Our isort configuration was almost Black-compatible, but we were
missing ensure_newline_before_comments.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
The query to finds and marks all unread UserMessages in the stream as read
can be quite expensive, so we'll move that work to the deferred_work
queue and split it into batches.
Fixes#15770.
In 468c5b9a58 we changed the method of
getting the list of management commands. Using app_config.path has a
caveat in that the value depends on the path from which we're executing.
An example of things breaking can be reproduced by calling
/home/vagrant/zulip/tools/test-backend TestCommandsCanStart
This makes the app_config.path values to start with /home/vagrant/zulip,
but DEPLOY_ROOT in the dev environment is set to /srv/zulip.
/home/vagrant/zulip is a soft link to /srv/zulip, so it's a valid path
to call test-backend through, but it causes self.commands to end up
being an empty list. We fix this by converting app_config.path to the
real path.
The `typing: stop` event did not have any tests in test_events
hence its documentation wasn't added. So add tests and relevant
documentation for the typing stop event. Also edit the documentation
of `typing: start` to include the fact that servers should use
their own timeout incase `stop` event event isn't received.
Fixes#16122.
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.
Improve OpenAPI documentation of /zulip-outgoing-webhook by moving
data and making appropriate additions from its couterpart in the
/outgoing-webhook docs. Then remove the redundant documentation
from the doc and add command to render OpenAPI documetation. Also
add a test to outgoing_webhooks_interface.py to ensure that OpenAPI
documentation is correct.
Fixes#16203.
This lets the backend tests pass if zilencer has been (manually)
removed from EXTRA_INSTALLED_APPS, by skipping the tests that require
it. test-backend complains that some URLs are untested in this case:
ERROR: Some URLs are untested! Here's the list of untested URLs:
api/v1/users/me/android_gcm_reg_id
api/v1/users/me/apns_device_token
team/
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Extracting a section for presence endpoints and using path() rather
than re_path() results in a much cleaner implementation of this
concept.
This eliminates the last case where test_openapi couldn't correctly
match an endpoint documentation with the OpenAPI definitions for it.
This renames 'group_id' to 'user_group_id' in the api docs to remove
the naming mismatch between the url config and the docs and eventually
remove the 'user_groups' endpoints from 'pending_endpoints' in
test_openapi.py.
This queue had a race condition with creation of another Timer while
maybe_send_batched_emails is still doing its work, which may cause
two or more threads to be running maybe_send_batched_emails
at the same time, mutating the shared data simultaneously.
Another less likely potential race condition was that
maybe_send_batched_emails after sending out its email, can call
ensure_timer(). If the consume function is run simultaneously
in the main thread, it will call ensure_timer() too, which,
given unfortunate timings, might lead to both calls setting a new Timer.
We add locking to the queue to avoid such race conditions.
Tested manually, by print debugging with the following setup:
1. Making handle_missedmessage_emails sleep 2 seconds for each email,
and changed BATCH_DURATION to 1s to make the queue start working
right after launching.
2. Putting a bunch of events in the queue.
3. ./manage.py process_queue --queue_name missedmessage_emails
4. Once maybe_send_batched_emails is called and while it's processing
the events, I pushed more events to the queue. That triggers the
consume() function and ensure_timer().
Before implementing the locking mechanism, this causes two threads
to run maybe_send_batched_emails at the same time, mutating each other's
shared data, causing a traceback such as
Exception in thread Thread-3:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/usr/lib/python3.6/threading.py", line 916, in _bootstrap_inner
self.run()
File "/usr/lib/python3.6/threading.py", line 1182, in run
self.function(*self.args, **self.kwargs)
File "/srv/zulip/zerver/worker/queue_processors.py", line 507, in maybe_send_batched_emails
del self.events_by_recipient[user_profile_id]
KeyError: '5'
With the locking mechanism, things get handled as expected, and
ensure_timer() exits if it can't obtain the lock due to
maybe_send_batched_emails still working.
Co-authored-by: Tim Abbott <tabbott@zulip.com>
I noticed RateLimitTests.test_hit_ratelimits fails when run as an
individual test, but never when run after other tests. That's due to the
first API request in a run of tests taking a long time, as detailed in
the comment on the change to the setUp method.
Django always sets request.user to a UserProfile or AnonymousUser
instance, so it's better to mimic that in the tests where we pass a
dummy request objects for rate limiter testing purposes.
Some `<img>` tags do not have an SRC, if they are rewritten using JS
to have one later. Attempting to access `first_image['src']` on these
will raise an exception, as they have no such attribute.
Only look for images which have a defined `src` attribute on them. We
could instead check if `first_image.has_attr('src')`, but this seems
only likely to produce fewer valid images.
The original commit was broken here:
b553507412
The intention was to run the same loop for all
settings, but instead, we did a funny loop of
just resetting schema_checker, and then we only
actually tested the last value of the loop.
Apparently, we were incorrectly using constants for title/description
rather than the nice non-constant values from og:title and
og:description in our meta tags.
This commit adds the is_web_public field in the AbstractAttachment
class. This is useful when validating user access to the attachment,
as otherwise we would have to make a query in the db to check if
that attachment was sent in a message in a web-public stream or not.
The new Stream administrator role is allowed to manage a stream they
administer, including:
* Setting properties like name, description, privacy and post-policy.
* Removing subscribers
* Deactivating the stream
The access_stream_for_delete_or_update is modified and is used only
to get objects from database and further checks for administrative
rights is done by check_stream_access_for_delete_or_update.
We have also added a new exception class StreamAdministratorRequired.
Via API, users can now access messages which are in web-public
streams without any authentication.
If the user is not authenticated, we assume it is a web-public
query and add `streams:web-public` narrow if not already present
to the narrow. web-public streams are also directly accessible.
Any malformed narrow which is not allowed in a web-public query
results in a 400 or 401. See test_message_fetch for the allowed
queries.
This adds 'user_id' to the simple success response for 'POST /users'
api endpoint, to make it convenient for API clients to get details
about users they just created. Appropriate changes have been made in
the docs and test_users.py.
Fixes#16072.
It is more suited for `process_request`, since it should stop
execution of the request if the domain is invalid. This code was
likely added as a process_response (in ea39fb2556) because there was
already a process_response at the time (added 7e786d5426, and no
longer necessary since dce6b4a40f).
It quiets an unnecessary warning when logging in at a non-existent
realm.
This stops performing unnecessary work when we are going to throw it
away and return a 404. The edge case to this is if the request
_creates_ a realm, and is made using the URL of the new realm; this
change would prevent the request before it occurs. While this does
arise in tests, the tests do not reflect reality -- real requests to
/accounts/register/ are made via POST to the same (default) realm,
redirected there from `confirm-preregistrationuser`. The tests are
adjusted to reflect real behavior.
Tweaked by tabbott to add a block comment in HostDomainMiddleware.
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.
In f8bcf39014, we fixed buggy
marshalling of Streams and similar data structures where we were
including the Stream object rather than its ID in dictionaries passed
to ujson, and ujson happily wrote that large object dump into the
RealmAuditLog.extra_data field.
This commit includes a migration to fix those corrupted RealmAuditLog
entries, and because the migration loop is the same, also fixes the
format of similar RealmAuditLog entries to be in a more natural format
that doesn't weirdly nest and duplicate the "property" field.
Fixes#16066.
It doesn’t end well. Or sometimes it doesn’t end (OverflowError:
Maximum recursion level reached).
Introduced by commits ccdf52fef6 and
94d2de8b4a (#15601).
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
ERROR_BOT setting is not None during testing, so running
test_report_error without making errors stream was causing exception.
This commit make a stream name errors thus removes exception and error
log spam caused by it in ./tools/test-backend output.
This commit verify that error logging while testing data export in
test_notify_realm_export_on_failure using assertLogs so that the logs
do not spam test output.
This commit tests if error logs are logged when an error occurs during
testing of check_send_webhook_fixture_message using assertlogs. Using
assertlogs ensure logs are not printed as spam in test output.
This commit verify warning logs while testing validate_api_key and
profile is incoming webhook but is_webhook is not set to True.
Verification is done using assertLogs so that logs does not cause spam
by printing in the test output.
This commit verify error logs printed during testing of log_and report
function using assertLogs without printing it in test output and hence
avoiding spam.
A few major themes here:
- We remove short_name from UserProfile
and add the appropriate migration.
- We remove short_name from various
cache-related lists of fields.
- We allow import tools to continue to
write short_name to their export files,
and then we simply ignore the field
at import time.
- We change functions like do_create_user,
create_user_profile, etc.
- We keep short_name in the /json/bots
API. (It actually gets turned into
an email.)
- We don't modify our LDAP code much
here.
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 fixes up some complex helpers that may
have had some value before f-strings come along,
but they mostly obscured the logic for
people reading the tests.
We still keep really simple helpers for the
common cases, but there are no optional
parameters for them.
One goal of this fix is to remove the
short_name concept, and we just explicitly
set senders everywhere we need them.
We also now have each test just explicitly set
its reaction_type.
For cases where we have custom message ids
or senders, we just inline the simple call
to api_post.
We generally want to avoid having two sibling test
suites depend on each other, unless there's a real
compelling reason to share code. (And if there is
code to share, we can usually promote it to either
test_helpers or ZulipTestCase, as I did here.)
This commit is also prep for the next commit, where
I try to simplify all of the helpers in EmojiReactionBase.
Especially now that we have f-strings, it is usually
better to just call api_post explicitly than to
obscure the mechanism with thin wrappers around
api_post. Our url schemes are pretty stable, so it's
unlikely that the helpers are actually gonna prevent
future busywork.
It's not clear to me why these passed mypy
before, given this:
def assert_realm_values(f: Callable[[Realm], Any], ...
But this is clearly more accurate.
This issue isn't something a system administrator needs to take action
on -- it's a likely minor logic bug around organization
administrators moving topics between streams.
As a result, it shouldn't send error emails to administrators.
This is a hacky fix to avoid spoiler content leaking in emails. The
general idea here is to tell people to open Zulip to view the actual
message in full.
We create a mini-markdown parser here that strips away the fence content
that has the 'spoiler' tag for the text emails.
Our handling of html emails is much better in comparison where we can
use lxml to parse the spoiler blocks.
We include tests for the new implementation to avoid churning the
codebase too much so this can be easily reverted when we are able to
re-enable the feature.
The tests had a bunch of different ways to create
users; now we are consistent. (This is a bit of
a prep step, too, to allow us to easily clean
Hamlet's existing words before each test.)
We could certainly do better with the handling here, but using the raw
string that the user gave us is okayish for now.
Proper formatting of timestamps requires handling locales and timezones
of the receiver as well which is a larger project.
We now do something sensible for spoilers in notifications. A message
like:
```spoiler Luke's father is
Vader. Don't tell anyone else.
```
would be rendered as:
Luke's father is (...)
If the push_notification for the UserMessage is already active,
we don't send any push notification to the user. This may
happen due to race conditions.
Added and fixed test cases affected by this.
Previously, we rendered the twitter previews outside of a
spoiler block at the end of the message. The commit series
ending with this commit fixes that by inlining twitter
previews instead of appending them all at the end. As a
consequence of the inlining, we have fixed the issue here.
This commit just adds a test to assert that.
Fixes#15518.
This is similar to our behavior with image previews, and helps
reduce clutter in the final rendered html.
We add the string 'Tweet: ' to our existing tests so those tests
remain the same.
This commit makes our handling of twitter previews consistent with
how we handle our inline images so that tweets render next to the
paragraph that links to the tweet.
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
Log RealmAuditLog in do_set_realm_property and do_remove_realm_domain.
Tests for the changes are written in test_events because it will save
duplicate code for test_change_realm_property.
Added new Event Type in AbstractRealmAuditLog STREAM_CREATED.
Since we finally create streams in create_stream_if_needed function
in zerver/lib/streams.py so logged realm_audit there.
Passed acting_user when create_stream_if_needed or ensure_stream
function is called.
Added tests in test_audit_log.
This commit moves out the SoftDeactivationMessageTest out of
test_messages.py (which at the moment have mixed category of tests) into
a more logical file, test_soft_deactivation.py.
This commit moves TestMessageForIdsDisplayRecipientFetching class which
have tests regarding display_recipient filled in by MessageDict to
test_message_dict.py.
This commit moves InternalPrepTest test class to test_message_send.py
because it tests internal_send_* and internal_prep_* functions which are
used for internal message sending in zulip.
This commit moves few tests related to testing proper sending of private
messages from PrivateMessagesTest class in test_messages.py to a new class
in test_message_send.py.
The commit moves, test_create_mirror_user_despite_race which is not related
to message sending from MessagePOSTTest class in test_message_send.py to
test_mirror_users.py.
This commit extracts out MessagePOSTTest class from test_messages.py
intially.
In future commits other related message sending tests will be moved from
test_messages.py to test_message_send.py.
Starting with extracting out MirroredMessageUsersTests as it is related to
mirror users than anything message-specific.
In a future commit, may extract out some tests from MessagePOSTTest as well
but still deciding on those.
We had been using !time() syntax for timestamps so far. Since its
an unreleased feature, we can make changes without affecting many
people.
Fixes#15442.