Moves the 'make_end_of_cycle_updates_if_needed' function to
the 'BillingSession' abstract class.
This refactoring will help in minimizing duplicate code while
supporting both realm and remote_server customers.
Since the function is called from our main daily billing cron job
as well, we have changed 'RealmBillingSession' to accept 'user=None'
(our convention for automated system jobs).
This calculates the largest amount of messages sent within a month for
the last 3 months. The query is targeted for the specific use-case in
this function - for finding the count for a specific server. For
calculating this in bulk for a large number of remote server an
adapted, bulk query will be needed - rather than running this one in a
loop, which would likely be very inefficient.
Moves `update_billing_method_of_current_plan` to the BillingSession
abstract class.
Adds a helper function for support views for the realm case:
`update_realm_billing_method`.
Moves `update_sponsorship_status` to BillingSession abstract class
as `update_customer_sponsorship_status`.
Updates the support views to have a helper for updating this on a
realm: `update_realm_sponsorship_status`.
Makes `approve_sponshorship` an abstract method in BillingSession
abstract base class and moves the implementation for realms to the
RealmBillingSession child class.
Adds `approve_realm_sponsorship` helper function that's used in
the support view and initiates the billing session.
This moves the logic for `attach_realm_discount`, which is used in
the support view, to be in the BillingSession class.
Updates the function name to be `attach_discount_to_customer` so
that the context is generalized vs realm specific.
Updates RealmBillingSession implementation to account for actions
that are initiated by a support admin user.
Also moves the helper function `get_discount_for_realm` that is
only used in support views to `corporate/lib/support.py`.
Moves two functions in corporate/lib/stripe.py that are used to
get data for the main installation activity analytics page to a
separate file: corporate/lib/analytics.py.
Also, updates these functions for the possibility of realm being
None for a Customer object.
Use analytics_realmcount to improve query runtime. There are two
known difference with previous query:
- Messages that are deleted after hourly stats are aggregated
are not decremented in new query.
- Messages sent since the hourly aggregation last ran are not counted.
As a preliminary step for including graphs of StreamCount data in our
analytics pages, add API support for fetching the chart data.
Care is taken to limit access to streams that the current user has
access to, which isn't necessary in similar views where the current
user is a server administrator by assumption.
Fixes part of #19653.
Co-authored-by: Tim Abbott <tabbott@zulip.com>
Moves the "Remote Zulip servers" tab in the "/activity" page for
an installation to a separate page, "/activity/remote".
Prototype for moving other tabs in "/activity" to separate pages.
Using `COUNT(*) FILTER (WHERE ...)` allows getting counts of different
subsets with only one giant join. This makes the query significantly
more performant.
_default_manager is the same as objects on most of our models. But
when a model class is stored in a variable, the type system doesn’t
know which model the variable is referring to, so it can’t know that
objects even exists (Django doesn’t add it if the user added a custom
manager of a different name). django-stubs used to incorrectly assume
it exists unconditionally, but it no longer does.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Translators benefit from the extra information in the field names, and
need the reordering freedom that isn’t available with multiple
positional fields.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Use the built-in HTML escaping of Markup("…{var}…").format(), in order
to allow Semgrep to detect mistakes like Markup("…{var}…".format())
and Markup(f"…{var}…").
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Black 23 enforces some slightly more specific rules about empty line
counts and redundant parenthesis removal, but the result is still
compatible with Black 22.
(This does not actually upgrade our Python environment to Black 23
yet.)
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Adds the count of users with the role of guest to the stats view
`page_params` via a database query. This information is then added
to the summary statistics section of the analytics page after being
formatted by `stats.js`.
Creates Bassanio as a guest user in the database for the analytics
realm.
Fixes#20162.
Adds the realm's used storage space for attachments to the stats
view `page_params`. This information is then added to the summary
statistics section of the analytics page after being formatted by
`stats.js`.
Uses the emoji test image to create an `Attachment` in the database
for the analytics realm. Even though it doesn't create a message
to claim the attachment, it still is sent as storage space used
data for the analytics `/stats/` page.
Decorators like `require_server_admin_api` turns user_profile into a
positional-only parameter, requiring the callers to stop passing it as a
keyword argument.
Functions like `get_chart_data` that gets decorated by both
`require_non_guest_user` and `has_request_variables` now have accurate
type annotation during type checking, with the first two parameters
turned into positional-only, and thus the change in
`analytics.views.stats`.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
This makes `has_request_variables` more generic, in the sense of the return
value, and also makes it more accurate, in the sense of requiring the
first parameter of the decorated function to be `HttpRequest`, and
preserving the function signature without using `cast`.
This affects some callers of `has_request_variables` or the callers of its
decoratedfunctions in the following manners:
- Decorated non-view functions called directly in other functions cannot
use `request` as a keyword argument. Becasue `Concatenate` turns the
concatenated parameters (`request: HttpRequest` in this case) into
positional-only parameters. Callers of `get_chart_data` are thus
refactored.
- Functions to be decorated that accept variadic keyword arguments must
define `request: HttpRequest` as positional-only. Mypy in strict mode
rejects such functions otherwise because it is possible for the caller to
pass a keyword argument that has the same name as `request` for `**kwargs`.
No defining `request: HttpRequest` as positional-only breaks type safety
because function with positional-or-keyword parameters cannot be considered
a subtype of a function with the same parameters in which some of them are
positional-only.
Consider `f(x: int, /, **kwargs: object) -> int` and `g(x: int,
**kwargs: object) -> int`. `f(12, x="asd")` is valid but `g(12, x="asd")`
is not.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>