Our intent throughout the codebase is to treat email
case-insensitively.
The only codepath affected by this bug is remote_user_sso, as that's the
only one that currently passes potentially both a user_profile and
ExternalAuthDataDict when creating the ExternalAuthResult. That's why we
add a test specifically for that codepath.
To increase code reusability and reduce code redundancy, we move data
structures which occur multiple times in the OpenAPI documentation to
the `schemas` section. Note that this a pure data movement commit
without any changes to the data beyond removing over-specific
descriptions (E.g. that suggest the user group was just created).
(Future commits will use these)
Previously there was a documented_events set which provided for partial
OpenAPI documentation while documentation was still going on. But since
the documentation is complete now, remove it.
This giant commit completes basic OpenAPI documentation for all events
in Zulip's real-time events API.
Further work will be required in the near future to make
/api/get_events usable.
With many edits by tabbott for wording and correctness (especially
around which clients receive events, and their purpose).
The variant `update_message` events have this extra sender field not
present in normal update_message events; this field has no purpose, so
we remove it.
Apparently, `update_message` events unexpectedly contained what were
intended to be internal data structures about which users were
mentioned in a given message.
The bug has been present and accumulating new data structures for
years.
Fixing this should improve the performance of handling update_message
events as well as cleaning up this API's interface.
This was discovered by our automated API documentation schema checking
tooling detecting these unexpected elements in these event
definitions; that same logic should prevent future bugs like this from
being introduced in the future.
Use `ujson.loads(ujson.dumps())` wrapper on events sent for OpenAPI
testing so that all tuples are converted into arrays as tuples aren't
valid in JSON.
To make it easier to check if there is user information to be used
in the error report emails, we create a user object inside report.
Now, to check if we have the user's full name, email, etc, we just
need to do report['user']['user_full_name'] rather than check
each information one by one, because if the value of one key in
the report is different than None, all the others will be as well.
ES and TypeScript modules are strict by default and don’t need this
directive. ESLint will remind us to add it to new CommonJS files and
remove it from ES and TypeScript modules.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Per the API documentation[1], the following codes all correspond to
HTTP 404:
- `34`: **Sorry, that page does not exist.** The specified resource
was not found.
- `144`: **No status found with that ID.** The requested Tweet ID is
not found (if it existed, it was probably deleted)
- `421`: **This Tweet is no longer available.** The Tweet cannot be
retrieved. This may be for a number of reasons.
- `422`: **This Tweet is no longer available because it violated the
Twitter Rules.** The Tweet is not available in the API.
Treat all of these identically.
[1] https://developer.twitter.com/en/docs/basics/response-codes
Since the title of a merge request can often change, it shouldn't be a
part of the topic that we send the message to. Otherwise things would
get messy and confusing.
But at the same time we don't want to make this mandatory. So we add
a new boolean GET parameter that can toggle whether or not the topic
should include the MR title (`use_merge_request_title`).
Fixes#15951.
Signed-off-by: Hemanth V. Alluri <hdrive1999@gmail.com>
The S3 data export tool's upload code path uses this nice boto
callback feature for showing a progress bar, which is nice for the
management command. It's spammy/broken in production and the backend
tests, so we change percent_callback to be a parameter passed in so
that it can only be used in the contexts where it makes sense.
This reverts commit c3779338c6 (part
of #14638), which incorrectly depended on commits from the future,
with the effect of either halting the flow of entropic time in an
irresolvable temporal paradox, summoning extradimensional beings to
rain destruction on the galaxy, or failing CI.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This commit modifies the /streams endpoint so that the web-public
streams are included in the default list of streams that users
have access to.
This is part of PR #14638 that aims to allow guest users to
browse and subscribe themselves to web public streams.
Modifies filter_stream_authorization so that web-public streams are
added in the list of authorized streams that a guest user can
subscribe.
This commit is part of PR #14638 that aims to allow guest users
to browse and subscribe to web-public streams.
In this commit, we grant guest users access to stream history,
send message and common stream data of web-public streams.
This is part of PR #14638 that aims to allow guest users to
browse and subscribe to web-public streams.
This modification allows guest users to have access to web-public
streams subscribers, even if they aren't subscribed or never
subscribed to that stream.
This commit is part of PR #14638 that aims to allow guest users to
browser and subscribe to web-public streams.
Now, gather_subscriptions include web-public streams in the 3 sets
of streams that it returns, subscribed, unsubscribed and never
subscribed.
This is part of PR #14638 that aims to allow guest users to browse and
subscribe to web-public streams.
This change makes the flow more coherent by instead of checking,
in the last condition, if the user isn't authorized to access that
stream, check if they are, as it is done in the other checks. Only
if all the conditions are false, which means that the user doesn't
have access to that stream, the stream is added to the
unauthorized_streams list.
Card descriptions aren't dates, and calling prettify_date on them results in removing upper case T characters, replacing uppercase Z characters with " UTC", etc. in descriptions when they appear in Zulip.
This was pretty clearly just a copy/paste mistake (these functions are very closely parallel to the *_due_date_* functions above, which do work on dates and call prettify_date).
Also add a Draft object-to-dictionary conversion method.
The following commits will provide an API around this
model using which our clients can sync drafts across each
other (if they so wish too). As of making this commit, we
haven't finalized exactly how our clients will use this.
See https://chat.zulip.org/#narrow/stream/2-general/topic/drafts
For some of the discussion around this model and in general,
around this feature.
Signed-off-by: Hemanth V. Alluri <hdrive1999@gmail.com>
Unlike the other Python datetime to Unix timestamp conversion
function (`datetime_to_timestamp`), `datetime_to_precise_timestamp`
won't drop the microseconds.
Signed-off-by: Hemanth V. Alluri <hdrive1999@gmail.com>
The apple developer webapp consistently refers this App ID. So,
this clears any confusion that can occur.
Since python social auth only requires us to include App ID in
_AUDIENCE(a list), we do that in computed settings making it easier for
server admin and we make it much clear by having it set to
APP_ID instead of BUNDLE_ID.
Uses git release as this version 3.4.0 is not released to pypi.
This is required for removing some overriden functions of
apple auth backend class AppleAuthBackend.
With the update we also make following changes:
* Fix full name being populated as "None None".
c5c74f27dd that's included in update assigns first_name and last_name
to None when no name is provided by apple. Due to this our
code is filling return_data['full_name'] to 'None None'.
This commit fixes it by making first and last name strings empty.
* Remove decode_id_token override.
Python social auth merged the PR we sent including the changes
we made to decode_id_token function. So, now there is no
necessity for the override.
* Add _AUDIENCE setting in computed_settings.py.
`decode_id_token` is dependent on this setting.
Three reasons:
1. The sliding was disorienting.
2. The collapsing disallowed searching for other pages with Ctrl+F.
3. The collapsing mechanism wasn't accessible (not usable with the
keyboard / no ARIA tags).
Tweaked by tabbott to center the left sidebar on the selected page.
Part of #15948.
Document all events of `type`=stream i.e all `op`s. Also document some other
events.
Tweaked by tabbott to clarify some documentation details (especially
around who receives events).
The idea behind doing this is that we would rather let the code error
out rather than add to the logs. It's webhook code usually never uses
the logging module so this section of legacy code needed to be changed
or removed.
Assists PR #15942.
Signed-off-by: Hemanth V. Alluri <hdrive1999@gmail.com>
Edit the function `validate_against_openapi_schema` and add some
helper functions to allow for validation of documented events.
Also add OpenAPI response validation in `verify_action` as it is
called in a large number of `/events` tests.
This lets us test the recursion bug behavior of this logging handler
without resulting in `logging.error` output being printed to the
console in the event that the test passes.
The parameter Stream.date_created is now sent down to the clients
for both:
- client.get_streams()
- client.list_subscriptions()
API docs updated for stream and subscriptions.
Fixes#15410
Some parameters such as `to` and `topic` have been intentionally
undocumentecd hence fail request validation. So mark tests which
fail due to this accordingly.
Change the condition for allowing failed validation to the condition
that `if the test fails, response status code begins with 4`. Also
add `intentionally_undocumented` argument in `validate_request` for
allowing passing of tests which return `200` responses but fail
validation due to some intentionally undocumented feature in
OpenAPI specification.
Added order_by("id") clause in query for RealmAuditLog
for consistent output.
It was causing zerver.tests.test_audit_log.TestRealmAuditLog
to fail due to order mismatch.
Clock time checks lead to tests that nondeterministically fail when
the CI container is super slow, and there's no good reason this test
in particular needs to do that sort of test in addition to our
standard database query count check (which is already does).
Now when you are reading a single test, you can
explicitly see that the event and service handler
are tied to your bot, which is our test bot
for outgoing webhooks.
Decorating an entire test with a mock makes it
hard to ascertain where the actual mock behavior
is expected to happen, plus it clutters up
the parameter list.
In fact, we remove a dubious re-assertion here that
a mock was called. The assertion that a mock was
called was true, but it was misleading to think
the code right before it had invoked the mock.
The stream schema is used in two locations so move it to the
components section. Also the `is_default` key returned by `/streams`
is not returned by `/events`. So handle it separately.
The `Messages` schema present in `#/components/schemas` was a
combination of all keys possible in any message object used in Zulip.
Edit it so that the original `Messages` contains just the keys present
in the `message` event. Also make another schema `GetMessages` which
adds a few other keys which are received when using `GET /messages`.
The message object in the `/zulip-outgoing-webhook` has also been
modified and corrected.
The `subscriptions` has use in multiple endpoints and hence instead
of redefining it at every point move it to the the components section
for easier reuse.
We also have the caller pass in the property name for an
additional sanity check.
Note that we don't yet handle the possibility of extra_data;
that will be a subsequent commit.
Also, the stream_id fields aren't in Realm.property_types,
so we specify their types in the checker.
This a pretty big commit, but I really wanted it
to be atomic.
All realm_user/update events look the same from
the top:
_check_realm_user_update = check_events_dict(
required_keys=[
("type", equals("realm_user")),
("op", equals("update")),
("person", _check_realm_user_person),
]
)
And then we have a bunch of fields for person that
are optional, and we usually only send user_id plus
one other field, with the exception of avatar-related
events:
_check_realm_user_person = check_dict_only(
required_keys=[
# vertical formatting
("user_id", check_int),
],
optional_keys=[
("avatar_source", check_string),
("avatar_url", check_none_or(check_string)),
("avatar_url_medium", check_none_or(check_string)),
("avatar_version", check_int),
("bot_owner_id", check_int),
("custom_profile_field", _check_custom_profile_field),
("delivery_email", check_string),
("full_name", check_string),
("role", check_int_in(UserProfile.ROLE_TYPES)),
("email", check_string),
("user_id", check_int),
("timezone", check_string),
],
)
I would start the code review by just skimming the changes
to event_schema.py, to get the big picture of the complexity
here. Basically the schema is just the combined superset of
all the individual schemas that we remove from test_events.
Then I would read test_events.py.
The simplest diffs are basically of this form:
- schema_checker = check_events_dict([
- ('type', equals('realm_user')),
- ('op', equals('update')),
- ('person', check_dict_only([
- ('role', check_int_in(UserProfile.ROLE_TYPES)),
- ('user_id', check_int),
- ])),
- ])
# ...
- schema_checker('events[0]', events[0])
+ check_realm_user_update('events[0]', events[0], {'role'})
Instead of a custom schema checker, we use the "superset"
schema checker, but then we pass in the set of fields that we
expect to be there. Note that 'user_id' is always there.
So most of the heavy lifting happens in this new function
in event_schema.py:
def check_realm_user_update(
var_name: str, event: Dict[str, Any], optional_fields: Set[str],
) -> None:
_check_realm_user_update(var_name, event)
keys = set(event["person"].keys()) - {"user_id"}
assert optional_fields == keys
But we still do some more custom checks in test_events.py.
custom profile fields: check keys of custom_profile_field
def test_custom_profile_field_data_events(self) -> None:
+ self.assertEqual(
+ events[0]['person']['custom_profile_field'].keys(),
+ {"id", "value", "rendered_value"}
+ )
+ check_realm_user_update('events[0]', events[0], {"custom_profile_field"})
+ self.assertEqual(
+ events[0]['person']['custom_profile_field'].keys(),
+ {"id", "value"}
+ )
avatar fields: check more specific types, since the superset
schema has check_none_or(check_string)
def test_change_avatar_fields(self) -> None:
+ check_realm_user_update('events[0]', events[0], avatar_fields)
+ assert isinstance(events[0]['person']['avatar_url'], str)
+ assert isinstance(events[0]['person']['avatar_url_medium'], str)
+ check_realm_user_update('events[0]', events[0], avatar_fields)
+ self.assertEqual(events[0]['person']['avatar_url'], None)
+ self.assertEqual(events[0]['person']['avatar_url_medium'], None)
Also note that avatar_fields is a set of four fields that
are set in event_schema.
full name: no extra work!
def test_change_full_name(self) -> None:
- schema_checker('events[0]', events[0])
+ check_realm_user_update('events[0]', events[0], {'full_name'})
test_change_user_delivery_email_email_address_visibilty_admins:
no extra work for delivery_email
check avatar fields more directly
roles (several examples) -- actually check the specific role
def test_change_realm_authentication_methods(self) -> None:
- schema_checker('events[0]', events[0])
+ check_realm_user_update('events[0]', events[0], {'role'})
+ self.assertEqual(events[0]['person']['role'], role)
bot_owner_id: no extra work!
- change_bot_owner_checker_user('events[1]', events[1])
+ check_realm_user_update('events[1]', events[1], {"bot_owner_id"})
- change_bot_owner_checker_user('events[1]', events[1])
+ check_realm_user_update('events[1]', events[1], {"bot_owner_id"})
- change_bot_owner_checker_user('events[1]', events[1])
+ check_realm_user_update('events[1]', events[1], {"bot_owner_id"})
timezone: no extra work!
- timezone_schema_checker('events[1]', events[1])
+ check_realm_user_update('events[1]', events[1], {"email", "timezone"})
Obviously, this file will soon grow--this
was the easiest way to start without introducing
noise into other commits.
It will soon be structurally similar
to frontend_tests/node_tests/lib/events.js--I
have some ideas there. But this should also
help for things like API docs.
We add the ability to supply optional_keys,
and we don't mutate the list of required
keys that gets passed into us.
We also enforce that there is a "type"
field.
(We will use optional_keys soon.)
This change makes our handling of youtube-url previews consistent
with how we handle our inline images. This allows the previews to
render next to the paragraph that links to the youtube video.
Follow-up to PR #15773.
In particular importing gitter data leads to having accounts with these
noreply github emails. We generally only want users to have emails that
we can actually send messages to, so we'll keep the old behavior of
disallowing sign up with such an email address. However, if an account
of this type already exists, we should allow the user to have access to
it.
This commit rewrites the way addresses are collected. If
the header with the address is not an AddressHeader (for instance,
Delivered-To and Envelope-To), we take its string representation.
Fixes: #15864 ("Error in email_mirror - _UnstructuredHeader has no attribute addresses").
Zulip converts :) to the 1F642 Unicode emoji and promotes the same emoji
in the popular section of the emoji picker.
Previously Zulip has labeled 1F642 as "slight smile". While that name
conforms to the Unicode standard (which describes the code point as
SLIGHTLY SMILING FACE), it didn't match our use case of the emoji.
If a user types :) or selects the first smile in the emoji picker they
probably mean to express a regular "smile" and not a "slight smile",
which raises the question why they are only smiling slightly.
This commit relabels 1F642 as 😄 and our previous 😄 263A as
:smiling_face:. Note that 263A looks different in our three supported
emoji sets, so it is not suited to be our "default smile".
This change does not require a migration since our emoji system stores
both unicode points and names and handles name changes transparently.