The commit f863a9b567 had modified
jquery.filedrop's paste method to exit early if any of the items in the
clipboardData is of the string kind. The early exit was added to prevent pasting
an image thumbnail for text copied from software like MS Word, instead of
pasting the actual copied text content. When copying an image in a (modern?)
Browser, though, the clipboard seems to contain a html `img` tag item, along
with the actual image file. This resulted in pastes being broken.
This commit modifies the condition checked for the early exit. We now actually
look at the html content in the clipboard to see if it is an `img` tag, in which
case we upload the image, instead of exiting early.
Closes#7130.
This is likely not the "right" fix in that it involved a negative
margin, but this does eliminate an annoying visual glitch where the
scrollbar overflows above its container in the left sidebar, without
creating other apparent problems.
Fixes#8731.
User was able to click delete button multiple time which could cause
multiple delete requests. This commit disables and hides the delete
message button after the first click and shows a spinner until http
the delete request responds.
Also adds a casperjs test to ensure that spinner becomes visible and
delete button becomes invisible after clicking on delete button for
first time and hides spinner and show delete buttton when message is
deleted.
Fixes: #11219.
Multiple delete message requests for the same message sometimes caused
a 500 error. This happened via the normal IntegrityError being thrown
by delete message/archiving code.
This was manually reproduced by adding latency in function
move_messages_to_archive() in retention.py and
delete_message_backend() in views.py. This addresses the problem by
adding code to handle the exception and throw JsonableError to convert
500 to 400 errors, with an automated test.
This fixes a section of code that hasn't really
been turned on yet. We decided to rename
"info" to "status_text", and I apparently missed
this. We don't have any UI to set these yet,
so it was a harmless bug.
I'll try to get some better test coverage on this
when I tweak the buddy list to show user status.
Apparently, Clubhouse has two different payloads for story label
changes, one where the label name lives inside the "references"
object, and the other where it lives inside the "actions" object.
Their webhook API is still in beta, so this could just be a bug.
Anyhow, we should support both.
This commit takes away the ability for non-admin members to create
streams where only admins can post messages by hiding the option from
them.
Fixes#11290.
This a check on server side to verify whether the user sending request
to create stream where only admins can post is an admin or not; Raises
a JsonableError when the user is not the realm admin.
You can now pass in an info field with a value
like "out to lunch" to the /users/me/status,
and the server will include that in its outbound
events.
The semantics here are that both "away" and
"status_text" have to have defined values in order
to cause changes. You can omit the keys or
pass in None when values don't change.
The way you clear info is to pass the empty
string.
We also change page_params to have a dictionary
called "user_status" instead of a set of user
ids. This requires a few small changes on the
frontend. (We will add "status_text" support in
subsequent commits; the changes here just keep
the "away" feature working correctly.)
We now have single function that handle both away
and not-away.
This refactoring sets us up to piggyback "info" more
easily onto status updates.
The only thing that changes here is that we don't
delete database rows any more when users revoke
their away status. Instead we just set the status
to NORMAL.
When I was initially writing the tests to solve issue #10131 in PR
2 schema checkers as I modified the code to send the rendered_value
only when required.
When I was using just 1 schema checker shared between two code paths,
we needed _allow_only_listed_keys. But after shifting to 2 schema
checkers for the two different cases, we no longer needed that flag,
and it's better to remove it for a stronger check.
We had a bug where if you started typing a message
and then used quote/reply (after the fact), we
would overwrite the user's original message.
The bug was kind of subtle--the internal call
to "respond" to the message would select the message
text, and then `smart_insert` would replace the
selection, unless it was Firefox.
Note that we now also allow you to cross-post
replies, which is a plausible scenario, although
possibly unintentional at times, too. I'm erring
on the side of giving the user control here, but
I'll add a warning in the next commit. Our compose
fade feature should also prevent unintentional
mixes here, too.
We often need to go to the server to get raw content.
The exceptions are messages for which we've already
fetched the raw content for some other reason (maybe
a previous quote-and-reply) or which are locally echoed.
Whether we can get the raw content locally or from
the server, the replace_content() logic is the same.
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.
This also fixes few unusual UI issues like an invitation got failed when
certain emails can't be invited then the error box is left with "warning"
even when next request got succeed and another case when invitation got
succeed after failing it's still reported with "alert-error" class alert
banner.
It's no longer used, as can be seen in
2d52463b61, in past we use `type` for
specifiying whether status is 'subscriptions-status' or else, which isn't
used now, hence `type` is removed here.
This reverts the temporary fix done in commit
46f4e58782 and replaced it with the fix that
non-admins should be able to see a dropdown to select a non-admin type of
invited user i.e. normal member or guest user.