Instead of zulip_test, use zulip_test_template for backend DB. This
makes sure that the DB used by backend tests is different from the
DB, which will be zulip_test, used by Casper tests.
This adds helpful email notifications for users who just logged into a
Zulip server, as a security protection against accounts being hacked.
Text tweaked by tabbott.
Fixes#2182.
This fixes an issue where if you saved a Python file (even just
changing whitespace) while casper tests were running, the Tornado
server being used would restart, triggering a confusing error like
this:
ReferenceError: Can't find variable: $
Traceback:
undefined:2
:4
Suite explicitly interrupted without any message given.
LocMemCache is not compatible with frontend tests so we only use it
for backend tests. To do that we change the cache backend within
`not CASPER_TESTS` if block.
There is a change in Django 1.10 due to which whenever the password
of the user is changed the session hash changes. This change affects
us because we cache user profile objects and these cached objects need
to be refreshed. However, the signal sent by Django in which objects are
refreshed fails to refresh the cache for Tornado because it uses a
different cache prefix.
Note: Backend tests are not affected because they don't rely on Tornado.
This change adds support for displaying inline open graph previews for
links posted into Zulip.
It is designed to interact correctly with message editing.
This adds the new settings.INLINE_URL_EMBED_PREVIEW setting to control
whether this feature is enabled.
By default, this setting is currently disabled, so that we can burn it
in for a bit before it impacts users more broadly.
Eventually, we may want to make this manageable via a (set of?)
per-realm settings. E.g. I can imagine a realm wanting to be able to
enable/disable it for certain URLs.
test_settings.py was setting EXTERNAL_HOST after importing settings.py,
which has several variables (like SERVER_URI) that are computed from
EXTERNAL_HOST.
[tweaked by tabbott to add comments explaining the story here].
This adds support for running a Zulip production server with each
realm on its own unique subdomain, e.g. https://realm_name.example.com.
This patch includes a ton of important features:
* Configuring the Zulip sesion middleware to issue cookier correctly
for the subdomains case.
* Throwing an error if the user tries to visit an invalid subdomain.
* Runs a portion of the Casper tests with REALMS_HAVE_SUBDOMAINS
enabled to test the subdomain signup process.
* Updating our integrations documentation to refer to the current subdomain.
* Enforces that users can only login to the subdomain of their realm
(but does not restrict the API; that will be tightened in a future commit).
Note that toggling settings.REALMS_HAVE_SUBDOMAINS on a live server is
not supported without manual intervention (the main problem will be
adding "subdomain" values for all the existing realms).
[substantially modified by tabbott as part of merging]
This works around a nasty problem with Webpack that you can't run two
copies of the Webpack development server on the same project at the
same time (even if on different ports). The second copy doesn't fail,
it just hangs waiting for some lock, which is confusing; but even if
that were to be solved, we don't actually need the webpack development
server running to run the Casper tests; we just need bundle.js built.
So the easy solution is to just run webpack manually and be sure to
include bundle.js in the JS_SPECS entry.
As a follow-up to this change, we should clean up how test_settings.py
is implemented to not require duplicating code from settings.py.
Fixes#878.
Camo is a caching image proxy, used in Zulip to avoid mixed-content
warnings by proxying HTTP image content over HTTPS. We've been using
it in zulip.com production for years; this change makes it available
in standalone Zulip deployments.
This could potentially help with debugging exactly what happened with
some issue down the line.
(imported from commit cc7321d742875b644d4727a084b462dcd01dcf10)
I figure we can start with 600s as a maximum age -- our threads do
many dozens of requests per minute, so I figure we'll get most of the
benefit of permanently persisting connections this way. I could also
be convinced to do just 60s, though the impact will likely to be less
visible on staging. 600s seems to be what Django originally had for
this parameter before they disabled it by default. See:
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!msg/django-developers/rH0QQP7tI6w/yBusiFTNBR4J
for discussion, which also suggests we might have issues with
runserver that we should watch out for.
(imported from commit 0ae09fa4f1b39cc88c76fa58258aaf20ab168dcf)
This requires no changes in production, but is tagged as manual to
remind developers that they need to edit and run the tools/migrate-db
script to fix up their local database instances.
(imported from commit fbf764fb61592ef994d6d2ad56edad65ff01f14b)
This includes a hack to preserve humbug/backends.py as a symlink, so
that we don't need to regenerate all our old sessions.
(imported from commit b7918988b31c71ec01bbdc270db7017d4069221d)