With `realm_active_humans` no longer dependent on the per-user rows,
there is no reason to preserve them -- any measure of "was a user
active" should look directly at the much richer RealmAuditLog. This
removes the bulk of the UserCount table, since the remaining rows all
require user interaction of some sort to produce rows.
This makes it no longer dependent on active_users_audit:is_bot:day,
which subsequent commits will make a RealmCount, not UserCount, query.
This folds the same behaviour of `active_users_audit` directly into
the query; however, only running over active users, using the index
from the earlier commit, and using the new `DISTINCT ON` formulation
make this a fast query compared to `active_users_audit:is_bot:day` +
the old `realm_active_humans::day`.
This produces a query which is more comprehensible, is 2x faster when
limited to a realm, and has equivalent speed when performing the full
table scan.
This index is used by `active_users_audit:is_bot:day`, and provides
roughly a 2x speedup. The existing
`zerver_realmauditlog_realm__event_type__event_time` is used if there
is a realm limit, but the standard statistics fill runs for all realms
at once, and thus cannot use it.
Commit 50f5cf9ad8 (#30227) changed
message_helper.process_new_message (called by
message_events.insert_new_messages) to return a newly created message
object rather than mutating the object it was passed. So
echo.insert_local_message needs to use this new object, fixing a
regression where we’d fail to replace a locally echoed message when
the server-rendered message came in.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Creates a helper function `get_subscribed_stream_ids` to fetch
subscribed streams' ids of the client.
Updates various functions to remove hardcoded values in request
body and used available API calls to fetch them.
This commit adds a server level setting which controls whether the setting
can be set to anonymous user groups. We only allow it in the tests for
now because the UI can only handle named user groups.
Earlier, onboarding_steps field of state_data was stored as
current_user_params.
Now, we store it separately in a data structure initialized in
onboarding_steps.ts
Reason: All the other state_data fields stored in current_user_params
are attributes of UserProfile. So, it makes sense to store it
separately.
Fixes part of #30043.
This commit renames the function 'update_notice_to_display' to
'update_onboarding_steps_to_display' as it can be used for
onboarding step of any type.
Currently, we have only one type i.e. 'one_time_notice'.
This commit fixes the event sent for updating first_message_id
when a message is deleted, to include the name field as it is
required for all "stream/update" events.
This commit also adds a test in test_events for the case when
first_message_id of a stream is updated on deleting a message.
This commit has the mechanism for setting the .last_update_id on the
backend for UserPresence objects, without introducing any API changes.
Therefore this should invisible to clients and able to be deployed
safely without impact to users.
Migration plan:
1. Add NULLable .last_update_id column to UserPresence with default 0
for new objects.
2. Backfill the value to 0 for old UserPresences, can be done in the
background while server is running.
3. Make the column non-NULL.
4. Add new model PresenceSequence and create its rows for old realms.
We completely rerender recent view when we receive a new message,
which is not ideal since it is flashes recent view frequently
during the initial fetch.
Since later parts of initial fetch which trigger the flash, only
load old messages, they cannot change the latest message of
rendered rows in recent view. That means we can just inplace
rerender the rendered rows which got updated and don't have
to worry about order of rows being changed.
Fixes#26369.
There are two important fixes to make to the dicts in edit_history:
1. Update the user_id so that it points to the imported sender.
2. Apply fix_message_rendered_content to the prev_rendered_content data
to fix up mentions and other such syntax.
The docstring was misleading talking about the import from non-Zulip
platforms, when this function is also very much applicable for
Zulip-to-Zulip imports.
Previously, when the operand of id operator was more than
2147483647, it was raising server error. This is because the
maximum permissible PostgreSQL integers value is 2147483647.
This is fixed by raising a BadNarrowOperatorError in case the
id operand is larger than 2147483647.