcity webhooks. They
both use check_send_message for private messages.
The older fixture for this event assumed that the "assignee" key
had a value of '{}' if no one was assigned to a PR anymore.
However, that is no longer true because testing with requestbin
showed that in the latest JSON payload for this event, the key
"assignee" now has the value of 'null' (None when converted to
Python) when a user is unassigned from a PR. The current code
didn't handle this correctly. This commit makes sure it does!
Its unclear as to whether the old fixture was simply wrong or
whether GitHub changed its payloads in any way.
Previously, api_key_only_webhook_view passed 3 positional arguments
(request, user_profile, and client) into a function. However, most
of our other auth decorators only pass 2 positional arguments. For
the sake of consistency, we now make api_key_only_webhook_view set
request.client and pass only request and user_profile as positional
arguments.
In cases where the webhook payload doesn't have the username for the
author of a particular commit (this can happen if the author doesn't
have a GitHub account or the author's email is not associated with
their GitHub account), we now use the author's full name to format
messages.
We now use the name of the author of a commit as opposed to the
committer to format Git messages with multiple committers.
Part of #3968.
Follow-up to #4006.
We now show a few new things:
(1) The number of commits pushed.
(2) Who authored the commits (just counts, not which specific ones, for brevity).
Add tests for case of multiple committers.
Part of #3968.