webpack optimizes JSON modules using JSON.parse("{…}"), which is
faster than the normal JavaScript parser.
Update the backend to use emoji_codes.json too instead of the three
separate JSON files.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
I believe we can remove these and rely on
other parts of our testing/code-review
to ensure template quality.
These tests never really exercised our
app code, as evidenced by us not regressing
any of the 100%-line-coverage files.
We have a couple other ways that we verify
the correct format of the templates:
- webpack (can they compile?)
- check-templates (are they nicely indented?)
For deep testing, we have Casper, which
exercises most of our most important templates
in some meaningful way.
I think it's pretty rare that we get bugs
now that are directly caused by bad templates,
and an even smaller subset of them would
have been caught by the node tests.
If that trend changes in the future, I would prefer to
just do something "greenfield" to address
any common problems rather than resurrect
this code, but we could always resurrect it
from git.
The template node tests did check a little bit of
detail about which fields are there, but not
in an integrated way, so that aspect of the tests
wasn't very useful either.
This adds Ubuntu 19.10 as a valid provisioning target.
The release test in setup-apt-repo was changed from a list of values to
a regex check for brevity.
This code was very useful when first implemented to help catch errors
where our backend templates didn't render, but has been superceded by
the success of our URL coverage testing (which ensures every URL
supported by Zulip's urls.py is accessed by our tests, with a few
exceptions) and other tests covering all of the emails Zulip sends.
It has a significant maintenance cost because it's a bit hacky and
involves generating fake context, so it makes sense to remove these.
Any future coverage issues with templates should be addressed with a
direct test that just accessing the relevant URL or sends the relevant
email.
In python 3.5-3.6, generic types had an __origin__ attribute which
indicated which generic they originated from; the code was reflecting on
that value to check types against the openapi spec. In python3.7, this
changed, and there's no longer an immediately simple way to get this
information in all cases. __origin__ appears to be the implementing
class now, returning `list` or `collections.abc.Iterator` rather than
`typing.List` and `typing.Iterator`. This adds a sloppy-but-effective
mechanism for inferring if a type maps to the List/Dict/Iterator/Mapping
types and gets the test suite passing again.
Every CLI program should have a usage message.
Also add a mention in the `push-to-pull-request` usage message of
its participation in the `refs/remotes/pr/` pseudo-remote feature.
This gives us the right behavior when using the `url.*.insteadOf`
mechanism for aliases in Git remote URLs. For example, if
one's ~/.gitconfig has:
[url "git@github.com:"]
insteadOf = gh:
then `git remote add upstream gh:zulip/zulip` will work great, as
the nice, short, mnemonic `gh:` prefix gets expanded to the more
finicky `git@github.com:`. I use just such a prefix routinely.
But the feature does require that scripts go through the right
abstractions. In particular `git remote get-url`, since Git 2.7
(from 2016), exists for exactly this reason. A plain `git config`
command bypasses the expansion, getting the verbatim `gh:...`
version, which doesn't work.
So, switch to that.
As a bonus, we get to behave correctly if for some reason the user
has configured a push URL distinct from the fetch URL for this
remote, just by adding `--push`. With `git config`, we'd have had
to manually implement the fallback from `remote.upstream.pushUrl` to
`remote.upstream.url` in order to properly handle that case.
The URL used earlier no longer consists of authentication guide for
github and google. So, two different permalinks to google and github
in authentication.html are added to config_error.html to direct the
user to proper authentication setup guide.
We now use realm_id for querying UserPresence
instead of building a big WHERE clause from the
list of user_ids.
This commit may be a bit hard to measure, since
we still get the list of user_ids for the PushToken
query in the same method.
It adds this index:
"zerver_userpresence_realm_id_timestamp_25f410da_idx" btree (realm_id, "timestamp")
We expect this index to provide a major performance improvement when
fetching presence data for the whole realm from the database on
servers like zulipchat.com hosting several realms.
We now validate streams with a separate
function from PM recipients.
It's confusing enough all the ways you can
encode a stream or encode the PM recipients,
but trying to do it all in one function was
hard to reason about and led to at least one
bug.
In particular, there was a bug where streams
with commas in them would get split. Now
we just don't ever split on commas inside
of `extract_stream_indicator`.
Fixes#13836
After removing internal_send_message() in a recent
commit, we now have only two callers for
extract_recipients, and they are both related
to our REQ mechanism that always passes strings
to converters. (If there are default values,
REQ does not call the converters.)
We therefore make two changes:
- use the more strict annotation of "str"
for the `s` parameter
- don't bother with the isinstance check
Note that while the test mocks the actual message
send, we now have a `get_stream` call in the queue
worker, so we have to set up a real stream for
testing (or we could have mocked that as well, but
it didn't seem necessary). The setup queries add
to the amount of queries reported by the test,
plus the `get_stream` call. I just made the
query count a digits regex, which is a little bit
lame, but I don't think it's worth risking test
flakes for this.
This effectively reverts the following
commit from May 2019:
be527905ca
The implementation of closest() was a bit
buggy and complex. It's easy enough
to just stub the method yourself. We may
want to eventually re-implement it, but we
should follow the template of parent/set_parent.
If you fail to stub `closest` zjquery gives
a fairly helpful error message:
Error: You must create a stub for $("link-stub").closest
We stub out jquery elements rather than giving
the illusion of having real DOM.
Also, we make it so that the message_store
interaction has an assertion attached to it.