This warning was added in #6551. It’s not for any version of the
current Electron app, which we warn about on the server side with
DESKTOP_WARNING_VERSION, but rather some pre-Electron app so ancient I
don’t even know what it is. Apparently it communicated using the
window.bridge global, so eradicate that too.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
‘function’ and ‘=>’ are not equivalent because they bind ‘this’
differently. For these functions, the ‘function’ semantics are
intentional.
This reverts part of commit 1a241cef88
(#17388).
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
We now call $.clear_all_elements at the top
of run_test.
We have to exempt two modules from the new regime:
compose
settings_user_groups
Also, if modules do set_global("$", ...) we don't
try to call the non-existent function.
It's possible we'll want to move to something like
this, but we might want to clean up the two
sloppy_$ modules first:
// AVOID THIS:
// const $ = require("zjquery")
run_test("test widget", ({override, $}) => {
override(foo, "bar", ...);
$.create(...);
// do stuff
});
We weren't exercising this method in any
meaningful way during the tests, and when
do add coverage, we probably want to just
test it directly.
We also kill off stub_selector(), which was
never well-documented.
Callers can either explicitly pass in children,
stub out $(...)[0] as needed, or just
circumvent jQuery complications with override.
Note the reactions test was broken before,
since $(...)[0] was always returning the same
stub.
We no longer export make_zjquery().
We now instead have a singleton zjquery instance
that we attach to global.$ in index.js.
We call $.clear_all_elements() before each module.
(We will soon get even more aggressive about doing
it in run_test.)
Test functions can still override $ with set_global.
A good example of this is copy_and_paste using the
real jquery module.
We no longer exempt $ as a global variable, so
test modules that use the zjquery $ need to do:
const $ = require("../zjsunit/zjquery");
The "silent" option was kind of evil, as it had
$(...).find(...) passing back "self" instead of a stub.
Now we just use $(...).set_find_results(...) or
override(...) to simulate/bypass drawing code.
(It turns out hash_util didn't even need this option.)
The tooltips for the left panel of stream settings
have been broken since November 2018 due to my
commit 8f915da2ca.
The code prior to 2018 was restoring tooltips
right inside the loop where we were detaching
the row from the DOM to put it back into the
DOM at another place. And then I tried to
just add them in bulk, forgetting that I was
in the middle of all the DOM manipulation (and
hence my selector for the loop was a noop).
Also, I don't think we've ever had them for live
events that add streams. (I fixed that too.)
It's not clear to me that this code is actually
necessary, as we get hover help without
calling $(...).tooltip(...) properly.
This is probably why we didn't notice any
breakage when we merged my 2018 commit.
We just want to reset the scrollbar here, which
we still do via ui.reset_scrollbar.
You don't want to preserve scroll position if
you are filtering or re-sorting.
We have long had this annoying two-pass way of building the
DOM that I am trying to eliminate.
The function names that I introduce here describe the current
situation more accurately.
In passing I make it so that we only throttle redraws when
users are actually typing. Using a throttled redraw when
you click on the sort icons is at best unnecessary, and it
may actually aggravate double clicks.
This splits the one big `run_test` block into
add/edit/delete parts, for better clarity.
This also removes the `with_field` calls and
uses the override style instead, which is
preferred because it makes sure the stubbed
function is actually called.
This commit replaces `with_field` calls to
use the override style instead.
`override` is preferred since it makes sure
the stubbed function is actually called,
while `with_field` doesn't, which makes it
hard to spot dead code.
This commit replaces all `with_stub` calls and
explicitly calls `make_stub` instead.
The `with_stub` helper does not add much clarity
hence we now use scoped stub objects instead.
This de-indents some blocks where scoping isn't
required, for example when there is a single
stub object inside a `run_test` function.
With this change, we also need to explicitly
assert `num_calls`.
These are still kind of a mess.
The old code combined the worst of both worlds:
- we had one monolithic test
- we called the events multiple times,
verifying a different stub each time
Now I make the tests more granular.
We could actually re-combine the tests, but
in a nicer way, so that we just set
up multiple stubs and verify that all stubs
get correctly invoked.
There is also some code cleanup here--in dispatch_subs,
we don't stub stream_data, so it's easier to write
deeper tests that actually validate the data changes.
This prevents a bug where we interpret "2something"
as a modern slug instead of a legacy stream name.
The bug was probably somewhat unlikely to happen in
practice, since it only manifests if 2 is an actual
stream_id.
We still need to write to these globals with set_global because the
code being tested reads from them, but the tests themselves should
never need to read from them.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This commit makes it so that MessageListData
methods always attempt to filter muted messages.
We later, in a new function
(`messages_filtered_for_topic_mutes`)
check if `excludes_muted_topics` is true or not,
and skip the filtering work if it isn't.
This new function consistently returns a new list.
This refactor will later allow us to write clean
and concise code as part of mute users.
This commit also refactors the muting tests
for MessageListData, which were earlier
spread across two `run_test` functions.
These tests should remain organized,
since similar tests will be added as part of
user mutes in future commits.
Previously, the `muting_enabled` property of
MessageListData class was used to indicate whether
some messages in the message list need to be
filtered due to topic muting, depending on the
narrow. For example, we exclude messages belonging
to muted topics from stream narrows, but not from
search narrows.
The name `muting_enabled` is a bit confusing, and hence is
changed to `excludes_muted_topics`.
It is also important that the name be specific, since
a similar new property will be added for user mutes
in future commits.
I have a local branch with a hacked up version of
zjquery that lets you basically detect when zjquery
stubs are never actually invoked by real code.
There are some nuances to that kind of audit, so
I haven't pushed the auditing code, but these
are low hanging fruit.
I now just use inline the code to create stubs
for the line items in the markdown_content
container, and I don't add methods to the
zjquery stubs.
And then I use the new "children" feature in
zjquery's `$.create(sel, opts)` to set up
$(".markdown_content"), which means I don't
have to stub `each` any more.
It's actually pretty rare in our codebase to
call methods like `$(...).map` or `$(...).each`,
but we now support them better in zjquery.
You can pass a list of child elements now to
`$.create(...)`.
Fixes the sorting button labels in stream settings, which were
regressed by commit f8fbae4d8e (because
the HTML was not marked as being HTML).
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This is a minor refactor in the muting test in
`message_list`.
The `unmuted_messages` function filters out messages only
considering topic mutes, and not stream mutes.
The test previously made it look like we were testing
stream muting, by stubbing the `is_topic_muted` on the
basis of `stream_id`.
This also replaces the stub and uses real data instead.
This is a prep commit, which renames some variables
and functions involved in topic muting to include
the word "topic" in them.
This is done to have clarity when similar code
will be added as a part of the mute-user in
future commits.
Replaced methods/functions of moment.js with date-fns library.
The motive was to replace it with a smaller frontend timezone library.
Date-fns ~ 11.51 kb
moment.js ~ 217.87 kb
Some of the format strings change because date-fns encodes them
differently from how moment did.
Fixes#16373.
It's not clear to me why this code was necessary,
and I assume it was either originally written
with a bit of misunderstanding of how zjquery
works or it became unnecessary with some refactoring
of the "real" code.
We move some of the data setup to the top of the file.
We also remove some get_sub() calls that aren't really
necessary now that peer_data and stream_data are more
independent.
The maybe_clear_subscribers() function was an artifact of
when we used to attach subscribers to the "sub" records in
stream_data.js. I think it was basically a refactoring
shim, and due to some other recent cleanup, it was only
used in test code.
We also change how we validate stream ids.
Going forward, peer_data just looks up stream_ids with the
normal stream_data API when it's trying to warn about
rogue stream_ids coming in. As I alluded to in an earlier
commit, some of the warning code here might be overly
defensive, but at least it's pretty self-contained.
We now use the same code in all places to
get the bucket of user_ids that correspond
to a stream, and we consistently treat
a stream as having zero subscribers, not
an undefined number of subscribers, in
the hypothetical case of us asking about
a stream that we're not tracking.
The behavior for untracked streams has
always been problematic, since if a
stream is untracked, all bets are off.
So now if we don't "track" the stream,
the subscriber count is zero. None of
our callers distinguish between undefined
and zero.
And we just consider the stream to be subscribed
by a user when add_subscriber is called,
even if we haven't been told by stream_data
to track the stream. (We also stop
returning true/false from add_subscriber,
since only test code was looking at it.)
We protect against the most likely source
of internal-to-the-frontend bugs by adding
the assert_number() call.
We generally have to assume that the server
is sending us sensible data at page load
time, or all bets are off.
And we have good protections in place
for unknown ids in our dispatch code
for peer_add/peer_remove events.
We also streamline some of the error handling code
by doing everything up front. This will prevent
scenarios where a single bad stream_id/user_id causes a
bunch of the same warnings in an inner loop.
This removes a bit of complexity. If a piece of
settings code needs to render a stream with
subscribers, it just asks for it.
We no longer have the brittle, action-at-a-distance
mechanism of mutating the subscriber count on to
the stream_data version of a sub.
Stream subs are pretty small, so making copies of
them is cheap, and the blueslip timings from the
previous commit can help confirm that.
There is some discussion of putting `subscriber_count`
on the Stream model, which may eventually get us
away from tracking it in `peer_data.js`, but we will
cross that bridge when we get there. See
https://github.com/zulip/zulip/issues/17101 for
more details.
The weekly stream traffic is a better tiebreaker
for stream typeaheads than subscriber count, as
it's more directly a measure of a stream's current
relevance.
Normally stream traffic and subscriber counts are
closely correlated, but a good example for me is
the #twitter feed on czo, which only has 80 subscribers,
but which gets more traffic than our #integrations
stream (with 16k subscribers). I would rather
see #twitter win the tiebreaker (if it even got
to the tiebreaker).
The main motivation behind this fix, though, is
to break our dependency on peer_data, which has
some upcoming changes that will introduce some
performance tradeoffs, and I want one less place
to audit.
Also, it will be easier long term to share this
code with mobile if we don't require mobile
to pull in our peer_data dependency. (The webapp
has different forces than mobile that dicate
our data structures.)
We use day_old calculated based on day instead of hours to
render last seen values. This fixes us incorrectly quoting
anything 24 - 48 hours ago as Yesterday and
incorrectly quoting `time` that are Yesterday
but < 24 hours ago in 'x hours ago' format.
We were adding `expanded` class to left-sidebar when searching
for streams even if the left-sidebar was not in the popover state.
This cased confusion with popovers.any_active returning true,
when actually it is not.
topic_generator previously included an entire lazy generator
combinator library that was used four times. These straightforward
equivalent loops might not be as fun but they are way simpler.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
After this change all peer_data functions consistently
use stream_id rather than some "sub" object whose
data type is complicated by all sort of fields that
don't really concern how we track subscribers.
The goal here is to make all our peer_data functions
basically work in id space. Passing a full `sub`
to these functions is a legacy of when subscriber
info was attached to a full stream "sub" object,
but we don't care about anything sub-related
(color, description, name, etc.) when we are
dealing with subscriptions.
When callers pass in stream_id, you can be more
confident in a quick skim of the code that we're
not mutating anything in the "sub".
This de-clutters stream_data a bit. Since our
peer data is our biggest performance concern,
I want to contain any optimizations to a fairly
well-focused module.
The name `peer_data` is a bit of a compromise,
since we already have `subs.js` and we use
`sub` as a variable name for stream records
throughout our code, but it's consistent with
our event nomenclature (peer/add, peer/remove)
and it's short while still being fairly easy
to find with grep.
This sets us up to use better system-wide data structures
for tracking subscribers.
Basically, instead of storing subscriber data on the
"sub" objects in stream_data.js, we instead have a
parallel data structure called stream_subscribers.
We also have stream_create, stream_edit, and friends
use helper functions rather than accessing
sub.subscribers directly.
In commit ebea17b9a6,
we added an extra fetch to get accurate data for the top
items in recent topics table.
But the `narrow` parameter wasn't passed to the endpoint,
this resulted in fetching the user's overall message
history including the muted streams/topics which aren't
required by the recent topics table.
`operators` can be replaced as we set the same value for
the `narrow_state` module and the narrowed message list's
filter, when activating the narrow.
The changes made in this commit are as follows:
* The `remove_messages` is moved to the `message_events.js`
file from `ui.js`.
* We refactor `MessageListData.change_message_id` to no
longer require an `opts` parameter as this function
just returns whether we need to rerender or not.
The blueslip error block can be removed since we made
the change to no long defer the data updates in
commit 3b5ba6b2c1,
this case can no longer occur.
The changes made in this commit are as follows:
* We remove the now unused `ui.find_message` which was added
in commit 1666403850.
* We change the function paramter to now accept message ids
instead of messages to eliminate redundant message ids to
message convertion as only the id is required.
* The remove method in MessageListData did not remove the
messages from the hash, it removed only from the items,
this fixes it.
* This commit also fixes a bug where messages are not added
to the current message list if an event is recieved where
messages are moved to this current narrow.
Only the message removal logic was present, which has been
refactored in this commit.
Steve asked me to remove this, since the tictactoe game was always
intended as a proof of concept. Now that we have poll and todo
widgets, the sample code for tictactoe has much less value.
We replace the content and type in test_widgets.py to maintain
coverage.
This fixes a bug where the autocomplete for topics
deleted all the text content, if the topic jump is used
without entering any text.
The topic typeahead is automatically set up, on entering
the ">" key for stream completions. Therefore there is a
case where the user can select a typeahead item without
entering any text.
Thus the token length will be 0 and `beginning.slice(0, -0)` returns
"" instead of the `beginning` string. The case is only relevant for
"topic_list" completion as we don't set up the typeahead for empty
strings.
Fix this by reverting a hunk of
48f5e5179a, adding a test.
Fixes#16599.
Co-authored-by: Rohitt Vashishtha <aero31aero@gmail.com>
Refactor test_video_link_compose_clicked into seperate tests for:
No video provider.
Jitsi as the provider.
Zoom as the provider.
BigBlueButton as the provider.
While working on shifting toward native browser time zone APIs
(#16451), it was found that all but very recent Chrome and Node
versions reject certain legacy timezone aliases like US/Pacific
(https://crbug.com/364374).
For now, we only canonicalize the timezone property returned in user
objects and not the timezone setting itself.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
We now can send an implied matrix of user/stream tuples
for peer_add and peer_remove events.
The client code basically does this:
for stream_id in event['stream_ids']:
for user_id in event['user_ids']:
update_sub(stream_id, user_id)
We used to send individual events, which gets real
expensive when you are creating new streams. For
the case of copy-to-stream case, we should see
events go from U to 1, where U is the number of users
added.
Note that we don't yet fully optimize the potential
of this schema. For adding a new user with lots
of default streams, we still send S peer_add events.
And if you subscribe a bunch of users to a bunch of
private streams, we only go from U * S to S; we can't
optimize it down to one event easily.
Upstream has slightly changed the whitespace around stashes. Take
this opportunity to clean up the extra blank lines we were outputting.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Using web_public_guest for anonymous users is confusing since
'guest' is actually a logged-in user compared to
web_public_guest which is not logged-in and has only
read access to messages. So, we rename it to
web_public_visitor.
Since the denmark stream stub has subscribed = true,
we include the current user id in it's subscribers set.
We remove user `me` from sweden stream stub for the same
reason.
For streams in which only full members are allowed to post,
we block guest users from posting there.
Guests users were blocked from posting to admin only streams
already. So now, guest users can only post to
STREAM_POST_POLICY_EVERYONE streams.
This is not a new feature but a bugfix which should have
happened when implementing full member stream policy / guest users.
For the lines of code that I changed here, we were
getting field reports that the below code
was getting `undefined`:
emoji.all_realm_emojis.get(r.emoji_code)
It's not really clear to me how this could happen,
but we definitely should fail softly here. We
still report it as an error, but we let the function
return and don't trigger a TypeError.
If there's a legitimate reason for realms to delete
realm emojis, we should either downgrade this to a
warning or consider a strategy of back-fixing messages
when realm emojis get deleted.
In c563cdba61 we imported the generated
pygments data from outside `/shared` folder. This had a couple of
problems:
* Using `require` was the wrong way to do the import in ES6 modules.
* Since we get the data from outside `/shared`, clients like
zulip-mobile would not receive it - this case had to be handeled.
Here, we fix the above problems by receiving the data when initializing
through fenced_code.initialize, and when the pygments data structure is
empty (for zulip-mobile) we fallback to the old header structure without
the data-code-language tag.
Also, this commit does a small refactor to improve the way we fetch
canonicalized_alias from pygments_data.
Tests amended.
Instead of prohibiting ‘return undefined’ (#8669), we require that a
function must return an explicit value always or never. This prevents
you from forgetting to return a value in some cases. It will also be
important for TypeScript, which distinguishes between undefined and
void.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
It would conflict with the stream_id variable after migration to an
ES6 module, and adds no real convenience over stream_sub().
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This commit enables keyboard support for user info popovers for
navigating through popover options using up/down keys.
We add get_user_info_popover_items function, whose implementation
is different from other similar functions. Instead of using
popover_data.$tip we directly use $("div.user-info-popover")
because when we open the popover of bot owner from the bot
popover, the element which opens the popover is removed from
DOM and popover_data is undefined.
This commit replaces the "Reply mentioning user" option with "Copy mention
syntax" for user info popovers that are not opened from a message.
Clicking on "Copy mention syntax" will copy the mention syntax of user to
clipboard.
This change is done because user popovers not opened from message are not
linked to any message.
Previously, compose_ui.autosize_textarea didn't work while editing
messages in many cases (uploading files, typeaheads, keydown handling,
etc.).
Refactored the autosize_textarea function in compose_ui to work
while editing messages too and added appropriate argument for the
introduced function parameter at all occurences of the function
use.
Also, updated the corresponding test cases.
On uploading a few files from markdown_preview mode of compose box and
then switching back to edit mode, the compose box doesn't get resized.
It even doesn't allow to scroll through the content.
Fixed this by switching back to the edit mode everytime user uploads
some file in markdown_preview mode as there's no use of staying in
markdown_preview mode anyways after uploading a file as the preview
doesn't get updated.
Also, updated the corresponding test cases.
Fixes: #16296.
This mimics the backend logic for adding the data-attribute -
to know what Pygments language was used to highlight the code
block - in locally echoed messages.
New test added checks our logic for canonicalizing pygments alias
(for both frontend and backend).
Other fixtures and tests amended.
We need this information in the frontend to:
* Display the 'view in playground' option for locally echoed messages.
* When we add a UI settings for realm admins to configure their
playground choices, we'll need to use these canonicalized aliases
for displaying the option.
Hence, this tweaks the tool which generates pygments_data.json to contain
the data we need.
Bumping major PROVISION_VERSION since folks need to provision in both
directions.
Tests amended.
Currently, compose box placeholder text for PMs only gets updated
when the focus shifts to it.
With this change, the text is now also updated if recipients are
added or removed.
Fixes#15897.
Because `util` is so late in the alphabet, this
leak never surfaced in practice, but I tried running
the node tests in reverse, and this leak came
up if you ran `util` before `stream_list`. I guess
it's nice that `stream_list` actually exercises
the difference between a dumb sort and an
Intl-aware sort.
It's possible that we should just assume that
Intl.Collator is always available at this point,
which would eliminate the need for this test.
There is good reason to do this (explanation is bit long!). With the
TypeScript migration, and the require and ES6 migrations that come
with it, we use require instead of set_global which loads the entire
module. Suppose we have a util module, which is used by some other
module, say message_store, and util is being required in message_store
since it is removed from window. Then, if a test zrequires
message_store first, and then zrequires the util module qand mocks one
of its methods, it will not be mocked for the message_store
module. The reason is:
1. zrequire('message_store') leads to require('util').
2. zrequire('util') removes the util module from cache and it is
reloaded. Now the util module in message_store and the one in
the test will be different and any updates to it in tests won't
be reflected in the actual code.
Which can lead to confusion for folks writing tests. I'll mention this
can be avoided doing zrequire('util') first but...that is not ideal.
And, since there was one outlier test that relied on this behavior,
we add the namespace.reset_module function.
Fixes#16252.
icon* classes are used by bootstrap for displaying glyphicons.
We removed these classes in our custom version of bootstrap 2.1.1;
but since our reset to v2.3.2, they have been added again and hence
any classes starting with icon* in zulip will have to be renamed.
We were not updating the trailing bookend on deactivation of stream
if the user was narrowed to deactivated stream and this commit fixes
this.
For subscribed streams, we just show the trailing bookend with
content as 'This stream has been deactivated' and hide the
Unsubscribe button.
For unsubscribed streams, we change the content of trailing bookend
to 'This stream has been deactivated' and hide the Subscribe button.
Fixes#15999.
This completes the remaining work required to support
addition of all members of another stream.
This allows the creation of stream pills on pasting
the #streamname and copying it from the stream pill.
The user pills uses email ids instead.
And also allows creating stream pills when the user
hides the typeahead.
Tested by commenting out the "set_up_typeahead_on_pills"
line in `stream_edit.js`.
A `node_tests/stream_pill.js` file has been created
for the node tests and the other half of the coverage
check takes place in `node_tests/stream_edit.js`.
This fixes the regression introduced in the pervious
commit to regain the 100% line coverage in `user_pill.js`
as well as `stream_pill.js`.
The new `stream_edit.js` mainly tests for:
* The stream related queries of the typeahead in `user_pill.js`
* The "Add subscribers" event handlers.
* The event handler which displays the settings for a stream.
This handles a rare race condition that occurs when the session hash
is not updated by the backend during the password change process.
This mostly occurs in puppeteer tests, but could occur to a user.
In list_render.js, [...list] requires list to be an array, and
widget.set_sorting_function(...opts.init_sort) requires init_sort to
be an array.
This allows the Node tests to pass in Babel strict mode. We currently
use loose mode for performance, and so we should test in loose mode as
well; but we must never depend on loose mode for correctness, since
individual Babel transformations may stop being applied as our browser
support baseline improves.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Clicking on the copy-to-clipboard button triggers the clipboard.js
API to dynamically set the text to be copied. This text is the
actual code content from the sibling <code> element (extracted
though jQuery text() method).
The html structure would now look like:
<div class="codehilite">
<pre>
<button> The copy button </button>
<span></span>
<code>......</code>
</pre>
</div>
Additionally, this preserves the original code formatting of
the codeblock during copy-paste.
Tests amended.
Fixes: #15208
`update_message_flags` events used `operation` instead of `op`, the
latter being the standard field used in other events. So add `op`
field to `update_message_flags` and mark `operation` as deprecated,
so that it can be removed later.
The dispatch test here really only cares that values
get passed on.
Note that the dispatch code ignores the email field, because
we only send subscription/update events to the user
whose subscription has changed.
This fixes a bug with the original frontend-side implementation for
has: filters, where it would incorrectly not match content in cases
where the message's nesting structure did not have an outer tag.
Bug was introduced in 02ea52fc18.
Fixes#16118.
This commit adds "role" field to the Subscription objects passed to
clients. This is important preparation for being able to work on the
frontend for this feature.
The dispatch for presence is a trivial one-liner,
so the test just makes sure three important parameters
get passed along.
We will eventually want to use the fixtures data in
other presence-related tests, but for now the only
goal is to make it pass the schema checks.
Since our Webpack config passes pre-minified JS files to
script-loader, they can’t be used as modules. Use the normal
unminified version, letting Webpack minify it and give us source maps.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
We also just make the test express what's actually
happening in the code; we just pass the entire
"exports" section of the event to the settings code
and let it do its thing.
We follow the naming convention.
I also arbitrarily assign the "op" of
"add" to the attachment event, even
though we don't meaningfully test it.
The situation with attachment from the
dispatch test point of view is that
we just want to test that the one line
of code that calls into attachments_ui
(for all three ops) does get dispatched
correctly. We eventually want to get
deeper coverage there, but attachments_ui
wasn't written in the most test-friendly
way. I think it might actually be easy
to fix up attachments_ui to make it a
bit easier to test, but it's out of the
scope of my current PR.
The benefit here is check-node-fixtures
now gives a more concrete plan for
moving schemas to event_schema.py.
We extract test_realm_emojis, and we make
the name of the event more explicit (adding
the __update suffix).
We also add the "op" of "update" here, which
is sort of a quirk of the api, since we don't
actually have alternatives like add/remove,
and therefore the current frontend code doesn't
look at the "op", and thus the original tests
never had to provide a correct value for it.
We move this function from `user_pill.js` to `pill_typeahead.js`.
The function has also been renamed to `set_up`.
The move was made because there are plans to update the pills
typeahead (i.e. to include user-groups/streams in the results).
Thus this function should not belong in `user_pill.js`.
This commit allows skipping over any disabled tabs
that are in the middle when using the left or right
arrow keys.
We also add `enable_tab` to the `components` API.
After the latest message in a stream is deleted, we should update
the max_message_id in the stream.
Removed false comment in message_util.get_messages_in_topic
this method only takes 2ms for 10,000 messages loaded locally.
Fixes#15992.
If the last message of the topic was deleted, we update the stored
message_id in the topic history so that the topic order in topic_list
is updated correctly.
ES and TypeScript modules are strict by default and don’t need this
directive. ESLint will remind us to add it to new CommonJS files and
remove it from ES and TypeScript modules.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Commit 114cc1ec25 (#15949) introduced a
subtle bug because sortablejs provides both a CJS module and an ES
module that expose different interfaces to CJS require() under
Webpack. This difference will disappear when we convert
settings_profile_fields to an ES module.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Prior to commit eb4a2b9d4e the center
area of the navbar was based on a structure that appended crumbs or
"tabs" as <li>s, forming a tab_bar and a tab_list.
However, in eb4a2b9d4e we apply a new
style and structure to the navbar which lets go of the convention of
tabs. Hence, we'd like to purge the tab_bar and tab_list labels from
our code base.
We purged tab_list in 1267caf5009118875f47fdafe312880af08024e1.
This commit purges tab_bar, it includes:
- A blanket search and replace of tab_bar with message_view_header.
- Splitting a single line comment in
tab_bar.js / message_view_header.js.
- The renaming of tab_bar.js to message_view_header.js.
- The renaming of tab_bar.hbs to message_view_header.hbs.
- A blanket search and replace of tab_data with
message_view_header_data.
- Replacing the single occurrence of tabbar with message_view_header
(it was within a comment.)
We will store list of stream ids to sort streams instead of names.
We have added a compare_function for sorting the list of stream_ids
by comparing stream names.
This change helps us to remove a couple of get_sub calls and using
stream ids instead of name also helps in avoiding bugs caused due
to live update on renaming of stream.
We add a function subscribed_stream_ids which returns an array
of stream ids of all subscribed streams.
This is a prep commit for changing the logic for sorting streams
to store stream ids instead of names.
We should not allow every function who wants to narrow to All
messages to come up with their own method to do so. This
commit makes existing such functions use hashchange library to
do so.
Remove click event on All message button, it already contains
an <a> tag which navigates correctly.
We always use hashchange.go_to_location method now to open the
info_overlay, this makes sure that the url hash are reliable and
hotkeys don't get confused if an overlay is open or not.
We don't want to change hash to "" (this also doesn't navigates
us to 'All messages' view, hence the bug was not noticed.) on
exit of info_overlay.
Note that require("moment") and require("moment-timezone") resolve to
the same thing, but the latter adds timezone support as a side effect.
So I went with the latter in every file where .tz is used.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This is done to decouple our message view related update events
from MessageListData as there are plans to create multiple
MessageListData objects. Instead we update the `stored_messages`
which tracks the complete data for all messages.
This just lets us temporarily assign a value
to a field.
Differences with the "override" scheme:
* override only works on globals
* override (when passed in via run_test) will
just automatically clean up at the end of
the function
This is a pretty straightforward conversion.
The bulk of the diff is just changing emoji.js
to ES6 syntax.
There is one little todo that can be deferred
to the next commit--we are now set up to have
markdown.js require emoji.js directly, since
it is no longer on `window`.
We now show before/after, and we don't complicate
our other test that runs in a big loop.
And we take advantage of function injection to
not have to hack into the "real" emoji_codes
structure.
Note that we're simulating the missing emojis
at a slightly higher level, but we already had test
coverage that emoji.get_emoji_name returns
undefined for unknown codepoints.
The main thing here is that we check that the
actual data got put into our data structures.
(In general we want to move away from stubbing
data modules; any place where we stub data modules
is a relic of earlier days, where we were just
trying to set the bar for 100% line coverage,
even though some of the original coverage was
quite shallow.)
I also use real stubs instead of noops for
the calls out to UI-oriented modules.
In passing I tweak some comments in the actual
dispatch code.
With update_emojis, it is pretty easy
to set up the tests with reasonable
data without reaching into internal
data structures.
Also, we can begin the process of
sharing the same data with our
dispatch tests (upcoming).
There was only one place where we weren't
overriding a function, and the use case there
was fairly unique.
Knowing that we're dealing with only functions
will simplify override and allow us to add
features like detecting spurious stubs.
This forces us to more explicitly document at the
top of the file what dependencies we are stubbing,
plus it's less magical.
Also, we may want to do occasional audits of
set_global to clean up places where we mock
things like stream_data, which are probably just
easier to use the real version of now that we
have cleaner APIs to set up stream data.
The modules most affected by this change are our
dispatch-oriented tests--basically, all the
modules that test handling of Zulip events
plus hotkey.js.
$.fn.typeahead, on the other hand, returns the jQuery object back (not
the Typeahead object, which also happens to have a select method), so
this should be converted.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Zulip converts :) to the 1F642 Unicode emoji and promotes the same emoji
in the popular section of the emoji picker.
Previously Zulip has labeled 1F642 as "slight smile". While that name
conforms to the Unicode standard (which describes the code point as
SLIGHTLY SMILING FACE), it didn't match our use case of the emoji.
If a user types :) or selects the first smile in the emoji picker they
probably mean to express a regular "smile" and not a "slight smile",
which raises the question why they are only smiling slightly.
This commit relabels 1F642 as 😄 and our previous 😄 263A as
:smiling_face:. Note that 263A looks different in our three supported
emoji sets, so it is not suited to be our "default smile".
This change does not require a migration since our emoji system stores
both unicode points and names and handles name changes transparently.
Previously, image upload widget delete button CSS class name was
`settings-page-delete-button`.
We can change the CSS class name to `image-delete-button`
so that the name can be more generic.
Prettier would do this anyway, but it’s separated out for a more
reviewable diff. Generated by ESLint.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Prettier would do this anyway, but it’s separated out for a more
reviewable diff. Generated by ESLint.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Prettier would do this anyway, but it’s separated out for a more
reviewable diff. Generated by ESLint.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Prettier would do this anyway, but it’s separated out for a more
reviewable diff. Generated by ESLint.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
We hide the spoiler content in browser/desktop notifications.
Note: its not worth adding zjquery tests for this bit of code because
the tests do not operate on the actual data and are likely to get stale
if we change the syntax for spoilers.
This handler adds a neat little effect whereby hovering over the
clickable region to open the navbar triggers the search_icon hover
effect and is a neat little visual cue about what happens onClick.
The previous implementation was slightly messy because it fetched the
color and applied it via ".css(". This commit cleans it up by creating
and using the class "search_icon_hover_highlight" instead. We also
make the selectors more specific, ensuring they target children of
"#tab_bar", this was so because it was reasonable to expect someone to
define eg `search_closed` elsewhere and we wanted to prevent bugs when
that happened.
We were not passing any arguments to needs_subscribe_warning
when testing the function itself.
This commit changes the code to pass the user-id and stream-id
to needs_subscribe_warning. We also remove the stubs for
get_by_user_id and is_user_subscribed and do these tests by
calling the original functions, because passing the arguments
(user-id and stream-id) only makes sense if we use original
functions for them rather than stubs.
Delete stored topic data in `recent_senders` and `recent_topics`
about the message's topics and re-render them. The process is similar
to topic editing. See `recent_senders.process_topic_edit` for
logical details.
We have changed our all instances of list_render to use
simplebar and thus, we will now use simplebar container
to track scroll event for all the lists created by
list_render.
This fixes the bug of new subscribers not rendering on
scrolling at the end of subscriber list in stream settings
and similar bug in some other lists also.
This commit also removes scroll_util.get_list_scrolling_container
function as this is no longer used.
Fixes#15637.
This reverts commit 63643c9d9d.
As the commit mentions, it makes a UI change for legacy search which
has largely been considered a regression. We've been running with
this reverted in zulip.com essentially since it was first merged.
Prior to commit eb4a2b9d4e the center
area of the navbar was based on a structure that appended crumbs or
"tabs" as <li>s, forming a tab_bar and a tab_list.
However, in eb4a2b9d4e we apply a new
style and structure to the navbar which lets go of the convention of
tabs. Hence, we'd like to purge the tab_bar and tab_list labels from
our code base.
It would have been nicer if we could simply purge tab_bar from the
codebase and rename "#tab_list" so that we have an anchor and wrapper
structure in the html, but dropping the float: left on tab_bar causes
some confusing problems such as causing the horizontal border to
disappear and the search_box to shift out of its intended position and
so its simpler to get rid of tab_list from our code base first.
This commit:
- Removes the #tab_list wrapper div from tab_bar.hbs.
- Removes any #tab_list selectors from night_mode.scss so that they
simply target based on "#tab_bar" instead of "#tab_bar #tab_list".
- Removes tab_list selectors from zulip.scss, so that #tab_list
attributes now apply to the #tab_bar, in the process we drop the
duplicated width property and reorder the attributes.
- Replaces all mention of #tab_list with #tab_bar in JS files.
Previously, the navbar sub count would not live update as users
subscribed or unsubscribed, this commit adds the relevant calls in
stream events.
It would have been better to just have a single call within
server_events_dispatch but it seems difficult due to the way of
mark_subscribed and mark_unsubscribed are structured.
stream_events.mark_unsubscribed conditionally calls
subs.update_settings_for_unsubscribed which calls
subs.rerender_subscriptions_settings and as such handles the update
for the subscriptions modal on its own. Hence, we simply rely on the
stream_data.update_calculated_fields to ensure the subscriber counts
are updated and make a call to
tab_bar.maybe_rerender_title_area_for_stream(sub).
stream_events.mark_subscribed is similar.
Previously, we were overriding narrow_state.is_for_stream_id() to make
sure we test the functions we intend to.
In this commit we:
* zrequire('narrow_state')
* set the filter to "stream:frontend" before the test cases which
were overriding is_for_stream_id to return true (and remove the
overrides).
* reset_current_filter() at the end of the above cases (and remove
the lines overriding is_for_stream_id to return false)
This is a prep commit to adding live update for sub_count in the
navbar.
This commit changes stream_data.is_user_subscribed to use stream id
instead of stream name.
We are using stream ids so that we can avoid bugs related to live
update after stream rename.
We have logic in place to update the ui for re-sending messages
on recieving the acknowledgement from the server on that API call.
However, if the acknowledgement is recieved through the get events
request before the `on_success` of `resend_message`, the message
gets re-rendered allowing the failed message actions to be clickable.
Now, we update the ".message_failed" ui for both cases. This helps
in preventing the "Trying to get local_id from row that has reified
message id" exception.
Fixes#15351.
As we add more features where rendered_markdown.update_elements does
something useful, it'll become important to run this code everywhere
we render markdown in the DOM.
One can see in this case that we had actually copied one hunk of
rendered_markdown.update_elements years ago, before we extracted it as
an independent function; we get to delete that copy.
Fixes#15500.
This particular commit has been a long time coming. For reference,
!avatar(email) was an undocumented syntax that simply rendered an
inline 50px avatar for a user in a message, essentially allowing
you to create a user pill like:
`!avatar(alice@example.com) Alice: hey!`
---
Reimplementation
If we decide to reimplement this or a similar feature in the future,
we could use something like `<avatar:userid>` syntax which is more
in line with creating links in markdown. Even then, it would not be
a good idea to add this instead of supporting inline images directly.
Since any usecases of such a syntax are in automation, we do not need
to make it userfriendly and something like the following is a better
implementation that doesn't need a custom syntax:
`![avatar for Alice](/avatar/1234?s=50) Alice: hey!`
---
History
We initially added this syntax back in 2012 and it was 'deprecated'
from the get go. Here's what the original commit had to say about
the new syntax:
> We'll use this internally for the commit bot. We might eventually
> disable it for external users.
We eventually did start using this for our github integrations in 2013
but since then, those integrations have been neglected in favor of
our GitHub webhooks which do not use this syntax.
When we copied `!gravatar` to add the `!avatar` syntax, we also noted
that we want to deprecate the `!gravatar` syntax entirely - in 2013!
Since then, we haven't advertised either of these syntaxes anywhere
in our docs, and the only two places where this syntax remains is
our game bots that could easily do without these, and the git commit
integration that we have deprecated anyway.
We do not have any evidence of someone asking about this syntax on
chat.zulip.org when developing an integration and rightfully so- only
the people who work on Zulip (and specifically, markdown) are likely
to stumble upon it and try it out.
This is also the only peice of code due to which we had to look up
emails -> userid mapping in our backend markdown. By removing this,
we entirely remove the backend markdown's dependency on user emails
to render messages.
---
Relevant commits:
- Oct 2012, Initial commit c31462c278
- Nov 2013, Update commit bot 968c393826
- Nov 2013, Add avatar syntax 761c0a0266
- Sep 2017, Avoid email use c3032a7fe8
- Apr 2019, Remove from webhook 674fcfcce1
To make the typeahead code more readable, we extract this function to
timerender. We also improve the logic to be more readable, and add tests
to confirm its validity.
We have moved our invalid timestamp logic to use timestamp-error class,
however, if there are any valid outputs by the backend markdown that
the frontend considers invalid, we want to debug them. This commit
adds tooling to ensure we log those error messages.
We had been using !time() syntax for timestamps so far. Since its
an unreleased feature, we can make changes without affecting many
people.
Fixes#15442.
There is a bug and race issue that occurs when a message is selected
while we are in the process of reifying a locally echoed message,
raising the "Selected message id not in MessageList" error.
The code flow to get the exception is as follows:
* A user sends a message to the current narrow we are in.
* Before the new message event is received, we sent a message to
the same message list which renders it with a locally echoed id.
* One of the ways of getting the exception is to already have the
locally sent message selected, before receiving an acknowledgment
from the server.
* Thus the Message List Data's `selected_id` now points to the new
message id. The exception is raised on entering the `was_selected`
if block inside `message_list_view` which tries to re-select the
message.
Updating the `_rerender_message` code for this special case won't fix
the entire bug because, as mentioned above there are other ways of
getting the exception:
Ideally, after all our synchronous work (`echo.process_from_server`)
has completed we would expect the re-order and re-render work of the
`change_message_id` would occur first, due to the timer of the
setTimeout being set to 0.
However as evident from the race condition existing, this isn't always
the case. `change_message_id` function is responsible for 3 things:
updation, re-ordering and re-rendering.
The first one which is responsible for updating the message list's
local cache, occurs synchronously while for the latter two, they both
occur asynchronously.
Before the setTimeout which is responsible for the latter two actions,
is encountered the user might select the message by clicking or more
commonly by scrolling, which causes this message selection event to be
ahead of the setTimeout in the callback queue.
During this time frame, our race condition takes place.
And even though the message id is updated it's Message List is not
in the correct sort order, which leads to `closest_id` !== `id` in
`MessageList_select_id` being true and raising the exception.
Now, we only asynchronously call the re_render function, to guarantee
the data is always correct and UI updates should be done at the end.
Extended by tabbott to comment the setTimeout call.
Fixes#15346.
We change validate_stream_message to check the existence of stream from
the stream name in compose box early and we then pass stream_id or the
obtained sub objects accordingly to other validate functions.
Passing stream_id or sub objects to these functions, enables us to use
stream_id instead of stream name in stream_data.get_subscriber_count.
stream_data.get_stream_post_policy is also removed as we only used it in
validate_stream_message_policy, but we do not need it now as we can get
stream_post_policy directly from sub object obtained by early check of
valid stream name.
This commits add data-stream-id attribute to the compose_invite_users
template. This helps in avoiding the error that occured if user
clicked the link after renaming of stream.
As a result of above changes, the checks for empty and invalid stream
name in compose box are done in warn_if_mentioning_unsubscribed_user
function instead of needs_subscribe_warning function.
Escape all the possible special characters.
We replaced \b with (?:^|\s) since it matches word boundries including
special characters.
Pasted relevant stackoverflow links which expain them properly.
The organization_settings_tip is not visible if organization settings
overlay is opened with any section other than organization profile,
settings and permissions. This is because insert_tip_box is called from
settings_org.build_page, which is called only when we open any of the
above three sections after opening the overlay and not others.
We should call insert_tip_box function from admin.build_page instead
of settings_org.build_page because we need to insert the admin tips
each time the organization settings overlay is opened, irrespective
of the section which opens first.
The function insert_tip_box is moved to admin.js from settings_org.js,
because settings_org.js file handles the organization profile,
settings and permissions page only, while we display the tips in many
other sections including bots, custom emoji, etc.
Thus, it makes sense to move insert_tip_box function to admin.js, which
renders the complete organization settings overlay using render_admin_tab.
We leverage the composebox typeaheads to show flatpickr to pick dates
and times for the !time syntax.
We use moment.js to try and parse the time from current token. If we
are successful, we initialize flatpickr with the parsed time, else we
default to using the current time.
In 5200598a31, we introduced a new
client capability that can be used to avoid unreasonable network
bandwidth consumed sending avatar URLs of long term idle users in
organizations with 10,000s members.
This commit enables this feature and adds support for it to the web
client.
This commit changes stream_data.create_sub_from_server_data to use
stream id, instead of stream name, for checking whether subscription
already exists or not. We are using stream ids so that we can avoid
bugs related to live update after stream rename.
This commit changes stream_data.remove_subscriber to use stream id
instead of stream name. We are using stream ids so that we can
avoid bugs related to live update after stream rename.
Thsi commit changes stream_data.add_subscriber to use stream_id
instead of stream name. We are using stream ids so that we can
avoid bugs related to live update after stream rename.
This commit removes stream_edit.rerender function. We directly
call subs.rerender_subscriptions_settings directly from
server_events_dispatch.js, which was the only caller of rerender
function, as we already have sub object.
We are using stream ids so that we can avoid bugs related to live
update after stream rename.
We can use get_sub_by_id instead of get_sub to get the stream info,
as we already have stream id from the message object. We are using
stream ids so that we can avoid bugs related to live update after
stream rename.
This commit changes receives_notifications function to use
stream_ids instead of stream names. We are using stream ids so
that we can avoid bugs related to live update after stream rename.
Prior to this commit has:link, has:attachment, has:image
filter couldn't be applied locally and deferred filtering to
web server. This commits make sure client filters all messages
it can instead of completely deferring to the server and hence
improve speed.
A tradeoff is also made to turn off local echo for has: narrows
as messages with link sent to has:link narrow were locally echoing
to another narrow and not appearing in the active has:link narrow.
Fixes: #6186.
With this implementation of the feature of the automatic theme
detection, we make the following changes in the backend, frontend and
documentation.
This replaces the previous night_mode boolean with an enum, with the
default value being to use the prefers-color-scheme feature of the
operating system to determine which theme to use.
Fixes: #14451.
Co-authored-by: @kPerikou <44238834+kPerikou@users.noreply.github.com>
Add arrow key navigation support for recent topics.
Simple jquery is used to allow navigation for filter buttons,
a grid system is used for navigation inside table.
This improves the logic and fixes the bug where the href was calculated
based on the current URL and not the filter of the current message list.
We now add the '/streams/public/' operator at the start of the operators,
similar to how it is represented in all other cases.
Fixes#15405
This reverts part of b0d632577f.
The problem was that multiple queries were combined as a single
search pill. And since we create the pills then narrow / search,
we added a comma seperator between them for the typeahead lookups
as required by the logic in `input_pill.js`.
This however introduced a new bug where the search suggestions
were incorrect as the typeahead lookup table wasn't updated, so
every time an item from the type ahead was selected it updated
the input string with an invalid operator.
Thus to resolve the first problem, we follow a simpler approach
by extracting all operators from the search string using our
`Filter.parse` logic and next add the pills, one by one.
Whenever a search pill is selected or deleted by a click the navbar
gets rendered as the searchbox loses focus. This allows the user to
be able to continue editing the search query without having to refocus
the searchbox.
A main change is that we now display the navbar if the search box
is not focused. This was already present in the search pills version
but adding it to the legacy version is an improvement.
We sufficiently increase the timeout so that the pills are actually
deleted. This was required when `filter.is_common_narrow()` is true,
as then only we render the narrow description and close the search bar.
This commit also matches another behaviour of the legacy search.
i.e. We narrow every time a search suggestion is clicked.
The now redundant "focusin" and "focusout" event handler tests are
also removed.
Two things were broken here:
* we were using name(s) instead of id(s)
* we were always sending lists that only
had one element
Now we just send "stream_id" instead of "subscriptions".
If anything, we should start sending a list of users
instead of a list of streams. For example, see
the code below:
if peer_user_ids:
for new_user_id in new_user_ids:
event = dict(type="subscription", op="peer_add",
stream_id=stream.id,
user_id=new_user_id)
send_event(realm, event, peer_user_ids)
Note that this only affects the webapp, as mobile/ZT
don't use this.
This commit adds message retention policy details in the subscription_type
text below the stream description.
We do not show any text when realm-level settings is set to forever and
stream-level is set to either forever or realm_default.
This commit adds frontend support for setting and updating message
retention days of a stream from stream settings.
Message retention days can be changed from stream privacy modal of the
stream and can be set from stream_creation_form while creating streams.
Only admins can create streams with message_retention_days value other
than realm_default.
This commit also contains relevant changes to docs.
Previously, we had implemented:
<span class="timestamp" data-timestamp="unix time">Original text</span>
The new syntax is:
<time timestamp="ISO 8601 string">Original text</time>
<span class="timestamp-error">Invalid time format: Original text</span>
Since python and JS interpretations of the ISO format are very
slightly different, we force both of them to drop milliseconds
and use 'Z' instead of '+00:00' to represent that the string is
in UTC. The resultant strings look like: 2011-04-11T10:20:30Z.
Fixes#15431.
Since we are no longer using the "pointer" value sent in
page_params.pointer for anything, there's no value in continuing to
send it from the server to the client.
The remaining code in pointer.js is logic managing state for the
currently selected message.
The stream_events tests were kinda messy, but
I mostly just consolidated a few sections of
code so that we didn't have to keep
re-stubbing the same functions.
For the actual code, I extracted add_sidebar_row
and then removed the unnecessarily complicated
jQuery trigger mechanisms.
This merges the `exports.get_search_result_legacy` and
`exports.get_search_result` function.
The key differences between the two code paths are as follows:
* We only want to generate suggestions for the queries which
the user is typing or can edit.
For the legacy version, suggestions are displayed for the
entire search string in the searchbox. (`all_operators`)
For the pills enabled version, suggestions are displayed
only for the input which hasn't been converted to pills.
(`query_operators`)
`all_operators` = `base_query_operators` + " " + `query_operators`.
trim is added at the end just to handle the legacy case
where we pass the `base_query` as ''.
* It is not possible to detect whether the user wants to
continue typing in the legacy version. However if the
the searchbox is still focused even after pill creation
we can assume the user still wants to continue typing.
To handle this we push an empty term as the `last` operator.
This is possible since the previous queries have been
completely entered as evident from it's generated pill.
* When using the legacy version, `search_operators` are
the same as `all_operators`, as mentioned in point 1.
In the pills enabled version we perform most of the
computations from the `query_operators`, but we do
require all `all_operators`, only for filtering the last
query's suggestion.
* And there is just one block unique to the legacy search
system. More details are mentioned in the comments of that
block.
We also refactor both the search suggestions node tests,
mainly to make them similar and easier to detect differences
when we switch over to the new version.
This fixes one of our oldest important user experience issues, namely
that if you never visit the home view, the Zulip webapp would often
load "deep in the past" because the pointer had not advanced.
Fixes#1529.
When fetching older/new messages, we used to resort to the pointer
to act as anchor when message list was empty.
This appears to be an impossible case, as
`fetch_status.can_load_newer_messages`
should be false in this case and user cannot be scrolling an
empty message_list in the first case.
Hence, we raise a fatal error to inform user of the same.
Now we can use common HTML image upload widget template
`image_upload_widget.hbs` for realm day/night logo and
we should access those day/night logo elements using
e.g., "#realm-day/night-logo-upload-widget .realm-logo-elements".
since we use image_upload_widget.hbs for realm day/night logo upload
widget we need to extract CSS for realm day/night logo and
place them separately under `#realm-day-logo-upload-widget`
and `#realm-day-logo-upload-widget` css id.
Google has removed the Google Hangouts brand, thus we are removing
them as video chat provider option.
This commit removes Google Hangouts integration and make a migration
that sets all realms that are using Hangouts as their video chat
provider to the default, jitsi.
With changes by tabbott to improve the overall video call documentation.
Fixes: #15298.
This adds support for a "spoiler" syntax in Zulip's markdown, which
can be used to hide content that one doesn't want to be immediately
visible without a click.
We use our own spoiler block syntax inspired by Zulip's existing quote
and math block markdown extensions, rather than requiring a token on
every line, as is present in some other markdown spoiler
implementations.
Fixes#5802.
Co-authored-by: Dylan Nugent <dylnuge@gmail.com>
The upload text element is wrongly named as id=user_avatar_upload_button.
now we can remove that id and access upload text element from
`#user-avatar-upload-widget .settings-page-upload-text` so that we
can have only one id at top-level and 'image_upload_widget.hbs` can
be more dynamic so we can use for other similar widgets also.
we can remove `user_avatar_delete_button` id and access delete button
from `#user-avatar-upload-widget .settings-page-delete-button` so that
we can have only one id at top level and 'image_upload_widget.hbs`
can be more dynamic so we can use for other similar widgets also.
The previous commit introduced a bug where it was not intuitive
for the user to scroll again.
For the current narrow, new messages were fetched again only when
scrolled to the bottom as usually there are many messages displayed.
However when the edge case mentioned in the previous commit
occured, it was not very obvious that a scroll should be done
or we could already be at the bottom and could not scroll again
to trigger a fetch.
`message_viewport.at_bottom` has a relevant comment explaining
this behaviour.
The previous commit handled the rare race condition. However,
there is a possibility that the rare race condition might occur
again while we are handling the previous condition.
This commit resolves these 2 problems by performing a re-fetch
while also resetting the `expected_max_message_id` and this
approach has two benefits:
1. The reset prevents an infinite loop, if somehow the expected
max message's id gets corrupted resulting in a situation
where the server can never send an id greater than that even
after fetching.
2. Even though we stop after just one re-fetch the race condition
might recursively occur while we handle the previous race
condition. And even though the reset prevents multiple re-fetches,
we don't have the missing message problem.
This is because we treat the next race condition as a new race
condition instead of it being a continuation of the previous.
The `expected_max_message_id` gets updated again, on receiving
a new message. Thus it can again enter the `fetch_status` block
as the reset value is updated again.
If a user sends a message while the latest batch of
messages are being fetched, the new message recieved
from `server_events` gets displayed temporarily out of
order (just after the the current batch of messages)
for the current narrow.
We could just discard the new message events if we havent
recieved the last message i.e. when `found_newest` = False,
since we would recieve them on furthur fetching of that
narrow.
But this would create another bug where the new messages
sent while fetching the last batch of messages would not
get rendered. Because, `found_newest` = True and we would
no longer fetch messages for that narrow, thus the new
messages would not get fetched and are also discarded from
the events codepath.
Thus to resolve both these bugs we use the following approach:
* We do not add the new batch of messages for the current narrow
while `has_found_newest` = False.
* We store the latest message id which should be displayed at the
bottom of the narrow in `fetch_status`.
* Ideally `expected_max_message_id`'s value should be equal to the
last item's id in `MessageListData`.
* So the messages received while `has_found_newest` = False,
will be fetched later and also the `expected_max_message_id`
value gets updated.
* And after fetching the last batch where `has_found_newest` = True,
we would again fetch messages if the `expected_max_message_id` is
greater than the last message's id found on fetching by refusing to
update the server provided `has_found_newest` = True in `fetch_status`.
Another benefit of not discarding the events is that the
message gets processed not rendered i.e. we still get desktop
notifications and unread count updates.
Fixes#14017