The logic in the case where there's only one realm and the function
tries to migrate the server's plan to it, had two main unhandled edge
cases that would throw exceptions:
1.
```
remote_realm = RemoteRealm.objects.get(
uuid=realm_uuids[0], plan_type=RemoteRealm.PLAN_TYPE_SELF_MANAGED
)
```
This could throw an exception if the RemoteRealm exists, but has an
active e.g. Legacy plan. Then there'd be no object matching the
plan_type in the query, raising RemoteRealm.DoesNotExist.
2. If the RemoteRealm had e.g. a Legacy plan in the past, that's now
expired, then it'd have a Customer object. Meaning that the attempt
to move the server's customer to the realm:
`server_plan.customer = remote_realm_customer`
would trigger an IntegrityError since a RemoteRealm can't have two
Customer objects.
In simple cases the situation in (2) can still be easily migrated, by
moving the plan from the server's customer to the realm's customer.
Just like deactivated realms should be excluded, so should locally
deleted realms.
In particular, failure to exclude locally deleted realms breaks
handle_customer_migration_from_server_to_realms.
When profiling the database query in `remote_activity.py`,
push_forwarded_count was identified as an expensive part of
the overall work. Adds an index on RemoteInstallationCount
so this is more efficient.
The presence of the name "François" in the random first name list led
to email addresses of the form `françois1234@zulip.com` which are
invalid.
Strip invalid ASCII from the email addresses generated in populate_db,
and validate them before tossing them verbatim into the database.
Pulls out shared code in get_remote_realm_guest_and_non_guest_count
and get_remote_server_guest_and_non_guest_count for generating the
RemoteCustomerUserCount so that it can be used in logic for getting
these counts for all remote servers and remote realms on an
installation.
This is preparatory work towards adding a Topic model.
We plan to use the local variable name as 'topic' for
the Topic model objects.
Currently, we use *topic as the local variable name for
topic names.
We rename local variables of the form *topic to *topic_name
so that we don't need to think about type collisions in
individual code paths where we might want to talk about both
Topic objects and strings for the topic name.
This was a bug from 4715a058b0 where this
was just incorrectly called. get_realms_info_for_push_bouncer() is a
function meant to be called on a self-hosted server - and this
handle_... call happens on the bouncer. Therefore this returns all
zulipchat realms in product.
With the way, handle_... is being called right now, there's no reason
for it to have an argument for passing a list of realms. It should just
fetch the relevant RemoteRealm entries by itself, given the server arg.
Requests to these endpoint are about a specified user, and therefore
also have a notion of the RemoteRealm for these requests. Until now
these endpoints weren't getting the realm_uuid value, because it wasn't
used - but now it is needed for updating .last_request_datetime on the
RemoteRealm.
For the RemoteRealm case, we can only set this in endpoints where the
remote server sends us the realm_uuid. So we're missing that for the
endpoints:
- remotes/push/unregister and remotes/push/unregister/all
- remotes/push/test_notification
This should be added in a follow-up commit.
Earlier, the 'handle_customer_migration_from_server_to_realms'
function was called during the send analytics step.
It resulted in an error for customers having multiple Zulip servers,
one for testing and the others for not-testing, sharing a
push bouncer registration.
The migration step when run in a test instance caused customers to
have their legacy plan migrated to a test realm, resulting in them
losing their legacy plan.
This commit moves the migration step to run during plan management
login step. This reduces the chances of losing legacy
plan as we expect them to only verify that 8.0 upgrade works and
not bother trying to login to plan management from their test instance.
This protects us from incorrectly handling situations where someone
tested and upgrade to 8.0 for a backup on a separate hostname, and
left the test system live while upgrading the main system, in a way
that results in duplicate RemoteRealm objects that are all marked as
locally deleted.
Further word is required to figure out how to avoid the original
duplication problem.
It seems most correct to answer the question about whether push
notifications are working specifically for the exact set of realms
that the server self-reported to us in fact exist.
Sending data on any additional realms that were not referenced in the
request (if that's somehow possible without them being locally
deleted) is likely to only be confusing.
And the client should reasonably be able to expect to get a response
covering exactly the realms it told us about.
Old RemotePushDeviceTokens were created without this attribute. But when
processing a notification, if we have remote_realm, we can take the
opportunity to to set this for all the registrations for this user.
This moves the function which computes can_push and
expected_end_timestamp outside RemoteRealmBillingSession
because we might use this function for RemoteZulipServer
as well and also renames it.
Also avoid prompting for full name time more than once.
Adds TOS version field to Remote server user.
Co-authored-by: Karl Stolley <karl@zulip.com>
Co-authored-by: Aman Agrawal <amanagr@zulip.com>