CZO discussion
[here](https://chat.zulip.org/#narrow/stream/6-frontend/topic/code.20coverage/near/1487773).
This allows `zjquery_element.js` to have test utils that aren't always being used.
`upload.js` is mostly UI focused and has upcoming commits that are hard
to write unit tests for (and for which unit tests wouldn't make much sense).
Previously notifications.clear_compose_notifications was used accross
the codebase. Since introducing the new
compose_banner.clear_message_sent_banners function, the two functions
are similar enough that we can just use clear_message_sent_banners
everywhere. This commit also moves scroll_to_message_banner_message_id
to compose_banner.
Since we are switching to tippyjs to display popovers, extracting
this data in a commit of its own, makes further changes easier to
review and merge.
Also, we could add tests with full coverage on the data
provided to popovers, possibly a good first issue for beginners.
Fixes#22984
Add an `@` icon in unread topics where user is mentioned.
We track a new set of `stream_id:topic` pairs for the unread mentions
so that recent topics instantly knows if a topic is unread and mentioned
or not.
This commit adds private messages to the Recent topics view, to make
it an all-encompassing overview of recent activity visible to the user.
We add a filter "Include PM" to toggle whether PMs should be shown in
recent topics.
Fixes#19449.
Fixes “E713 Test for membership should be `not in`” found by ruff (now
that I’ve fixed it not to ignore scripts lacking a .py extension).
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Transitions the frontend of the web app to no longer use the
user status `away` field for setting a user's activity status
to be 'unavailable' (which is now a deprecated way to access
a user's `presence_enabled` setting).
Instead we now directly use and update the user's `presence_enabled`
setting for this feature.
Renames frontend code related to the feature to `invisible_mode`
vs `away`.
We lose node test coverage in `user_status.js` because we are now
using `channel.patch` to send these user setting updates to the
server.
Removes the temporary updates to `server_events_dispatch.py` (and
related tests) made in a previous commit, since we no longer have
or need the `away_user_ids` set.
This is preparatory commit that does basic UI set up for
user group edit in group settings overlay. This allows us to
write proper hashchange logic for user group settings overlay
under diffrent situations.
The work in this commit will be extended in further commits
to add proper UI and group edit logic.
Add support for creation of user groups using right panel
of new user group settings overlay being developed as part
of https://github.com/zulip/zulip/issues/19526.
In further commits we will add support for editing user
groups using right panel of the overlay.
This commit also introduces a minor bug related hashchange
for #groups which would be a quick fix once we have UI
for group edit on #groups overlay.
Dedicated overlay for user group settings is added as part of
addressing zulip#19526.
The newely added overlay is currently empty and more UI
related to settings is to be added in further commits.
A preparatory commit to have legacy user group settings logic
as we move forward to redesign the user group settings.
This is done so that current user group settings are functional
while we are working on the redesign, and also to make it clear
that most of the code in this file will be deleted and developers
should avoid spending much time on it.
Adds an API endpoint for accessing read receipts for other users, as
well as a modal UI for displaying that information.
Enables the previously merged privacy settings UI for managing whether
a user makes read receipts data available to other users.
Documentation is pending, and we'll likely want to link to the
documentation with help_settings_link once it is complete.
Fixes#3618.
Co-authored-by: Tim Abbott <tabbott@zulip.com>
When we were preparing the conversion to ES modules in 2019, the
primary obstacle was that the Node tests extensively relied on the
ability to reach into modules and mutate their CommonJS exports in
order to mock things. ES module bindings are not mutable, so in
commit 173c9cee42 we added
babel-plugin-rewire-ts as a kludgy transpilation-based workaround for
this to unblock the conversion.
However, babel-plugin-rewire-ts is slow, buggy, nonstandard,
confusing, and unmaintained. It’s incompatible with running our ES
modules as native ES modules, and prevents us from taking advantage of
modern tools for ES modules. So we want to excise all use of
__Rewire__ (and the disallow_rewire, override_rewire helper functions
that rely on it) from the tests and remove babel-plugin-rewire-ts.
Commits 64abdc199e and
e17ba5260a (#20730) prepared for this by
letting us see where __Rewire__ is being used. Now we go through and
remove most of the uses that are easy to remove without modifying the
production code at all.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
The most notable change here is that when you are adding
subscribers to a stream as part of creating the stream,
you can now use the same essential pill-based UI for
adding users as we do when you edit subscribers for an
existing stream.
We don't try to exactly mimic the edit-stream UI or
implementation, since when you are adding subscribers
during create-stream, we are just updating a list in
memory, whereas in the edit-stream UI, we immediately
send info to the server.
Fixes#20499
We are going to move to this code organization for
managing streams:
stream_create.js
stream_create_subscribers.js
stream_edit.js
stream_edit_subscribers.js
The modules stream_create.js and stream_edit.js historically
manage the entire process of creating and editing stream
data (respectively).
Going forward both will delegate most of the subscriber-specific
pieces to either stream_create_subscribers or stream_edit_subscribers.
The stream_*_subscribers modules will be somewhat similar in
nature, but the way that we manage subscribers at creation time
is a bit different than how we manage subscribers at edit time.
This is mostly a pure code move. A few small tweaks:
* The create() function is new.
* The new module doesn't assume a `pill_widget`
global.
This module represents the truly re-usable code
that can be shared during these two user actions:
* edit-stream subscribers (now)
* create-stream subscribers (future)
In both situations the input pill has (or will have)
essentially the same behavior, and the next commit
will tighten up the abstraction.
(The two processes will both also use fairly similar
ListWidgets, but the mechanics of managing the list
are going to be different, so we do not intend
to keep around stream_subscribers_ui in its current
name. More on that later.)
This simplifies some of our dependencies.
As an example, we really don't want compose.js
to depend on stream_subscribers_ui.js, since
the former doesn't use any actual UI code from
the latter.
We also rename the two functions here:
invite_user_to_stream -> add_user_ids_to_stream
remove_user_from_stream -> remove_user_id_from_stream
(The notion of "inviting" somebody to a stream is
somewhat misleading, since there is really no invitation
mechanism; you just add them.)
Apart from naming changes this is a verbatim code move.
Finally, we eliminate a little bit of test cruft--the
`override` helper already ensures that a function gets
called at least once during a test.
These tests have been historically difficult to maintain.
We have pretty good direct test coverage on the
components used by stream_edit.
The code tested here was mostly glue code and jQuery
code, which the node tests are particularly poorly
suited for testing.
Note that we lose 100% line coverage on
stream_settings_containers.js, but that module
is literally a single-line function to describe
a jQuery container, and the node tests for that
would be more convoluted than helpful.
We save the preferred theme in localstorage so that user doesn't
have to re-select the theme on every reload. Users on slow
computers might see flash of a theme change, if it happens.
This PR changes how the Pan & Zoom feature of images displayed in the
attachment lightbox are handled.
The existing method of using a canvas element is replaced by the Panzoom
library (timmywil/panzoom). This library is lightweight and has 0
transitive dependencies.
This fixes#20759 where the issue is that the viewport of a zoomed image
was not expanding to fill the available space on the page. Switching to
this new library also solves several other UX issues:
* Images are no longer blurred when in Pan & Zoom mode.
* The zoom behavior itself uses focal point zooming: zooming occurs
where the cursor is on the image instead of at the center of the
image, reducing the need for extra panning.
* CSS transitions are used for a more visually pleasing experience
when switching images, toggling zoom off, etc.
* The library has the potential to open other file types which
leaves that option open for us in the future.
Navigation key presses like `Up` and `PageUp` with an empty recipient
boxes will now close the compose and propagate the keypress to the message
list or recent topics, depending upon the active view.
This extends behavior we've had for a long time with focus in the
compose box itself.
When you use nyc, its code instrumentation transforms
the code so that line numbers and columns no longer
make sense, and the long stack trace is likely to cause
more confusion than convenience.
We want to encourage a workflow where you debug your
node tests using the normal (and much quicker mode)
before running `--coverage`.
This is a fairly straightforward extraction.
It's good to test this with Iago, and then go into
Manage Streams and add/remove subscribers for a stream
like devel.
I copy/pasted two small functions that will soon
diverge from stream_edit. The get_stream_id function
will either use a module variable (since we're
generally only editing subscribers for one stream, and
we already have the singleton assumption with
`input_pill`) or a more strict CSS selector. And then
get_sub_for_target depends on get_stream_id. We may not
always need full subs, anyway, and when we adapt some
of this code for creating streams, things are likely to
change.
I stopped exporting a couple functions that have no
callers outside of this module.
The main entry point for the module is
enable_subscriber_management.
We continue to export invite_user_to_stream and
remove_user_from_stream, which should possibly be just
pulled into their own module to lessen some
dependencies, but they don't have too much baggage,
since they just wrap channel calls.
This commit adds a new module settings_defaults.js which calls
the functions in settings_display passing appropriate container
element and settings object as parameters.
We also add one more parameter for_realm_settings to some of the
functions in settings_dislay to differentiate between the user
and realm-level settings.
We will use this modal for any narrow / hash or other UI element that
requires an actual account to use, to provide something reasonable to
occur when a user clicks on those things.
This makes several changes:
* Fixes a bug where the help text explaining our policies was not displayed.
* No help text was defined for many organization types.
* Copy-edits the help text somewhat.
* Offers all of the organization type options.
* Removes the 100% coverage requirement because it's annoying to test
the e.currentTarget click handler.
This commit changes the bot-edit modal to use dialog_widget instead of
edit_fields_modal.
This commit also removes edit_fields_modal module as it is no longer used.
This commit adds a new dialog_widget.js file containing most
of the code of confirm_dialog.js with some minor changes and
changes confirm_dialog to be a wrapper around dialog_widget.js.
We pass 'is_confim_dialog' as true in dialog_widget for a
confirm_dialog modal. This commit also renames confirm_dialog.hbs
and confirm_dialog_heading.hbs to dialog_widget.js,
dialog_widget.hbs and dialog_widget_heading.hbs respectively.
We use subs as a common variable name for a collection of stream
data structure used in settings, in lot of modules. So this
rename clears a bunch of related shadowed variables.
This commit first moves the compose.validate() function out
with the functions that are needed by it. Then one by one
checked for which function is now not needed in compose.js.
This moves all validation related functions out of "compose.js"
to "compose_validate.js".
Splitting compose announce variables out of compose.js.
This commit moves the "user_acknowledged_all_everyone" and
"user_acknowledged_announce" out of compose.js to reduce
cyclic dependency of compose_validate on compose.js.
Moving wildcard mentions to compose_validate.
The wildcard mention settings are mostly used while validating.
Also to reduce the cyclic dependence of compose in
compose_validate, the related wildcard mentions are moved out to
compose_vaidate.js.
This also converts reset_acknowledged functions to set values
by passing values.
We create a new widget edit_fields_modal such that this common
framework can be used in bot-edit modal, linkifier-edit modal
and user-edit modal, which have very similar implementations.
The "edit-fields-modal-status" is used only for edit-linkifier
modal and remains empty for others, so this change does not
cause problems with other modals.
We had a lot of functions and click handlers that were only
involved with user profile modal and were not related to
popovers logic in any way. So we extract these functions
into a separate module `user_profile.js`.
We turn off the eslint no-use-before-define for TypeScript files
because it does not work correctly for types. There is already
a typescript-eslint version of it that is enabled for TS.
We also update the error handler on window to use instanceof check
for ErrorEvent instead of checking the error property.
The plan for type annotating the page_params is to set it to
Record<string, unknown> for now and then annotate individual
properties on it as we use it in typescript modules.
We split recent_topics module into recent_topics_(ui + data + util).
This allows us to reduce cyclical dependencies which were
created due to large list of imports in recent topics. Also, this
refactor on its own makes sense.
Currently only enabled in development, since the exact details don't
seem right..
Co-Author-By: Signior-X <b19188@students.iitmandi.ac.in>
Co-Author-By: Aman Agrawal <amanagr@zulip.com>
Implements UI for #8005.
Adds a setting UI to list all configured playgrounds
in a realm. The filter functionality can be used to
search playgrounds by its name or language.
Default sort is provided on the 'pygments_language'
field.
Front tests added to maintain server_event_dispatch
coverage. The `settings_playgrounds.js` file is added
to coverage exclusion list since it is majorly UI
based and will be tested using puppeteer tests (in
following commits).
To prevent breaking of the hardcoded playgrounds, we resort
to checking if realm_playgrounds is empty and falling back
to the hard-coded list if so. This logic is removed in the
followup commit which introduces the UI to add a playground.
Our aim is to use this library to remove use of bootstrap-tooltip
for showing popovers and tooltips. This will remove our
dependency on bootstrap for showing tooltips. Thus, bootstrap
can be upgrade more independently.
We use GIPHY web SDK to create popover containing GIFs in a
grid format. Simply clicking on the GIFs will insert the GIF in the compose
box.
We add GIPHY logo to compose box action icons which opens the GIPHY
picker popover containing GIFs with "Powered by GIPHY"
attribution.
This is a mostly verbatim extraction.
I re-phrased one line of code to work around a lint
false alarm. (Look for `preamble` in the diff.)
There are about 8 lines missing coverage here, so
the new module might be a good candidate to get
100% line coverage on.
Before this change, you would need to remove 74
edges from our dependency graph to make it
acyclic. Now it's 72.
This helper was added in eac6463031 and
used by the "message.handlebars" file. This is no current call for
this helper in the codebase, hence it is removed to improve coverage.
This commit also marks template.js to have 100% test coverage.
This commit renames --force argument used with various tests to
--skip-provision-check. As a consequence of this name change all other
files that set --force option for the test commands have been updated.
This change is done in order to provide more clarity for using this
option for runnning tests.
This commit addresses issue #17455.
This commit moves --force option used with various tests to
test-scripts.py to have it alongside the logic that does provisioning
status assertion.
This is a step towards providing more clarity over use of this
argument with tests as asked in issue #17455.
I added these hooks in Zulip Desktop 5.5.0; handling these events in
the frontend will let us remove the janky desktop-side fallback code
that uses fake click events on menu items with specific indexes.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Steve asked me to remove this, since the tictactoe game was always
intended as a proof of concept. Now that we have poll and todo
widgets, the sample code for tictactoe has much less value.
We replace the content and type in test_widgets.py to maintain
coverage.
In 6653e19e3a we added
the convenient line to tell folks about the coverage
report. But if we failed coverage checks, we didn't
show the link.
Arguably we should just always show this, even if
tests fail, but that can also be potentially confusing.
The code to run single files was added
in c15695e514,
and it's just kinda strange code.
We already do a lot of file logic in Python
to check for line-coverage, so it's easier
to just have all the logic in Python.
This adds a new feature--you can now specify
the actual file:
./tools/test-js-with-node frontend_tests/node_tests/people.js
(This is helpful if you just want to use
shell autocomplete.)
Another minor change is that if you specify
individual files, we won't sort them. This is
important when you're trying to hunt down test
leaks.
Finally, we have a nicer message if we can't find
the file.
nyc was added in 29f04511c0
All the stuff after "&&" was actually passed to
node, because we didn't use shell=True, so the
"nyc report" command didn't run, and the ugly
finder.js code just skipped over all the final tokens.
This fixes the regression introduced in the pervious
commit to regain the 100% line coverage in `user_pill.js`
as well as `stream_pill.js`.
The new `stream_edit.js` mainly tests for:
* The stream related queries of the typeahead in `user_pill.js`
* The "Add subscribers" event handlers.
* The event handler which displays the settings for a stream.
We update the pills typeahead logic to also include
stream results and pass the "stream" key in `opts`
to enable this option for the Add subscriber form.
This commit implements the feature of adding all the
subscribers of another stream in the "Add subscribers"
UI, with the help of a new "stream_pill.js` file.
We temporarily add `user_pill.js` to the EXEMPT_FILES
list as typeahead will be set up in `stream_edit.js`
file which does not have any dedicated tests file.
Work towards #15186.
Prior to commit eb4a2b9d4e the center
area of the navbar was based on a structure that appended crumbs or
"tabs" as <li>s, forming a tab_bar and a tab_list.
However, in eb4a2b9d4e we apply a new
style and structure to the navbar which lets go of the convention of
tabs. Hence, we'd like to purge the tab_bar and tab_list labels from
our code base.
We purged tab_list in 1267caf5009118875f47fdafe312880af08024e1.
This commit purges tab_bar, it includes:
- A blanket search and replace of tab_bar with message_view_header.
- Splitting a single line comment in
tab_bar.js / message_view_header.js.
- The renaming of tab_bar.js to message_view_header.js.
- The renaming of tab_bar.hbs to message_view_header.hbs.
- A blanket search and replace of tab_data with
message_view_header_data.
- Replacing the single occurrence of tabbar with message_view_header
(it was within a comment.)
Add arrow key navigation support for recent topics.
Simple jquery is used to allow navigation for filter buttons,
a grid system is used for navigation inside table.
This adds support for a "spoiler" syntax in Zulip's markdown, which
can be used to hide content that one doesn't want to be immediately
visible without a click.
We use our own spoiler block syntax inspired by Zulip's existing quote
and math block markdown extensions, rather than requiring a token on
every line, as is present in some other markdown spoiler
implementations.
Fixes#5802.
Co-authored-by: Dylan Nugent <dylnuge@gmail.com>
Fixes#2665.
Regenerated by tabbott with `lint --fix` after a rebase and change in
parameters.
Note from tabbott: In a few cases, this converts technical debt in the
form of unsorted imports into different technical debt in the form of
our largest files having very long, ugly import sequences at the
start. I expect this change will increase pressure for us to split
those files, which isn't a bad thing.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Automatically generated by the following script, based on the output
of lint with flake8-comma:
import re
import sys
last_filename = None
last_row = None
lines = []
for msg in sys.stdin:
m = re.match(
r"\x1b\[35mflake8 \|\x1b\[0m \x1b\[1;31m(.+):(\d+):(\d+): (\w+)", msg
)
if m:
filename, row_str, col_str, err = m.groups()
row, col = int(row_str), int(col_str)
if filename == last_filename:
assert last_row != row
else:
if last_filename is not None:
with open(last_filename, "w") as f:
f.writelines(lines)
with open(filename) as f:
lines = f.readlines()
last_filename = filename
last_row = row
line = lines[row - 1]
if err in ["C812", "C815"]:
lines[row - 1] = line[: col - 1] + "," + line[col - 1 :]
elif err in ["C819"]:
assert line[col - 2] == ","
lines[row - 1] = line[: col - 2] + line[col - 1 :].lstrip(" ")
if last_filename is not None:
with open(last_filename, "w") as f:
f.writelines(lines)
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
Generated by pyupgrade --py36-plus --keep-percent-format, but with the
NamedTuple changes reverted (see commit
ba7906a3c6, #15132).
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Previously, we handled this code only in message_list_view.js.
Now we support rendering stream descriptions and some dynamic
elements can be rendered in them, so we extract this new module
and use it in both the places.
We use this new widget in bot settings panels
(personal and org). It lets you re-assign a
bot to a new human user.
Ideally we can improve this code to use
our existing list widgets to make it more
performant for realms with lots of users.
We figure out the dev host using the same logic as
dev_settings.py, so that we don't use wrong things
like 127.0.0.1 for droplet users.
And we display the link in cyan.
Generated by `pyupgrade --py3-plus --keep-percent-format` on all our
Python code except `zthumbor` and `zulip-ec2-configure-interfaces`,
followed by manual indentation fixes.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
Before this test, we were validating the behavior
of `i18next`, but we weren't validating our light
layer that sits on top of `i18next`, which currently
resides in the slightly misnamed `translations.js`
file.
The translations module is now so small that I'll
just quote it verbatim here:
import i18next from 'i18next';
i18next.init({
lng: 'lang',
resources: {
lang: {
translation: page_params.translation_data,
},
},
nsSeparator: false,
keySeparator: false,
interpolation: {
prefix: "__",
suffix: "__",
},
returnEmptyString: false, // Empty string is not a valid translation.
});
window.i18n = i18next;
We now just do `zrequire('translations')` to initialize
the `i18next` library, which allows us to have simpler
test setup and to actually exercise the above call to
`i18next.init`.
This change now gives us 100% line coverage of `translations.js`,
which of course isn't that hard to acheive (see above).
This gives them cache-compatible URLs, and also avoids some extra
copies of the sprite sheet images.
Comments on the Octopus emoji added by tabbott.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
This moves some code from settings_display.js
into the new module settings_config.js.
Extracting this module breaks some dependencies
on settings_display.js (which has some annoying
transitive dependencies, including jQuery).
In particular this isolates stream_data from
from settings_display.js.
Two of the three structures that we moved here
weren't even directly used by settings_display.js,
since we do a lot of rendering in the modules
admin.js and setting.js.
We make get_all_display_settings() a function
to avoid a require-time dependency on page_params.
Breaking the dependencies simplifies a few
node tests.
Most of the node test complexity came from the
following commit in March 2019:
5a130097bf
The commit itself seems harmless enough, but
dependencies can have a somewhat "viral" nature,
where making stream_data depend on settings_display
caused us to modify four different node tests.
This allows us to collect coverage for Handlebars templates, and also
improves the readability of Handlebars-related stack traces.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
We used to have a block of code doing this just in the presence
endpoint because that's where we'd had error-handling problems with it
not being present, but it seems more correct for it to run
unconditionally on all HTTP requests.
This requires adding a dependency of channel on reload_state, which we
record in the webpack configuration for now.
This should return us to a situation where we won't get blueslip
browser error reporting for users created while a device was offline
just before it reloads.
We now have 100% line coverage on 71 JS files.
This is thanks to about 150 people who have
contributed code to frontend/node_tests.
And then 126 files are still short of 100% line
coverage.
We now enforce line coverage with a set called
EXEMPT_FILES, which are the files for which
we do NOT expect to have 100% coverage.
Using an exemption list makes it so that adding
a new JS file to the project without 100% line
coverage will cause the build to fail. This will
encourage folks to be intentional about their
lack of test coverage.
If a file that had 100% coverage somehow regressed
to 0% coverage, we would report an error to the
console, but we weren't treating it as an actual
failure.
We've probably always had this bug, but it probably
rarely was an issue, since devs might have seen
the error locally, or hopefully whatever crazy
thing you did to totally remove coverage would
have had other symptoms.
If this was intentional, I suspect it might have
had something to do with wanting to get coverage
reports when you just run individual tests. But
a while back we changed it so that when you run
individual tests, we don't do the line coverage
enforcement.
We now use vdom-ish techniques to track the
list items for the pm list. When we go to update
the list, we only re-render nodes whose data
has changed, with two exceptions:
- Obviously, the first time we do a full render.
- If the keys for the items have changed (i.e.
a new node has come in or the order has changed),
we just re-render the whole list.
If the keys are the same since the last re-render, we
only re-render individual items if their data has
changed.
Most of the new code is in these two modules:
- pm_list_dom.js
- vdom.js
We remove all of the code in pm_list.js that is
related to updating DOM with unread counts.
For presence updates, we are now *never*
re-rendering the whole list, since presence
updates only change individual line items and
don't affect the keys. Instead, we just update
any changed elements in place.
The main thing that makes this all work is the
`update` method in `vdom`, which is totally generic
and essentially does a few simple jobs:
- detect if keys are different
- just render the whole ul as needed
- for items that change, do the appropriate
jQuery to update the item in place
Note that this code seems to play nice with simplebar.
Also, this code continues to use templates to render
the individual list items.
FWIW this code isn't radically different than list_render,
but it's got some key differences:
- There are fewer bells and whistles in this code.
Some of the stuff that list_render does is overkill
for the PM list.
- This code detects data changes.
Note that the vdom scheme is agnostic about templates;
it simply requires the child nodes to provide a render
method. (This is similar to list_render, which is also
technically agnostic about rendering, but which also
does use templates in most cases.)
These fixes are somewhat related to #13605, but we
haven't gotten a solid repro on that issue, and
the scrolling issues there may be orthogonal to the
redraws. But having fewer moving parts here should
help, and we won't get the rug pulled out from under
us on every presence update.
There are two possible extensions to this that are
somewhat overlapping in nature, but can be done
one a time.
* We can do a deeper vdom approach here that
gets us away from templates, and just have
nodes write to an AST. I have this on another
branch, but it might be overkill.
* We can avoid some redraws by detecting where
keys are moving up and down. I'm not completely
sure we need it for the PM list.
If this gets merged, we may want to try similar
things for the stream list, which also does a fairly
complicated mixture of big-hammer re-renders and
surgical updates-in-place (with custom code).
BTW we have 100% line coverage for vdom.js.
This test mostly tests logic that I'm about
to remove in subsequent commits, and it's a bit
messy.
This commit removes 100% line coverage, but I
will restore that a few commits later.
We have ~5 years of proof that we'll probably never
extend Dict with more options.
Breaking the classes into makes both a little faster
(no options to check), and we remove some options
in FoldDict that are never used (from/from_array).
A possible next step is to fine-tune the Dict to use
Map internally.
Note that the TypeScript types for FoldDict are now
more specific (requiring string keys). Of course,
this isn't really enforced until we convert other
modules to TS.
This adds the general machinery required, and sets it up for the file
`typing_status.js` as a first use case.
Co-authored-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
The minimal syntactic sugar it might provide isn’t worth the
unexpected side effects (including side effects on third party
modules).
For now, we allow zrequire to emulate the previous syntax in the Node
test suite, even though stealing part of the NPM namespace is
confusing.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
This fixes an issue where one could end up with a `(` in the markdown
syntax for a link after copy-pasting this, which doesn't work in
markdown.
Fixes#12579.
This commit migrates the Subscription's notification fields from a
BooleanField to a NullBooleanField where a value of None means to
inherit the value from user's profile.
Also includes a migrations to set the corresponding settings to None
if they match the user profile's values. This migration helps us in
getting rid of the weird "Apply to all" widget that we offered on
subscription settings page.
The mobile apps can't handle None appearing as the stream-level
notification settings, so for backwards-compatibility we arrange to
only send True/False to the mobile apps by applying those defaults
server-side. We introduce a notification_settings_null value within a
client_capabilities structure that newer versions of the mobile apps
can use to request the new model.
This mobile compatibility code is pretty effectively tested by the
existing test_events tests for the subscriptions subsystem.
This commit adds `stream_ui_updates.js` module. This module
will includes functions which will update different ui elements
(i.e. subscription button, subscriber count).
Currently, the `test-js-with-node` tests append ".js" to filenames
without an extension. Since Typescript is now also supported, it can
produce results such as "dict.ts.js". To remedy this, check for ".ts"
files as well.
The delete operator could throw a TypeError when attempting to
remove a non-configurable property, which is rare in practice since
they can only be created using `Object.defineProperty()` and
`Object.freeze()`. We also never uses the output of `del()` anyway.
NOTE: If you revert this commit, you want to revert
the immediately prior commit as well. The history
is that Ishan made some improvements to the widget,
but there were some minor bugs. I decided not
to squash the commits together so that the git
history is clear who did what. (In particular, I
want questions about the JS code to come to me if
somebody does `git blame`.)
Anyway...
This is a fairly significant rewrite of the polling
widget, where I clean up the overall structure of
the code (including things from before the prior
fix) and try to polish the prior commit a bit as
well.
There are a few new features:
* We tell "other" users to wait for the poll
to start (if there's no question yet).
* We tip the author to say "/poll foo" (as
needed).
* We add edit controls for the question.
* We don't allow new choices until there's
a question.
The goal here was to enforce 100% coverage on
parse_narrow, but the code has an unreachable line
and is overly tolerant of bogus urls. This will
be fixed in the next commit.
We now let color_data keep its own state for
unused_colors, so that we longer have to pass in
a large list of unused_colors every time we want
to assign a new stream color.
This mostly matters at startup, where we might
be cycling through 5000 streams. We claim all
the unused colors up front.
Each operation now has an upper bound of expensiveness,
where the worst case scenario is basically popping
off the first element of a list of <= 24 colors.
The algorithm is now deterministic, too, to make
it easier to test. It's unclear whether random color
assignment ever had much benefit, and it made unit
testing the algorithm difficult. Now we have 100%
line coverage.
Fixes part of #10902.
We don't use input.create_non_editable_pill() in our
code yet. If we add this back, we'll want to have node
tests on it.
Removing this unused code brings us to 100% line
coverage for input_pill.js.
This directly reverts 5c11ab85 with the small addition
of adding input_pill to our list of fully covered
modules.
We probably should have done this a while ago, even
though these functions are pretty tiny. The goal here
is to make it easier to have more consistent search
semantics.
Our first use case is subs.js. In this case we
are able to decouple a bit of generic string
matching from the subs-specific code.
Adds search_pill.js to the static asset pipeline. The items
for search pill contain 2 keys, display_value and search_string.
Adding all the operator information i.e the operator, operand and
negated fields along with the search_string and description was tried out.
It was dropped because it didn't provide any advantage as one had to
always calculate the search_string and the description from the operator.
This starts the concept of a schema checker, similar to
zerver/lib/validator.py on the server. We can use this
to validate incoming data. Our server should filter most
of our incoming data, but it's useful to have client-side
checking to defend against things like upgrade
regressions (i.e. what if we change the name of the field
on the server side without updating all client uses).
I mistakenly pushed a PR when my tests failed. I ran with
the coverage option, so I saw this brightly colored summary
report that distracted me from the failure message.
This adds a couple newlines and some all caps.
The timezone environment variable was set to UTC initially. It was
changed to something other than UTC so that any local vs UTC
conversion issues will manifest in the tests.
Fixes: #5105.
This was a bit more than moving code. I extracted the
following things:
$widget (and three helper methods)
$input
text()
empty()
expand_column
close_widget
activity.clear_highlight
There was a minor bug before this commit, where we were inconsistent
about trimming spaces. The introduction of text() and empty() should
prevent bugs where users type the space bar into search.
We now allow you to run --coverage on individual files. This helps
when you want to make sure a file is being covered directly and not
just getting incidental coverage from higher level tests.
Before this commit, we were conflating wanting coverage reports with
wanting coverage checks. For individual files, we now solve that by
simply eliminating the coverage checks. This required some minor
refactoring to extract some functions.
Added support for passing a filename without `.js` suffix.
This then fixed the issue of no complaints for invalid test
files. Now, throws an error for invalid test files.
Fixes#8579.
We now isolate the code to transmit messages into transmit.js.
It is stable code that most folks doing UI work in compose.js don't
care about the details of, so it's just clutter there. Also, we may
soon have other widgets than the compose box that send messages.
This change mostly preserves test coverage, although in some cases
we stub at a higher level for the compose path (this is a good thing).
Extracting out transmit.js allows us to lock down 100% coverage on that
file.
This reverts commit 66261f1cc. See parent commit for reason; here,
provision worked but `tools/run-dev.py` would give errors.
We need to figure out a test that reproduces these issues, then make a
version of these changes that keeps that test working, before we
re-merge them.
This function was extracted from build_user_sidebar(). We
also slightly streamlined it to not unnecessarily call
filter() when the filter text was blank. This extraction
also eliminated the need for us to have the two-line
filter_and_sort() function.
Also, we get to 100% coverage in this commit.
This causes `upgrade-zulip-from-git`, as well as a no-option run of
`tools/build-release-tarball`, to produce a Zulip install running
Python 3, rather than Python 2. In particular this means that the
virtualenv we create, in which all application code runs, is Python 3.
One shebang line, on `zulip-ec2-configure-interfaces`, explicitly
keeps Python 2, and at least one external ops script, `wal-e`, also
still runs on Python 2. See discussion on the respective previous
commits that made those explicit. There may also be some other
third-party scripts we use, outside of this source tree and running
outside our virtualenv, that still run on Python 2.
This new module tracks the recent topic names for any given
stream.
The code was pulled over almost verbatim from stream_data.js,
with minor renames to the function names.
We introduced a minor one-line function called stream_has_topics.
This mostly sets the stage for a subsequent commit to start
using client_message_id as the key into sent_messages.
It has the nice side effect of making it more explicit that
certain things should always happen when transmit_message()
succeeds.
This commit does regress our node test coverage a bit.
This is mostly straightforward moving of code out of compose.js.
The code that was moved currently supports sending time
reports for sent messages, but we intend to grow out the new
module to track more state about sent messages.
The following function names in this commit are new, but their
code was basically pulled over verbatim:
process_success (was process_send_time)
set_timer_for_restarting_event_loop
clear
initialize
All the code in the new module is covered by previous tests that
had been written for compose.js. This commit only modifies
a few things to keep those tests.
The new module has 100% node coverage, so we updated `enforce_fully_covered`.