This commit removes short_name and client_id fields from the user
objects returned by get_profile_backend because neither of them
had a purpose.
* short_name hasn't been present anywhere else in the Zulip API for
several years, and isn't set through any coherent algorithm.
* client_id was a forgotten 2013-era predecessor to the queue_id field
returned by the register_event_queue process.
The combination of these changes gets us close to having `get_profile`
have the exact same format as other endpoints fetching a user object.
Option to disable breadcrumb messages were given in both message edit
form and topic edit stream popover.
User now has the option to select which stream to send the notification
of stream edit of a topic via checkboxes in the UI.
This reimplements our Zoom video call integration to use an OAuth
application. In addition to providing a cleaner setup experience,
especially on zulipchat.com where the server administrators can have
done the app registration already, it also fixes the limitation of the
previous integration that it could only have one call active at a time
when set up with typical Zoom API keys.
Fixes#11672.
Co-authored-by: Marco Burstein <marco@marco.how>
Co-authored-by: Tim Abbott <tabbott@zulipchat.com>
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
Some UTF-8 characters (★ for example) are not displayed correctly, with
fonts-liberation. Puppeteer recommends[1] installing fonts-freefont-ttf in
their docs on running Puppeteer in docker.
Provisioning forward is sufficient. There's no need to remove the
new font and replace it with the old font, I think.
[1]: https://github.com/puppeteer/puppeteer/blob/master/docs/troubleshooting.md#running-puppeteer-in-docker
There's no reason to send data beyond the user `id` of the uploader,
and reason not to, as the previous model was both awkward when
`author=None` and resulted in unecessary parsing complexity for
clients.
Modified by tabbott to add the frontend changes and API documentation.
Fixes#15115.
When a user changes its avatar image, the user's avatar in popovers
wasn't being correctly updated, because of browser caching of the
avatar image. We added a version on the request to get the image in
the same format we use elsewhere, so the browser knows when to use the
cached image or to make a new request to the server.
Edited by Tim to preserve/fix sort orders in some tests, and update
zulip_feature_level.
Fixes: #14290
We remove the `owner` field from `page_params/realm_bots`
and bot-related events.
In the recent commit 155f6da8ba
we added `owner_id`, which we now use everywhere we need
bot owners for.
We also bump the `API_FEATURE_LEVEL` to 5 here. We
had already documented this in the prior commit to
add `owner_id`.
Note that we don't have to worry about mobile/ZT clients
here--we only deal with bot data in the webapp.
Popular email clients like Gmail will automatically linkify link-like
content present in an HTML email they receive, even if it doesn't have
links in it. This made it possible to include what in Gmail will be a
user-controlled link in invitation emails that Zulip sends, which a
spammer/phisher could try to take advantage of to send really bad spam
(the limitation of having the rest of the invitation email HTML there
makes it hard to do something compelling here).
We close this opportunity by structuring our emails to always show the
user's name inside an existing link, so that Gmail won't do new
linkification, and add a test to help ensure we don't remove this
structure in a future design change.
Co-authored-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
For privacy-minded folks who don't want to leak the
information of whether they're online, this adds an
option to disable sending presence updates to other
users.
The new settings lies in the "Other notification
settings" section of the "Notification settings"
page, under a "Presence" subheading.
Closes#14798.
The major PROVISION_VERSION bump would not be needed, but it was
missing in commit 5ab62a3514 (#14834),
so I’m doing it here.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
I imagine this can be improved in various ways, but I've initialized
this with all the **Changes** entries recorded in either zulip.yaml or
the rest of the API documentation, and I expect we'll be able to
iterate on this effectively.
It'll also be useful as a record of changes that we should remember to
document the API documentation as we document more endpoints that
currently don't discuss these issues.
While working on this, I fixed various issues where feature levels
could be mentioned or endpoints didn't properly document changes.
Includes this change:
* openapi/python_examples: Update get_single_user.
This updates get_single_user to pass keyword arguments to
get_user_by_id instead of passing a dictionary.
Which is required for CI to pass, as we indeed fixed the API of that
function (which had only been present with the wrong API for one release).
We have two different digest schemes to make
sure we keep the database up to date. There
is the migration digest, which is NOT in the
scope of this commit, and which already
used the mechanism we use for other tools.
Here we are talking about the digest for
important files like `populate_db.py`.
Now our scheme is more consistent with how we
check file changes for other tools (as
well as the aformentioned migration files).
And we only write one hash file, instead of
seven.
And we only write the file when things have
actually changed.
And we are explicit about side effects.
Finally, we include a couple new bot settings
in the digest:
INTERNAL_BOTS
DISABLED_REALM_INTERNAL_BOTS
NOTE: This will require a one-time transition,
where we rebuild both databases (dev/test).
It takes a little over two minutes for me,
so it's not super painful.
I bump the provision version here, even
though you don't technically need it (since
the relevant tools are actually using the
digest files to determine if they need to
rebuild the database). I figure it's just
good to explicitly make this commit trigger
a provision, and the user will then see
the one-time migration of the hash files
with a little bit less of a surprise.
And I do a major bump, not a minor bump,
because when we go in the reverse direction,
the old code will have to rebuild the
database due to the legacy hash files not
being around, so, again, I just prefer it
to be explicit.
Upgrade libthumbor in main zulip venv. This version drops support
for python 2 and runs on py>=3.6.
As such, it is our first commit taking advantage of our having dropped support
for Debian Stretch and Ubuntu Xenial, our previous Python 3.5-based platforms.
The purpose is to provide a way for (non-webapp) clients,
like the mobile and terminal apps, to tell whether the
server it's talking to is new enough to support a given
API feature -- in particular a way that
* is finer-grained than release numbers, so that for
features developed after e.g. 2.1.0 we can use them
immediately on servers deployed from master (like
chat.zulip.org and zulipchat.com) without waiting the
months until a 2.2 release;
* is reliable, unlike e.g. looking at the number of
commits since a release;
* doesn't lead to a growing bag of named feature flags
which the server has to go on sending forever.
Tweaked by tabbott to extend the documentation.
Closes#14618.
This guarantees that we don’t accidentally upgrade one without the
other, which could happen for example due to different third-party
version constraints between the two.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
When creating a webhook integration or creating a new one, it is a pain to
create or update the screenshots in the documentation. This commit adds a
tool that can trigger a sample notification for the webhook using a fixture,
that is likely already written for the tests.
Currently, the developer needs to take a screenshot manually, but this could
be automated using puppeteer or something like that.
Also, the tool does not support webhooks with basic auth, and only supports
webhooks that use json fixtures. These can be fixed in subsequent commits.
Add sgrep (sgrep.dev) to tooling and include simple rule as
proof of concept. Included rule detects use of old django render
function.
Also added a rule that looks for if-else statements where both
code paths are identical.
This makes it relatively easy for a system administrator to
temporarily override these values after a desktop app security
release that they want to ensure all of their users take.
We're not putting this in settings, since we don't want to encourage
accidental long-term overrides of these important-to-security values.