The (1) delay in fetching the read receipts data from the api call to
`/json/messages/${message_id}/read_receipts`; followed by the execution
of the success callback function, and the (2) use of `.append()` to
render the modal and user list, together lead to duplication of the read
receipts modal and also the user list inside the read receipts menu.
This commit adds a check to set the read receipts menu contents only if
the read receipts modal for the selected message ID is open by the time
the network request is resolved.
In addition, this commit also uses the `on_shown` hook instead of the
`on_show` hook in the read receipts modal logic, to add a delay in the
calling of the read receipts API, which prevents the stacking of the
requests.
For fixed-price plans, we send a reminder email to
sales@zulip.com, 2 months before the end date, to review
the pricing and configure a new fixed-price plan accordingly.
Instead of charging the customer using the attached payment
method and then creating the invoice, we create an invoice and
force an immediate payment for the invoice via the attached
payment method.
As the help center article now has detailed instructions to generate
an incoming webhook URL, the integration documentation only needs to
link to that information.
The way the flow goes now is this:
1. The user initiaties login via "Billing" in the gear menu.
2. That takes them to `/self-hosted-billing/` (possibly with a
`next_page` param if we use that for some gear menu options).
3. The server queries the bouncer to give the user a link with a signed
access token.
4. The user is redirected to that link (on `selfhosting.zulipchat.com`).
Now we have two cases, either the user is logging in for the first time
and already did in the past.
If this is the first time, we have:
5. The user is asked to fill in their email in a form that's shown,
pre-filled with the value provided inside the signed access token.
They POST this to the next endpoint.
6. The next endpoint sends a confirmation email to that address and asks
the user to go check their email.
7. The user clicks the link in their email is taken to the
from_confirmation endpoint.
8. Their initial RemoteBillingUser is created, a new signed link like in
(3) is generated and they're transparently taken back to (4),
where now that they have a RemoteBillingUser, they're handled
just like a user who already logged in before:
If the user already logged in before, they go straight here:
9. "Confirm login" page - they're shown their information (email and
full_name), can update
their full name in the form if they want. They also accept ToS here
if necessary. They POST this form back to
the endpoint and finally have a logged in session.
10. They're redirected to billing (or `next_page`) now that they have
access.
For the last form (with Full Name and ToS consent field), this pretty
shamelessly re-uses and directly renders the
corporate/remote_realm_billing_finalize_login_confirmation.html
template. That's probably good in terms of re-use, but calls for a
clean-up commit that will generalize the name of this template and the
classes/ids in the HTML.
Use of `string_id` in the sponsorship request email content was
removed in commit d3834f8b9, but it is still used in the email
subject.
Updates the email subject to use the billing_entity_display_name,
which is still the Realm.string_id for Zulip Cloud organizations.
Sets this string as "billing_entity" in the context and subject
template.
The hidden logout form facilitates logging out from the app by providing
a form with the CSRF token required for the csrf_token protection in
Jinja2.
This commit moves this form from the ".app" div to the body,
where it is more appropriately placed in the DOM.
This is a prep commit for #27550.
Adds details about the requested organization URL and type to the
registration confirmation email that's sent when creating a new
Zulip organization.
Fixes#25899.