We show a modal as a warning when unsubscribing a private stream
because it is a irreversible action and one cannot re-subscribe
tovit until added by other member of stream.
Fixes#9254.
This commit adds "close-modal-btn" class to cancel button in
the modal and cross icon.
We do this change because we would add a modal for unsubscribing
from private stream in further commit using confirm_dialog module.
We would need to avoid the unexpected closing of stream settings
on closing the modal which can be done by calling 'e.stopPropagation'
to prevent propagating of events in other elements.
Thus, adding this class will mean that the handler used for stream
privacy modal for this same task will be used for unsubscribe modal
also.
This commit adds 'close-modal-btn' class to cancel button and cross icon
in the deactivation stream modal.
This change is a prep commit for enabling background events on
'hidden.bs.modal' event. As we would enable background events in furhter
commit using the 'hidden.bs.modal' event, we would need to remove the
'hide.bs.modal' event of deactivation_stream_modal which removes the
element from DOM.
When we remove this event we would need a e.stopPropagation call to avoid
unexpected closing of stream settings which was not a problem previously
because the element was being removed from DOM before actual closing of
modal.
So instead of adding a different handler, we can use the handler used
for stream privacy modal here by adding this new class.
This commit renames the class of both cancel button and the cross
icon to close-modal-btn.
This change is a prep commit for enabling background events on
'hidden.bs.modal' event. As we would enable background events in
furhter commit using the 'hidden.bs.modal' event, we would need to
remove the 'hide.bs.modal' event of deactivation_stream_modal which
removes the modal element from DOM.
When we remove this we would need a e.stopPropagation call to avoid
unexpected closing of subscription settings, which was not a problem
before as the element was removed from DOM before the actual closing
of modal.
So instead of adding a separate `e.stopPropagation' call, we can use
the same handler that is being used for stream privacy modal and this
is the reason the class name of cancel button of privacy modal is
being changed.
We do not remove the stream row instantly from the subscribed list in
subscription overlay when unsubscribing from public streams in most
of the cases but we do so when unsubscribing using hotkey.
This commit makes it consistent by not removing the stream row on
unsubscribing using hotkey.
We also not remove the 'active' class as streams settings is still
open in the right seciton and this behavior is also consistent with
the other ways of unsubscribing.
Note that this behavior is only for public streams, we remove the
stream row in case the stream is private, as user cannot
resubscribe himself and this behavior is consistent across all ways
of unsubscribing.
- Rectifies broken label tag having a misleading 'for' attribute.
- Removed 'name' attribute from unlabelled span tag.
- Removed label expression from DropdownListWidget to built an,
abstraction for control group only.
Fixes#17311.
Restructured dropdown_list_widget template to unwrap label tag
from the control group, hence defaulting the edit_bot
dropdown items to their original text size.
We add a TUTORIAL_ENABLED setting for self-hosters who want to
disable the tutorial entirely on their system. For this, the
default value (True) is placed in default_settings.py, which
can be overwritten by adding an entry in /etc/zulip/settings.py.
Updated database query to filter out deactivated streams from the
return of the get_topic_mutes method. Added optional
include_deactivated parameter to the method to make the behavior
default but overrideable. Added test case in test_muting for these
changes. Fixes blueslip warnings thrown by muting.js set_muted_topics
when passed deactivated streams via page_params.
We now consistently set the PM counts for the right
sidebar toggle in unread_ui, similar to what we
do for the overall counts in the left sidebar toggle.
(Use a thin window to see the code in action.)
This breaks a dependency cycle.
In passing I improve the test coverage for the
actual job that pm_list still does (updating its
own total count in the "Private Messages" section).
With the previous two commits deployed, we're ready to use the
denormalization to optimize the query.
With dev environment db prepared using
./manage.py populate_db --extra-users=2000 --extra-streams=400
this takes the execution time of the query in
bulk_get_subscriber_user_ids from 1.5-1.6s to 0.4-0.5s on my machine.
The new comment explains the issue in some detail, but basically if we
deactivate the bots first, then an error partway through is corrected
by a retry; if we deactivate the user first, then we may leak
undeactivated bots if a failure occurs.
This adds the is_user_active with the appropriate code for setting the
value correctly in the future. In the following commit a migration to
backfill the value for existing Subscriptions will be added.
To ensure correct user_profile.is_active handling also in tests, we
replace all direct .is_active mutation with calls to appropriate
functions.
These procedures should be done atomically overall, with the exception
of the code that sends events to avoid block if there's a delay
communicating with Tornado.
We add the savepoint=False on underlying function that already
executes inside an atomic context - to avoid the overhead of creating
savepoints where they aren't needed.
This commit adds a new option of STREAM_POST_POLICY_MODERATORS
in stream_post_policy which will allow only realm admins and
moderators to post in that stream.
We extract a helper which checks whether to allow the sender to send the
message to a stream according to the stream_post_policy. The purpose
of extracting it out is to avoid additional code for checking the access
for bot owners in case of bot sending the messages and instead calling
the handler two times - one time for sender and one time for bot owner if
sender is a bot.
The moderators-only option was actually added in the previous
commit for create_stream_policy as we use the same function
'has_permission' for both the policies. But we add the error
handling code and tests for moderators-only option in this
commit.
This commit modifies the has_permission function to include
realm moderator role. Thus this adds a new option of moderators
only for create_stream_policy.
Though this automatically adds this option for invite_to_stream_policy
also, but we will keep other code for showing error and for tests
in a separate commit.
This commit adds an assert statement in the last block of
has_permission which checks whether the policy_value is
POLICY_FULL_MEMBERS_ONLY. This assert statement is added
for readability.
For messages which we don't have stored locally, we don't update
our data structures. This was actually our behaviour before
59e5f2d8fc, which introduced this
bug.
Not doing this caused a major bug where we ran into errors
moving messages for topics for which we didn't have all
the messages available.
The current API documentation uses call_endpoint to upload a file;
since we've added a custom helper in python-zulip-api, we should
document that cleaner approach.
This data structure has never been one that we actually render into
the DOM; instead, its role is to support clicking into view that
contain muted streams and topics quickly.
This downgrade makes that situation much more explicit, and is also
useful refactoring to help simpify the upcoming changes in #16746.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
The session object provides a common place to set headers on all
requests, no matter which implementation.
Because the `headers` attribute of Session is not a true static
attribute, but rather exposed via overriding `__getstate__`, `mock`'s
autospec cannot know about it, and thus throws an error; in tests that
mock the Session, we thus must explicitly set the `session.headers`.
The existing organization, of returning an opaque blob from
`build_bot_request`, which was later consumed by
`send_data_to_server`, is not particularly sensible; the steps become
oddly split between the OutgoingWebhookWorker, `do_rest_call`, and the
`OutgoingWebhookServiceInterface`.
Make the `OutgoingWebhookServiceInterface` in charge of building,
making, and returning the request in one method; another method
handles extracting content from a successful response. `do_rest_call`
is responsible for calling both halves of this, and doing common error
handling.