By registering a post_delete handler to clear appropriate caches in a
nicer way, we can get rid of the ugly flush-memcached call in the
delete_realm command.
We replace knight command with change_user_role command which
allows us to change role of a user to owner, admins, member and
guest. We can also give/revoke api_super_user permission using
this command.
Tweaked by tabbott to improve the logging output and update documentation.
Fixes#16586.
Right now the list of languages in Display settings → Default language
is sorted in an unintuitive order due to the varying case conventions:
British English
Chinese (Taiwan)
Deutsch
English
Hindi
Indonesian (Indonesia)
Lietuviškai
Magyar
Malayalam
Nederlands
Português
Română
Tiếng Việt
Türkçe
català
español
français
galego
italiano
polski
suomi
svenska
česky
Русский
Українська
български
српски
فارسی
தமிழ்
日本語
简体中文
繁體中文
한국어
Fix the sort to use the locale-independent Unicode Collation
Algorithm:
British English
català
česky
Chinese (Taiwan)
Deutsch
English
español
français
galego
Hindi
Indonesian (Indonesia)
italiano
Lietuviškai
Magyar
Malayalam
Nederlands
polski
Português
Română
suomi
svenska
Tiếng Việt
Türkçe
български
Русский
српски
Українська
فارسی
தமிழ்
한국어
日本語
简体中文
繁體中文
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This class removes a lot of the annoying tuples
we were passing around.
Also, by including the user everywhere, which
is easily available to us when we make instances
of SubInfo, it sets the stage to remove
select_related('user_profile').
I think it's important that the callers understand
that bulk_add_subscriptions assumes all streams
are being created within a single realm, so I make
it an explicit parameter.
This may be overkill--I would also be happy if we
just included the assertions from this commit.
do_send_messages has side effects outside the database and may not
work reliably if its database effects are reordered by being inside a
transaction.
This also fixes a bug where we were doing the update incorrectly on
the Message table.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
SIGALRM is the simplest way to set a specific maximum duration that
queue workers can take to handle a specific message. This only works
in non-threaded environments, however, as signal handlers are
per-process, not per-thread.
The MAX_CONSUME_SECONDS is set quite high, at 10s -- the longest
average worker consume time is embed_links, which hovers near 1s.
Since just knowing the recent mean does not give much information[1],
it is difficult to know how much variance is expected. As such, we
set the threshold to be such that only events which are significant
outliers will be timed out. This can be tuned downwards as more
statistics are gathered on the runtime of the workers.
The exception to this is DeferredWorker, which deals with quite-long
requests, and thus has no enforceable SLO.
[1] https://www.autodesk.com/research/publications/same-stats-different-graphs
We call build_message_send_dict from check_message instead of
do_send_messages.
This is a prep commit for adding a new setting for handling
wildcard mentions in large streams.
We display the text of the consent message, and then continue with the
export, which will scroll the content off the screen. Allow the
administrator time to examine the contents of the message, and decide
whether to proceed based on that and the fraction of users that have
responded so far.
`zproject/settings.py` itself is mostly-empty now. Adjust the
references which should now point to `zproject/computed_settings.py`
or `zproject/default_settings.py`.
These weren’t wrong since orjson.JSONDecodeError subclasses
json.JSONDecodeError which subclasses ValueError, but the more
specific ones express the intention more clearly.
(ujson raised ValueError directly, as did json in Python 2.)
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
The exception trace only goes from where the exception was thrown up
to where the `logging.exception` call is; any context as to where
_that_ was called from is lost, unless `stack_info` is passed as well.
Having the stack is particularly useful for Sentry exceptions, which
gain the full stack trace.
Add `stack_info=True` on all `logging.exception` calls with a
non-trivial stack; we omit `wsgi.py`. Adjusts tests to match.