The pyldap fork was merged back into python-ldap, and released as
python-ldap 3.0.0; `pyldap` is now just a wrapper package that depends
on python-ldap.
Fixes#8912.
This commit adds support for '+' and 'Z' for "zoom in" and '-' and 'z'
for "zoom out" shortcut keys in the lightbox image viewer for Pan and
Zoom.
Fixes: #8689.
Implement few optimizations for reading admin's bot dicts from database
for a constants number of requests:
- add models.get_user_profiles_by_ids() for reading bots profiles
by single query from database
- add models.get_services_for_bots() for reading services for bots
by single query from database
- add bot_config.get_bot_configs() for reading config data for bots
by single query from database
Fixes#8838
This fixes a bug where the endpoint for editing bot users would allow
an organization administrator to edit the full name of a bot user.
A combination of this an another recently fixed bug made it possible
for this process to set a `bot_owner` for a non-bot user; so we also
include a migration to fix that for any users that might have had our
model invariants corrupted in that way.
Apparently, since 1948cb6a89, we've been
sending requests by an administrator to change a user's name to the
/json/bots endpoint, which would end up changing the "bot owner" of
these objects to some random user.
We fix this by re-splitting the views code.
This was a user-reported bug and a very subtle and painful one
to track down.
Previously, if payload['push']['changes'][i]['closed'] was True,
we assumed that a branch was removed. Looking at whether `closed`
was set to True or not was our way to tell whether a push removed
a branch or not.
However, this is wrong! `closed` being set to True can also mean
that the pull request associated with the branch was approved but
the branch itself was not deleted. According to the BitBucket docs,
the correct way to see if a branch is deleted is to check if `new`
is null.
This bug was leading to KeyErrors about not being able to find
the `commits` key, which shouldn't happen anymore!
'processing_emojis' check is added in the 'import_uploads'
function, so that the emoji files present in the to be imported
data file can be uploaded.
The procedure of saving emoji files in slack importer is same as
saving attachments and avatars, and the import has the similar
procedure too.
Change 'get_user_data' function to a more general function
to get data from the slack api using legacy tokens.
Also, change the error handling as upon invalid token,
the response is 200, but the response has an error
field in it.
For eg. Go to the following link with invalid token:
https://slack.com/api/emoji.list?token=xoxp-249056023425
Remove allocation ID function from slack import script. All the IDs
count will start from 0. Hence the ID List returned
by the allocation function is of no use, and we remove its implementation.
(example: get_total_messages_and_attachments function is of no use anymore,
hence we remove it)
In importing avatars, we use the implementation where the 'avatar_path'
is seperately calculated using realm and user ID and then the content
of the path provided in the avatar's 'records.json' are copied to this
'avatar_path'.
Similary, here for the uploads, 's3_file_name' is seperately calculated
using the realm ID and uploaded file name and then the content of the
path provided in upload's 'records.json' are copied to this 's3_file_name'.