This commit adds support to add subgroups to a group while
creating it.
User can add the subgroups to group irrespective of permissions
like user can add members during creating it.
Removed `move_messages_between_streams_policy` property, as the permission
to move messages between channels is now controlled by
`can_move_messages_between_channels_group` setting.
'realm_upload_quota_mib` is updated when `plan_type` changes.
Earlier, we were including 'upload_quota' to update
`realm_upload_quota_mib` in extra_data field of 'realm op: update'
event format when property='plan_type'.
This commit migrate those two parameters to `realm op: update_dict`
event format.
* None of the clients processes these fields, so no compatibility
code required.
* Renamed `upload_quota` to `upload_quota_mib` as it better aligns
with our goal to encode units in the client-facing API names.
Also, it helps to avoid extra code to update 'realm_upload_quota_mib`
in web client, web client simply aligns with
'realm["realm_" + key] = value'.
Few of the properties in the data field of 'realm/update_dict'
event format were no longer in sorted order (by alphabet).
This commit rearranges them to maintain the order.
Earlier, only public data export was possible via `POST /export/realm`
endpoint. This commit adds support to create full data export with
member consent via that endpoint.
Also, this adds a 'export_type' parameter to the dictionaries
in `realm_export` event type and `GET /export/realm` response.
Fixes part of #31201.
Document setting the keys that will send a message or create a new
line when composting a message via the compose box and via the
personal settings overlay.
Updates links and redirect from former help center article about
this feature.
Fixes#31620.
This commit updates backend code to not allow adding deactivated
users to groups including when creating groups and also to not
allow removing deactivated users from groups.
This commit updates code to not include deactivated users in the
anonymous group settings data sent to clients, where the setting
value is sent as a dict containing members and subgroups of the
anonymous group.
This commit updates code to not include deactivated users in
members list in the user groups object sent in "/register"
and "GET /user_groups" response and also in the response
returned by endpoint like "GET /user_groups/{group_id}/members".
The events code is also update to handle this -
- We expect clients to update the members list on receiving
"realm_user/update" event on deactivation. But for guests
who cannot access the user, "user_group/remove_members"
event is sent to update the group members list on deactivation.
- "user_group/add_members" event is sent to all the users on
reactivating the user.
For the six realm settings mentioned in the main description of
the /api/update-message endpoint, link back to that page in the
/api/register-queue and /api/get-events endpoints. This way we
can maintain a centralized point of documentation for how these
settings work for message content edits and moving messages.
The descriptions in the events and register pages focuses on the
specifics for each realm setting, e.g., when a value is added or
changed for a particular realm setting.
Limiting lookups by delivery_email to users with "everyone" email
visibility is overly simplistic. We can successfully do these lookups
whenever the requester has the permission to view the real email address
of the user they're looking up.
Ths hardcoded documentation of which values are possible was destined
to end up inaccurate and out-of-date; and meanwhile, we do have a part
of the API that already has these data in machine-readable format.
We create an unnamed user group with just the group creator as it's
member when trying to set the default. The pattern I've followed across
most of the acting_user additions is to just put the user declared
somewhere before the check_add_user_group and see if the test passes.
If it does not, then I'll look at what kind of user it needs to be set
to `acting_user`.
This commit does not add the logic of using this setting to actually
check the permission on the backend. That will be done in a later
commit.
Only owners can modify this setting, but we will add that logic in a
later commit in order to keep changes in this commit minimal.
Adding the setting breaks the frontend, since the frontend tries to find
a dropdown widget for the setting automatically. To avoid this, we've
added a small temporary if statement to `settings_org.js`.
Although, most lists where we insert this setting follow an unofficial
alphabetical order, `can_manage_all_groups` has been bunched together
with `can_create_groups` since keeping those similar settings together
would be nicer when checking any code related to creating/managing a
user group.
This commit does not add the logic of using this setting to actually
check the permission on the backend. That will be done in a later
commit.
Adding the setting breaks the frontend, since the frontend tries to find
a dropdown widget for the setting automatically. To avoid this, we've
added a small temporary if statement to `settings_org.js`.
The error response when a user group cannot be deactivated due
to it being used as a subgroup or for a setting includes details
about the supergroups, streams, user groups as well the settings
for which it is used.
This new property allows organization administrators to specify whether
users can modify the custom profile field value on their own account.
This property is configurable for individual fields.
By default, existing and newly created fields have this property set to
true, that is, they allow users to edit the value of the fields.
Fixes part of #22883.
Co-Authored-By: Ujjawal Modi <umodi2003@gmail.com>
This commit renames "allow_deactivated" parameter in
"GET /user_groups" endpoint to "include_deactivated_groups", so
that we can have consistent naming here and for client capability
used for deciding whether to send deactivated groups in register
response and how to handle the related events.
This commit introduced 'creator' and 'date_created'
fields in user groups, allowing users to view who
created the groups and when.
Both fields can be null for groups without creator data.
As part of our todo in the code, we want to use the unique user IDs
instead of emails when processing the results of subscribing users to a
channel. These changes apply those changes and streamlines the use of IDs.
This param allows clients to specify how much presence history they want
to fetch. Previously, the server always returned 14 days of history.
With the recent migration of the presence API to the much more efficient
system relying on incremental fetches via the last_update_id param added
in #29999, we can now afford to provide much more history to clients
that request it - as all that historical data will only be fetched once.
There are three endpoints involved:
- `/register` - this is the main useful endpoint for this, used by API
clients to fetch initial data and register an events queue. Clients can
pass the `presence_history_limit_days` param here.
- `/users/me/presence` - this endpoint is currently used by clients to
update their presence status and fetch incremental data, making the new
functionality not particularly useful here. However, we still add the
new `history_limit_days` param here, in case in the future clients
transition to using this also for the initial presence data fetch.
- `/` - used when opening the webapp. Naturally, params aren't passed
here, so the server just assumes a value from
`settings.PRESENCE_HISTORY_LIMIT_DAYS_FOR_WEB_APP` and returns
information about this default value in page_params.