The check for the channel ('general' and 'random') must be added before
'build_defaultstream' function is called and then the id is incremented.
Otherwise, the id appended at the end of second defaultstream object, which would be
greater than the total number of defaultstream objects would crash at
'defaultstream_id_list[defaultstream_id]' which is a paramater of 'build_defaultstream'.
Added tests to prevent the same.
This is necessary for mobile apps to do the right thing when only
RemoteUserBackend is enabled, namely, directly redirect to the
third-party SSO auth site as soon as the user enters the server URL
(no need to display a login form, since it'll be useless).
At some point, GitLab decided to change the name of the event for
CI notifications from "Build Hook" to "Job Hook" and we started
running into errors in webhook-logger.log.
This commit:
* Removes the unnecessary screenshot. The UI is intuitive enough
and standalone instructions should suffice.
* Rearranges the instructions into 4 steps.
* Makes the wording more explicit.
This commit:
* Removes the unnecessary screenshot. The user should be able to
easily see the fields in question in this case.
* Wraps the text at 80 chars.
* Combines the instructions into 4 steps.
The docs for this can easily be combined into 4 steps. For
uncomplicated setups, 4 seems to be like a good number.
Again, I have no way of verifying the correctness of the instructions
here because Airbrake doesn't let you do anything till you specify
your credit card information, which I didn't want to.
This commit modifies the text to:
* Use number 1 for all steps and let Markdown take care of the rest.
* Removes the line that says this webhook is "experimental". It isn't
anymore.
This commit modifies the doc.md to:
* Use consistent language and style.
* Use the number 1 for all numbered steps and let Markdown take
care of the rest.
* Have detailed steps on how to get to the Integrations settings
instead of just linking to the page.
* Remove unnecessary screenshots.
This commit:
* Adds a missing step to the documentation.
* Replaces wording such as "Go to X" with "Click on X".
* Removes the unnecessary screenshots.
* Rearranges the doc to contain only 4 steps. For uncomplicated
setups, 4 seems to be the right number.
This commit:
* Removes the unnecessary screenshot.
* Reorders the instructions and combines them in to 4 steps.
* Improves the contents of the webhook-url-with-bot-email-indented.md
macro and makes it more consistent with create-bot-construct-url.md.
* Sets the recommended stream name to "commits", since that's what
the webhook function for Beanstalk expects in
zerver/webhooks/beanstalk/view.py. This allows us to use the
create-stream.md macro.
This got broken at some point when we moved around the context
processing logic for integrations/webhooks. Thankfully, the
context value for external_uri_scheme was only used in a couple of
our less popular integration docs. It should render perfectly now.
* Remove unnecessary screenshot. It doesn't help very much in this
case.
* Update text to instruct users to not leave the `Title` field
empty (it cannot be blank).
* Replace wording such as `Go to Settings` with `Click on Settings`.
* Combine the "fill out the form" and "click 'Save'" steps.
* Replace "Choose X on the left-hand side" with "Choose X".
* Replace "Remember to check the X" with "Check the X".
Creating the very first organization administrator user and
subscribing them to streams before any messages were sent resulted in
RealmAuditLog entries being created with a `event_last_message_id` of
None, because that's the maximum ID in the empty set.
We correct this by fixing the incorrectly created RealmAuditLog
entries, both for new servers and also fixing old broken entries on
existing servers.
This fixes an issue where if a user setup a Zulip server with just the
organization administrator, and then forgot about it (so that the
initial user became soft-deactivated), trying to sign in 3 weeks later
would throw an exception.
This fixes the issue reported here:
https://chat.zulip.org/#narrow/stream/9-issues/subject/500.20error.20on.20login/near/511981
The total number of stream objects are allocated to
total_users. They should be allocated to the total_channels.
This passed the tests as the total number of users in the test
where greater than the total number of channels.
Previously, we used to raise an exception if the direct dev login code
path was attempted when:
* we were running under production environment.
* dev. login was not enabled.
Now we redirect to an error page and give an explanatory message to the
user.
Fixes#8249.
The Markdown extension that lives inside
zerver/lib/bugdown/api_code_example.py previously used ujson.
ujson's `dumps` function doesn't accept a `separators` argument,
which means we have no control over how the JSON is pretty-printed.
This resulted in JSON fixtures with no spaces after the colon, which
looks unnecessarily convoluted.
So now, we use the built-in `json` module to get around this.
For further reading, this issue
<https://github.com/esnme/ultrajson/issues/82> opened on ujson's
repo explains why they are reluctant to support such formatting
due to performance considerations.
This commit adds a test for the sample fixture for when an invalid
stream name is passed to a query that expects a valid stream name
as an argument. This is the case with almost all of our queries
documented under the sidebar heading "Streams".
EDIT: Actually, I was wrong. This payload is highly specific to
get-stream-id, so it shouldn't be a part of common-error-payloads
at all.
In templates/zerver/api/delete-queue.md, we have a sample fixture
for when the queue_id passed to client.deregister_queue is not
valid or the event queue in question has already been deleted.
This commit tests that fixture.
Note that this error payload is specific to client.deregister_queue.
In templates/zerver/api/create-user.md, we have a sample fixture
for when a client attempts to create a user with the same email
as an existing user. This commit adds a test for that fixture.
Note that this error payload is specific to client.create_user
and this error payload isn't generated anywhere else.
In templates/zerver/api/add-subscriptions, we have a sample fixture
for when the user being subscribed is already subscribed to a
stream. This commit tests that fixture against a running server.
This commit adds tests for the fixture for when a user is not
authorized (perhaps because the query requires the use of admin
privileges) for a particular query.
In templates/zerver/api/update-message.md, we have a sample fixture
for when a zulip.Client does not have the permission to update/edit
a particular message. This commit adds a test for that fixture.
Also, tools/test-api now also uses a non-admin client for this test,
which might come in handy in the future.
This commit adds tests for the sample fixture for when a required
request argument is missing. Also, it moves the sample fixture
to common-error-payloads.md, since this is an error payload that
is common to most requests (except the ones that don't take any
arguments).
In templates/zerver/api/private-message.md, we have a sample fixture
for when the email address of the PM's recipient is invalid. This
commit makes sure that fixture is tested against a running server.
In templates/zerver/api/stream-message.md, we have a sample fixture
for when the target stream does not exist. This commit adds a test
for that sample fixture.
I think it makes more sense to first tell the user that
the character you are entering is invalid than telling
minimum length requirement is not satisfied.
Fixes#3058.
This uses an actual query to the backend to check if the subdomain is
available, using the same logic we would use to check when the
subdomain is in fact created.
This changes the missed-message logic to use the new encoding
scheme for stream url fragments that prefixes them with
"{stream_id}-".
For simplicity sake, we just get a Stream object to pass to
the helper functions, and we only call get_display_recipient()
now for the HUDDLE case. (We were calling it wastefully before
for the PM case.)
This commit prefixes stream names in urls with stream ids,
so that the urls don't break when we rename streams.
strean name: foo bar.com%
before: #narrow/stream/foo.20bar.2Ecom.25
after: #narrow/stream/20-foo-bar.2Ecom.25
For new realms, everything is simple under the new scheme, since
we just parse out the stream id every time to figure out where
to narrow.
For old realms, any old URLs will still work under the new scheme,
assuming the stream hasn't been renamed (and of course old urls
wouldn't have survived stream renaming in the first place). The one
exception is the hopefully rare case of a stream name starting with
something like "99-" and colliding with another stream whose id is 99.
The way that we enocde the stream name portion of the URL is kind
of unimportant now, since we really only look at the stream id, but
we still want a safe encoding of the name that is mostly human
readable, so we now convert spaces to dashes in the stream name. Also,
we try to ensure more code on both sides (frontend and backend) calls
common functions to do the encoding.
Fixes#4713
We use the command
'select nextval('sequence') from generate_series(1, increment_number)'
which returns a list of allocated values for the ids.
This list is used to assign ids to the to be converted objects.
This adds button under "Organization profile" settings, which
deactivates the organization and sends an "event" to all the
active user and log out them.
Fixes: #8212.
This enforces `**` around all the mentions including "at-all" and
"at-everyone" mentions. Hence this makes `@all` and `@everyone`
invalid mentions, resulting into proper syntax for these mentions as
`@**all**` and `@**everyone**` respectively.
Note from tabbott: This removes an old feature/syntax, which made
sense back when @Tim was also a way to mention a user with Tim as
their first name. Given how nice typeahead is now, the user part of
the feature was removed a while ago; this should have gone at the same
time.
Fixes: #8143.
This commit modifies the Markdown extension in bugdown/api_code_examples.py
to support rendering code examples in multiple languages by specifying
the language like so:
{generate_code_example(python)|doc.md|example}
This makes us one step closer towards adding support for testable
JavaScript code examples.
This commit simply adds a comment in zerver/lib/api_test_helpers.py
explaining why it isn't worth the effort to explicitly test the
code example in api/get-events-from-queue.md.
This may be helpful for some API clients, since it avoids them needed
to do somewhat messy post-processing on the results (the data was
always available via scanning for the first unread message in the result).
Fixes#6244.
From here on we start to authenticate uploaded file request before
serving this files in production. This involves allowing NGINX to
pass on these file requests to Django for authentication and then
serve these files by making use on internal redirect requests having
x-accel-redirect field. The redirection on requests and loading
of x-accel-redirect param is handled by django-sendfile.
NOTE: This commit starts to authenticate these requests for Zulip
servers running platforms either Ubuntu Xenial (16.04) or above.
Fixes: #320 and #291 partially.
With minor fixes by eeshangarg!
Eeshan: I decided to remove the screenshot. It looks very old and
was blurry and the instructions were very screenshot-agnostic
anyway!
I couldn't update the screenshot because Airbrake doesn't even let
you use the free trial till you give them your credit card info,
which I didn't want to do!
External bots may call bot_handler.quit() when
they wish to terminate, e.g. due to a misconfiguration.
Currently, embedded bots ignore calls to quit(), even
though they signal a problem. This commit does the first
step in handling quit() calls by logging a warning.
This is based on usage in bulk_change_user_names.py, and that
the RealmAuditLog acting_user field is Optional[UserProfile].
This could be more meaningfully changed in future, perhaps to
indicate that the command was run by a specific zulip user.
It catches the `UserProfile.DoesNotExist` exception and
hence prevent internal server error.
Also remove option to select empty bot owner.
Fixes: #8334.
When the answer is False, this will allow the mobile app to show a
warning that push notifications will not work and the server admin
should set them up.
Based partly on Kunal's PR #7810. Provides the necessary backend API
for zulip/zulip-mobile#1507.
We keep having to change the same thing in three places here; and also
the duplicates have accumulated unnecessary variation that makes it
hard to see what's actually supposed to be different and not different
in the three cases.
* Put imports in order.
* `import stripe`; that's the style upstream docs recommend, and it avoids
confusion e.g. between our StripeError and the library's StripeError.
* Simplify loading JSON.
* Keep lines largely to 100 columns.
The error message, in relevant part:
```
zerver/templatetags/app_filters.py: error: INTERNAL ERROR --
please report a bug at https://github.com/python/mypy/issues version: 0.560
File ".../site-packages/mypy/nodes.py", line 497, in accept
return visitor.visit_func_def(self)
File ".../site-packages/mypy/report.py", line 317, in visit_func_def
assert start_indent is not None and start_indent > old_indent
AssertionError:
zerver/templatetags/app_filters.py: : note: use --pdb to drop into pdb
```
Seems mypy gets confused by the comment following the decorator.
I got distracted, came back later to a successful test run in my
terminal, and thought I remembered finishing the change and just
kicking off a final test run to check.
In fact, there was an `assert False` right in the normal case for
production, and I just hadn't finished a test for that path. (m.-)
Definitely the most grateful I've been for our coverage checks,
which highlighted this for me.
Remove the `assert False`, and also finish writing the test it was
there to help me write. Those lines are covered now.
This is a wrapper over lru_cache function. It adds following features on
top of lru_cache:
* It will not cache result of functions with unhashable arguments.
* It will clear cache whenever zerver.lib.cache.KEY_PREFIX changes.
The fresh imported data shows that the users emails are not included
in the data. However, the data received from the older method of slack
(which is using legacy tokens) contains the email data of the users.
If some bug in Bugdown results in a rendered message content that is
bigger than twice the message size, we now just throw an exception
from Bugdown. This is considerably better than the old behavior,
which might result in an enormous message being placed in the database
(potentially, bigger than the 1MB limit to store in memcached), which
would in turn result in tragic consequences.
This fixes#8322, in that it prevents the super bad outcome seen there
(where basically Zulip became unusable for everyone on the stream
where the message is posted). Now, the failure mode is just the
message failing to send. Still not ideal (and requires further work
on the URL embed feature), but not a minor problem, not a major one.
This commit adds tests (and thus, an extra code example) for
unsubscribing another user from a particular stream by passing in
the `principals` argument to client.remove_subscriptions. The
ability to pass in `principals` was added in the latest release
of the zulip API PyPI package.
We now have a separate page for common error payloads, for example,
the payload for when the client's API key is invalid. All error
payloads that are presented on this page will be tested similarly
to our other non-error sample fixtures.
This commit adds support for passing in an argument to the macro
"call" to explicitly specify a fixture to render, like so:
{generate_code_example|doc_name|fixture(stream_message_with_args)}
api/get-all-streams - make use of the api_code_example Markdown extension's
feature of recursively extracting multiple code examples from a single
test method.
To generate a code exammple,
{generate_code_example|<api_doc_md>|example} sounds better and
more intuitive than,
{generate_code_example|<api_doc_md>|method}
The count of integrations is automatically computed now, so this will
change every time we add 10 more. Just stop asserting on the number.
Thanks to @hackerkid for spotting the issue.
This code duplicated the code in setup_realm_internal_bots, with some
added logic to avoid trying to create the same bot twice. That logic
was buggy so that it would never work at all -- it subtracted a set of
UserProfile objects from a set of email strings -- so it looked like
the command might blow up when run after the users already existed.
In fact, the buggy logic wasn't necessary, because the work the
command does after it is idempotent -- in particular `create_users`,
within its subroutine `bulk_create_users`, already filters out users
that already exist. So just cut the buggy stuff out, deduplicate the
rest with `setup_realm_internal_bots`, and document that invariant on
the latter.
While we're here, in the common case bail early without doing any
per-realm work in Python, since we're running this on every upgrade.
Users having only account in one realm will not be distracted by realm
name in subject lines of every email. Users who have multiple
accounts in realms can turn this setting on and receive a
corresponding realm name in email's subject.
Tweaked by tabbott to rebase and address a few small issues.
Fixes#5489.
For messages where the entire rendered body is a message_inline_image
object, we actually don't display any text and just display the
image. These messages may have links to images which might or might
not be internal to Zulip but in both cases there is a chance of this
links being broken when accessed by an email server like Gmail that
doesn't possess the recipient user's cookies.
We don't want to have ugly looking broken images displayed in email
notifications. So we patch this by inserting a replacement for the
`message_inline_image` block in which we essentially replace the
content with the textual link.
Edited for clarity by tabbott.
This is easy to do, and prevents this feature from getting a server
admin stuck in potentially a pretty uncomfortable way -- unable to
roll back a deploy.
This reverts commit acebd3a5e, as well as a subsequent fixup commit
0975bebac "quick fix: Fix migrations to be linear."
These changes need more work and thought before they're ready to
deploy on any large established Zulip server, such as zulipchat.com.
See discussion on #6534.
In place of the removed migration, leave behind a placeholder so
`manage.py migrate` doesn't get confused on installs where it was
already applied.
This is to break the bigger functions into smaller
ones and hence, makes unit testing easier.
Also includes renaming the stream's topic name to 'from slack'.
This will let us defer configuring outbound email to the end of the
install procedure, so we can greatly simplify it by consolidating
several scripted steps.
The new flow could be simplified further by giving the user the full
form in the first place, rather than first a form for just their
email address and then a form with the other details. We'll leave
that improvement for a separate change.
Now, there's just one spot at the beginning of the function where we
inspect the string key the user gave us; and after that point, we not
only have validated that string but in fact are working from our own
record that it pointed to, not the string itself.
This simplifies the code a bit, e.g. by not repeatedly searching the
database for the key (and hoping everything agrees so that we keep
getting the same row), and it will simplify adding logic to inspect
row attributes like `presume_email_valid`.
There's no use case for presenting a key that's invalid; if we haven't
given the user a valid key, we needn't send them to a URL that
presents an invalid one. And the code is simpler to think about if
the only keys that can exist (after the validation at the top of the
function) are valid ones.
Apart from the case where creation_key is None, but invalid, and
settings.OPEN_REALM_CREATION is True so that we'd previously let the
invalid key slide, this is a pure refactor.
This fixes an issue where the user's own avatar was being sent down
the wire as None. We could have fixed it, as in #8265, by adding code
in the webapp and mobile apps to compute medium-size gravatar URLs as
well, but that would be messy, and there's little benefit to that
complexity (saving at most 2 URLs from the payload).
Fixes#8253.
This commit uses the Markdown extension defined in
zerver/lib/bugdown/api_generate_examples to generate the
example fixture and code example, so that both are tested
in zerver/lib/api_test_helpers.
This commit uses the Markdown extension defined in
zerver/lib/bugdown/api_generate_examples to generate the
example fixture and code example, so that both are tested
in zerver/lib/api_test_helpers.
Some of our code examples can only be run with administrator
credentials (such as create-user). Thus, the Markdown extension
for generating code examples should have an option to include
the lines that recommend using an admin zuliprc instead of a
non-admin one.
This commit uses the Markdown extension defined in
zerver/lib/bugdown/api_generate_examples to generate the
example fixture and code example, so that both are tested
in zerver/lib/api_test_helpers.
This commit uses the Markdown extension defined in
zerver/lib/bugdown/api_generate_examples to generate the
example fixture and code example, so that both are tested
in tools/lib/api_tests.
This commit uses the Markdown extension defined in
zerver/lib/bugdown/api_generate_examples to generate the
example fixture and code example, so that both are tested
in tools/lib/api_tests.
This commit uses the Markdown extension defined in
zerver/lib/bugdown/api_generate_examples to generate the
example fixture and code example, so that both are tested in
tools/lib/api_tests.
This commit uses the Markdown extension defined in
zerver/lib/bugdown/api_generate_examples to generate the example
fixture and code example, so that both are tested in
tools/lib/api_tests.
This commit uses the Markdown extension defined in
zerver/lib/bugdown/api_generate_examples to generate the example
fixture and code example, so that both are tested in
tools/lib/api_tests.
Now that the Markdown extension defined in
zerver/lib/bugdown/api_generate_examples depended on code in the
tools/lib/* directory, it caused the production tests to fail since
the tools/ directory wouldn't exist in a production environment.
This commit uses the Markdown extension defined in
zerver/lib/bugdown/api_generate_example to generate the example
fixture and code example, so that both are tested in
tools/lib/api_tests.
This commit adds a Markdown extension that allows the following
syntax,
{generate_code_example|<md_file_name>|<fixture or method>}
to generate code examples and fixtures found in tools/lib/api_tests.py
and templates/zerver/api/fixtures.json, respectively.
If an exception was thrown inside `send_email` resulting in a retry,
we would include the `failed_tries` data in the event, which turned
out to thrown an exception itself.
This fixes that flow, including deepening the test so that it would
fail if we didn't have the new logic.
We'll replace this primarily with per-realm quotas (plus the simple
per-file limit of settings.MAX_FILE_UPLOAD_SIZE, 25 MiB by default).
We do want per-user quotas too, but they'll need some more management
apparatus around them so an admin has a practical way to set them
differently for different users. And the error handling in this
existing code is rather confused. Just clear this feature out
entirely for now; then we'll build the per-realm version more cleanly,
and then we can later add back per-realm quotas modelled after that.
The migration to actually remove the field is in a subsequent commit.
Based in part on work by Vishnu Ks (hackerkid).
This is a little cleaner in that the try/except blocks for
SMTPException are a lot narrower; and it'll facilitate an upcoming
change to sometimes skip sending mail.
In this commit we also fix a test which would fail as a result of
doing this cleanup since the test wasn't designed to take into
account the space chars which might occur in the beginning of a
html line.
In the email integration, previously, EMAIL_GATEWAY_EXAMPLE wasn't
rendered at all, which was recently fixed. So, now, we should make
sure that it gets rendered!
In order to get test coverage on topic name checks, we
do them in Addressee, so that we don't hit an assertion
first. The assertion in question is in Addressee.topic(),
and it was added partly to appease mypy.
Previously we had a problem of id clashes while importing converted
slack data into an existing zulip instance with realms which are actively
populating the database.
This counts the total objects to be imported and does a db transaction
to increase the SEQUENCE number for that table by that number,
and hence allocates a range of ids for the to be converted slack data
objects.
Adds a check for newline that was present on backend, but missing in the
frontend markdown implementation. Updating messages uses is_me_message flag
received from server instead of its own partial test. Similarly, rendering
previews uses markdown code.
Fixes#6493.
This is the first step for allowing users
to edit a bot's service entries, name the
outgoing webhook configuration entries. The
chosen data structures allow for a future
with multiple services per bot; right now,
only one service per bot is supported.
This is responsible for:
1.) Handling all the incoming requests at the
messages endpoint which have defer param set. This is similar to
send_message_backend apart from the fact that instead of really
sending a message it schedules one to be sent later on.
2.) Does some preliminary checks such as validating timestamp for
scheduling a message, prevent scheduling a message in past, ensure
correct format of message to be scheduled.
3.) Extracts time of scheduled delivery from message.
4.) Add tests for the newly introduced function.
5.) timezone: Add get_timezone() to obtain tz object from string.
This helps in obtaining a timezone (tz) object from a timezone
specified as a string. This string needs to be a pytz lib defined
timezone string which we use to specify local timezones of the
users.
This code takes care of the environment running Python 3.4 when
test label is passed directly to the test-backend command:
./tools/test-backend test_alert_words
This also amends a commit from Brock Whittaker <brock@zulipchat.com>
that merges two separate functions for YouTube videos and Vimeo videos
into a generic video recall function.
Fixes#7550.
We add two functions:
1.) check_schedule_message(): This function is responsible for
doing the essential initial checkes to verify the validity of
the message. These checkes include things like if user is
allowed to send messages to some stream or not or if the user is
a super_user. All this is basically done by further calling
check_message() with appropriate parameters. This is on the same
lines as is check_send_message().
2.) do_schedule_messages(): This function is responsible for
creating ScheduleMessage table rows for a list of messages that
are to be scheduled. This basically accumulates the ScheduleMessage
objects in a list and then bulk creates the rows.
This adds UI fields in the bot settings for specifying
configuration values like API keys for a bot. The names
and placeholder values for each bot's config fields are
fetched from the bot's <bot>.conf template file in the
zulip_bots package. This also adds giphy and followup
as embedded bots.
This endpoint is about to become an API-style route and have the legacy
decorator removed from its view. Other endpoints will be used in tests
instead of it.
* For strikethrough formatting: Slack's '~strike~' to Zulip's '~~strike~~'.
* For bold formatting: Slack's '*bold*' to Zulip's '**bold**'.
* For italic formatting: Slack's '_italic_' to Zulip's '*italic*'.
* For mentioning formatting: Slack's <@slack_id|short_name> to Zulip's @**full_name**.
* Checking links.
load_bot_config_template(bot) parses the <bot>.conf
template file, which can be found in the zulip_bots
package for each bot. It then returns the INI content
of that file as a dict.
Currently the zip file is extracted to the root of
zulip directory no matter where the the zip file.
The extracted data is not useful after running the command
which pollutes the zulip directory. It make more sense to
extract it to the same directory of zip file especially
when the zip file gets downloaded to /temp like in the tests.
This commit adds a setting to limit creation of generic bots
to admins for realms that want that restriction. (Generic
bots, apart from being considered spammy on some realms,
have less locked down permissions than webhook bots).
Fixes#7066.
We no longer have a special UI setting and model
field ("emoji_alt_code") for saying users want text-only
emojis. We now instead make "text" be a fifth choice
for "emojiset".
Fixes#7406
This commit does the following:
* Move the Arguments table data from stream-message.md and
private-message.md to a JSON file.
* Add a Markdown extension that allows one to include and render
a table from a JSON file like so:
{generate_arguments_table|arguments.json|private-stream.md}
* Use Bootstrap's .table class to format the table instead of
relying on custom CSS.
This commit splits usage.md into two separate docs,
stream-message.md and private-message.md. The arguments and return
values for sending a stream message are somewhat different from
those of sending a private message, so it made sense to split the
two up for clarity.
There might be case that NOTIFICATION_BOT is none, so before sending stream
announce notification, check first if settings.NOTIFICATION_BOT is not none.
This uses the correct regex for strikethrough. Also, added
a test to make sure that strikethrough works when it contains
link with whitespace.
Fixes#7596.
A `None` value is not properly handled in this function, which
indicates some lack of testing or a recent regression we don't
understand. We were getting lots of tracebacks from this line
of code on our test server:
mentioned = 'mentioned' in flags and 'read' not in flags
This diff is nothing but dedentation -- it's empty under
`git diff -b`. These with-statements are only needed for
a pretty narrow scope of code, so make that clear in the
source.
There are two different things you need to patch in order to get error
emails (at `/emails`) in dev. Flip one of them in dev all the time,
and make the comment on the other a bit more explicit.
When I added this "Deployed code" feature to the error reporting,
I apparently hadn't worked out enough of how this code works to
realize that `notify_server_error` may be in a different process,
at a different time and potentially even on a different machine
from the actual error being reported.
Given that architecture, all the data about the error must be computed
in `AdminNotifyHandler`, before sending the report through the queue,
or else it risks being wrong. The job of `notify_server_error` and
friends is only to format the data and send it off. So, move the
implementation of this feature in order to do that.
(@showell added some "nocoverage" directives here for code that
is hard to test (exceptions being thrown, deployment files not
existing) and that was originally part of a file that didn't
require 100% coverage)
This helps prevent them from diverging and getting different sets of
features and fixes. As a bonus, the email path gets a nice tweak that
the Zulip path has had for years, since f7f2ec0ac, which makes the
emails clearer and less broken-looking when logging a message with no
stack trace.
This deduplicates a little bit of logic, and also has us always put
things into `report` the same way.
Empirically an exception in this codepath is very rare, so we won't
complicate the code by trying to salvage a lot of partial information
if it happens -- just log the traceback, and try to get a minimal
notification sent of the bare fact this happened.
This name hasn't been right since f7f2ec0ac back in 2013; this handler
sends the log record to a queue, whose consumer will not only maybe
send a Zulip message but definitely send an email. I found this
pretty confusing when I first worked on this logging code and was
looking for how exception emails got sent; so now that I see exactly
what's actually happening here, fix it.
This is just a basic Dropbox webhook integration. It just
notifies a user when something has changed, it does not
specify what changed. Doing so would require storing data,
as Dropbox API was created mainly for file managers, not
integrations like this.
Closes#5672
We have shifted to a generic queue to send all the emails. This queue
can retry in case of network issues; this makes sure that the emails are
always sent.
This commit just copies all the code from MissedMessageSendingWorker
class to a new EmailSendingWorker class. All the logic to send an email
through a queue was already there. This commit only makes the logic
generic. It does so by creating a special purpose queue called
'email_senders' to send any type of email. To make
MissedMessageSendingWorker still work we derive it from
EmailSendingWorker. All the tests that were testing
MissedMessageSendingWorker now run against EmailSendingWorker.
Such payloads are generated when a GitLab repository has merge
request approvals enabled and a project member approves a merge
request. Approving is not the same as merging.
This reverts commit 620b2cd6e.
Contributors setting up a new development environment were getting
errors like this:
```
++ dirname tools/do-destroy-rebuild-database
[...]
+ ./manage.py purge_queue --all
Traceback (most recent call last):
[...]
File "/home/zulipdev/zulip/zproject/legacy_urls.py", line 3, in <module>
import zerver.views.streams
File "/home/zulipdev/zulip/zerver/views/streams.py", line 187, in <module>
method_kwarg_pairs: List[FuncKwargPair]) -> HttpResponse:
File "/usr/lib/python3.5/typing.py", line 1025, in __getitem__
tvars = _type_vars(params)
[...]
File "/usr/lib/python3.5/typing.py", line 277, in _get_type_vars
for t in types:
TypeError: 'ellipsis' object is not iterable
```
The issue appears to be that we're using the `typing` module from the
3.5 stdlib, rather than the `typing=3.6.2` in our requirements files,
and that doesn't understand the `Callable[..., HttpResponse]` that
appears in the definition of `FuncKwargPair`.
Revert for now to get provision working again; at least one person
reports that reverting this sufficed. We'll need to do more testing
before putting this change back in.
The name `create_logger` suggests something much bigger than what this
function actually does -- the logger doesn't any more or less exist
after the function is called than before. Its one real function is to
send logs to a specific file.
So, pull out that logic to an appropriately-named function just for
it. We already use `logging.getLogger` in a number of places to
simply get a logger by name, and the old `create_logger` callsites can
do the same.
From the docs:
> This function does nothing if the root logger already has handlers
> configured for it.
Which we do if we've started up Django and configured settings, and in
particular allowed Django to process `settings.LOGGING`.
So, cut it out -- all it can do is confuse people about how logging
works.
If we ever actually used the `log_format` parameter, this would be
doubly confused, because only the first call would have any effect.
Because calls to `create_logger` generally run after settings are
configured, these would override what we have in `settings.LOGGING` --
which in particular defeated any attempt to set log levels in
`test_settings.py`. Move all of these settings to the same place in
`settings.py`, so they can be overridden in a uniform way.
This is already the loglevel we set on the root logger, so this has no
effect -- except in tests, where `test_settings.py` attempts to set
some of these same loggers to higher loglevels. Because the
`create_logger` call generally runs after we've configured settings,
it clobbers that effect.
The code in `test_settings.py` that tries to suppress logs only works
because it also sets `propagate=False`, which has nothing to do with
loglevels but does cause logs at this logger (and descendants) to be
dropped completely unless we've configured handlers for this logger
(or one of its relevant descendants.)
Adds a markdown preprocessor that finds ordered lists where all items
use the same number and change them to be in normal increasing order,
starting with that number.
Fixes#5159.