This results in a brief service interruption (not a graceful restart),
but fixes a bug where on a `supervisorctl restart zulip-django`, we'd
end up leaking a bunch of uwsgi processes.
The mechanism was that sending SIGHUP to uwsgi was a command for it to
gracefully restart, so it'd start doing that (whereas supervisor
expected it to be dying)... and then supervisor would start up the new
uwsgi process group, resulting in 2 uwsgi process groups running.
This, in turn, led to a memory leak that could eventually result in
OOM kills.
This fixes a regression introduced by our migration to track
subscribers for all public streams, where now users who are added to
an invite-only stream were receiving a mark_subscribed event
for a stream their browser didn't know existed, causing an exception.
To fix this, we now send a stream create event to the browser just
before the user receives the notification that it was added to the
invite-only stream.
Replaces the hardcoded list of emoji_names and unicode_emoji_names in
static/js/emoji.js with a list generated from emoji_map.json, both to get
the list out of version control and so we can start modifying it for our
autocomplete. This does not change the contents of emoji_names. It sorts and
removes duplicates from unicode_emoji_names (causes no change in behavior,
since unicode_emoji_names is only used as if it were a set).
Previously, if you pressed the escape key with various modals open
(keyboard shortcuts, markdown help, etc.), the modals would close but
also the compose box would close and the user would be unnarrowed.
This changes makes it so all that happens is the modal closes.
Fixes#3472.
Since build_emoji will soon be generated
static/generated/emoji_data.js (containing the emoji data), we need to
generate those JavaScript files before minifying them.
This fixes CSS issues such as removing padding with negative margins
and then re-adding padding back later. It also ensures the width of the
picker is exactly six columns wide and does not shift around when zoom
is enabled in the browser.
We now allow spaces and other special characters to be part
of the token (following "#", "@", or ":") that the typeahead
code will further evaluate as a typeahead candidate.
This is important for folks with short/common first names
on larger realms.