This commit does not remove the 'enable_login_emails' field from
RealmUserDefault table but it is just not used and cannot be
changed from UI or API similar to 'enable_marketing_emails' setting.
This is a somewhat subtle function, that deserves a few comments
explaining subtle details of its logic, and there's no good reason to
have multiple copies of that logic that are slightly inconsistent.
Because the main changes here are just checking for invariant
failures, the behavioral change here should be limited to ensuring
deactivated streams are not considered available even if they were
tagged as web public streams before deactivation.
This fixes a problem where we could not import zerver.lib.streams from
zerver.lib.message, which would otherwise be reasonable, because the
former implicitly imported many modules due to this issue.
Requests to the root subdomain weren't getting request_notes.realm set
even if a realm exists on the root subdomain - which is actually a
common scenario, because simply having one organization, on the root
subdomain, is the simplest and common way for self-hosted deployments.
This reverts commit cd93d0967f.
This check_or is redundant with check_union; it gives a misleading
error message for the non-matching case; and it has no type safety.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
In maybe_send_resolve_topic_notifications, since the calls to the
translation function `_()` are made outside of the `override_language`
block, the strings are not translated correctly.
This commit refactors the function to make sure that the translation
happens in the right block of code.
Fixes#19730.
Apparently, our slack compatible outgoing webhook format didn't
exactly match Slack, especially in the types used for values. Fix
this by using a much more consistent format, where we preserve their
pattern of prefixing IDs with letters.
This fixes a bug where Zulip's team_id could be the empty string,
which tripped up using GitLab's slash commands with Zulip.
Fixes#19588.
This commit removes the existing default_twenty_four_hour_time field in
Realm table which was used to set the twenty_four_hour_time setting of
new user on joining and instead we now use the twenty_four_hour_time
field of RealmUserDefault table for the same.
With some tweaks by tabbott to clarify the documentation.
These values are currently either a string already or a List[int]. We
should do the conversion in
do_update_user_custom_profile_data_if_changed properly: if the value is
already a string, it can be used directly - if it's not, orjson.dumps is
a more future-proof way of converting than str(). Using orjson.dumps
here also allows us to change the converter of the USER type
CustomProfileField to orjson.loads, which is nicer to have than
ast.literal_eval.
While orjson.dumps() and str() give the same output when
given the special case of List[int],
ast.literal_eval was previously used due to orjson.loads not being
a good inverse function to str in general. That gets straightened out
now.
None of the existing custom profile field types have the value as an
integer like declared in many places - nor is it a string like currently
decalred in types.py. The correct type is Union[str, List[int]]. Rather
than tracking this in so many places throughout the codebase, we add a
new ProfileDataElementValue type and insert it where appropriate.
The old assignment is incorrect - field_value.value is a TextField() and
should always be a string. This didn't strictly break anything, because
django converts the value to a string when .save()ing to the db, but
field_value.value persists as a non-string for the rest of this
codepath. After fixing this, the small codeblock in
notify_user_update_custom_profile_data handling conversion of
field_value.value to a string becomes redundant.
We're assured that we're not breaking event format by the test
test_custom_profile_field_data_events in test_events.py.
Send update event to client after a stream is made web public.
This has been documented in the API documentation since feature level
73; previously the value was always false.
We allow clients to make existing streams web public via the API.
This feature is still disabled via settings in production
environments, because we may have additional policy rules or UI
warnings we wish to add to this sort of conversion.
User can now create web public stream via the /subscribe API.
So, when a web public stream present in the API request does not
exist, it will be created now by specifying the is_web_public
parameter. The parameter would have been ignored without this
commit.
The new error message is more clear about why, "User cannot create
stream with this settings." was bad English, and in any case removing
an unnecessary string is always an improvement for translators.
This new setting both serves as a guard to allow us to merge API
support for web public streams to main before we're ready for this
feature to be available on Zulip Cloud, and also long term will
protect self-hosted servers from accidentally enabling web-public
streams (which could be a scary possibility for the administrators of
a corporate Zulip server).
Recently, we discovered that our settings_tab/relative Markdown
directives didn't work when they were in a macro that was included
in another Markdown file. Note that without this commit, the
/help/create-your-organization-profile page is broken. This commit
changes the respective priorities of these two extensions such that
these directives are rendered *after* the macro is included in
another file.
Thanks to Alya Abbott for reporting this bug!
All of our custom Markdown extensions have priorities that govern
the order in which the preprocessors will be run. It is more
convenient to have these all in one file so that you can easily
discern the order at first glance.
Thanks to Alya Abbott for reporting the bug that led to this
refactoring!
This is a follow-up to #19388.
We will in the future allow patch requests to change the visibility
of an existing topic, so `last_updated` is better name for this field.
This commit does not affect the API or events in any way, but only the
database.
Fixes#17456.
The main tricky part has to do with what values the attribute should
have. LDAP defines a Boolean as
Boolean = "TRUE" / "FALSE"
so ideally we'd always see exactly those values. However,
although the issue is now marked as resolved, the discussion in
https://pagure.io/freeipa/issue/1259 shows how this may not always be
respected - meaning it makes sense for us to be more liberal in
interpreting these values.
The test now uses submit_reg_form_for_user, meaning a blank
full_name is posted to /accounts/register/ rather than the
parameter being excluded.
Fixes part of #7564
I had to pass stop_after_reg_form=True, as the call to get_user in
verify_signup fails. I am not sure whether this is the expected
behavior. Also this causes the test to use submit_reg_form_for_user,
meaning a blank password is posted to /accounts/register/ rather than
no password.
Fixes part of #7564
get_user_by_delivery_email should be used, given that the email variable
is the realm email address that the account is being created with, not
the .email field which can be a dummy address based on org settings.
Currently we used to redirect to /new when the user click on buy
standard from the root domain. Instead we redirect to /upgrade page.
The /upgrade page redirect would ask user to enter the subdomain
of their organization and would then redirect them to /upgrade
page of their organization.
This better matches the title of the page and more generally our
conventions around naming /help/ articles. We include a redirect
because this is referenced from Welcome Bot messages, and we
definitely don't want those links to break.
This parallels fe25517295, but for mobile notifications. It also
adds a test, which verifies that such content does not crash either
mobile or email notifications.
fe25517295 adjusted the email_notifications codepath to use
`lxml.html.fragment_fromstring` method when parsing
`rendered_content`, but left the tests using a helper which called
`fromstring`.
Switching the tests to match the code as run reveals a bug -- using
`drop_tree` on all `message_inline_image` classes now _does_ remove
all of a top-level image-URL-only message. Previously, such messages
were "safe" from the block that calls `drop_tree` only by dint of
`drop_tree` being a silent no-op for the root element. When parsed
using `fragment_fromstring`, they are no longer the root, and as such
an empty message results.
Reorder relative_to_full_url to check for only one `message_inline_image`
within the top `<div>`, and only run the `drop_tree` path in the
alternate case. Tests must be adjusted for their output now including
one more layer of `<div>`.
The previous commit introduced logging of attempts for username+password
backends. For completeness, we should log, in the same format,
successful attempts via social auth backends.