This is a best-effort rendering of the "fields" of Slack incoming
hooks, which Slack renders in two columns. We approximate them in a
Markdown table, with some minor in-place replacements.
Fixes#22228.
`check_text_block` transformed its input, making the object it
returned not the same object it was passed; this invalidated it for
use in `check_list`. It is also, in general, unlike all other
validators.
Make it return a TypedDict cast of its input.
The previous regular expression required a `[^\w]` at the start and
end of the match. This had two unintended effects -- it meant that it
could never match at the start or end of a string, and it meant
that *adjacent* words required *two* non-word characters between them,
as the pattern matches cannot overlap.
Switch to allowing string start/end to anchor the matches, and make
the trailing `[^\w]` be a zero-width look-ahead, to allow the patterns
to overlap. Also remove the spurious `^` within the inner character
classes, which prevented `*foo^bar*` from matching. Finally, add
tests to cover the functionality, which was previously untested.
This commit checks for null values for keys within "attachment" in
the Slack integration's incoming payloads. These keys were expected
to exist optionally previously, and the existence of null values for
these wasn't anticipated. Due to an issue report for such null
values in the payload, their handling is updated appropriately.
The checks for these values are truthiness checks since the strategy
for these values being null or falsy ("", 0) is the same; we don't
process that key-value pair. This is consistent with how Slack handles
this scenario.
For the case where all the attachment fields have null values, Slack
displays this as an empty block with no content, and therefore our
strategy for this is a no-op.
Tests updated.
slack_incoming webhook previously used has_request_variables to
extract payload from HttpRequest object first, before trying to
access HttpRequest.body again in view.py. This caused an error
when one sends a request without payload - it is forbidden to
read from request data stream twice.
Instead of relying on has_request_variables, this PR extracts
payload depending on content type in view.py directly to avoid
reading request data stream twice.
Fixes#19056.
Adds request as a parameter to json_success as a refactor towards
making `ignored_parameters_unsupported` functionality available
for all API endpoints.
Also, removes any data parameters that are an empty dict or
a dict with the generic success response values.
django.utils.translation.ugettext is a deprecated alias of
django.utils.translation.gettext as of Django 3.0, and will be removed
in Django 4.0.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
These weren’t wrong since orjson.JSONDecodeError subclasses
json.JSONDecodeError which subclasses ValueError, but the more
specific ones express the intention more clearly.
(ujson raised ValueError directly, as did json in Python 2.)
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Fixes#2665.
Regenerated by tabbott with `lint --fix` after a rebase and change in
parameters.
Note from tabbott: In a few cases, this converts technical debt in the
form of unsorted imports into different technical debt in the form of
our largest files having very long, ugly import sequences at the
start. I expect this change will increase pressure for us to split
those files, which isn't a bad thing.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Generated by pyupgrade --py36-plus --keep-percent-format, but with the
NamedTuple changes reverted (see commit
ba7906a3c6, #15132).
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This adds a webhook that can be used to interpret standard Slack
payloads. Since there are a ton of existing Slack integrations out
there, having a webhook which can accept standard Slack payloads can
significantly ease transition pains. Obviously this can't do everything
that Slack payloads can (particularly WRT their widgets/interactions),
but we can ingest text and parse out multi-block payloads into a message
relatively reasonably.