If another user subscribed to or unsubscribed from a stream while the
current user was not subscribed, we previously would attempt to
rerender the subscriber counts for that stream, even though they
weren't rendered at all in the first place; this would trigger
blueslip errors from the expectOne() check in this function.
Fixes#8720.
Even if realm admin can access unsubscribed private stream subscribers,
admin can't add subscriber to stream. Hide the option to add subs to
stream in UI.
This will allow realm admins to access subscribers of unsubscribed
private stream. This is a preparatory commit for letting realm admins
remove those users.
Previously, when creating an invite-only stream, the subscriber counts
were not being rendered properly, in that the "create" event for the
stream had the user not yet subscribed (so can_add_subscribers was
false), and then the rerendering we did when the user susbcribed just
tried to update the number, not actually rerender the thing.
When user click on unsubscribe button, to unsubscribe from private stream
immediately remove unsubscribed stream from all subscribed stream list.
We don't remove public stream immediately on unsubscription, cause
user may want to undo/subscribe back to stream.
Currently, our stream creation do not add stream list to all
stream list. Only subscription-add event add stream list to
stream list. If public stream is created without acting user
subscribed to stream, then newly created stream is not listed
to all stream list.
On stream creation add sub to all stream list table.
This migrates what were effectively data update functions to be called
from the main stream_events handlers, instead of being called from the
view-update code in subs.js.
To re-render stream members on subscription add or remove event,
we are accessing undefined value "active_stream.stream_id" rather
than "active_stream.id", which resulted in falsey value and our
stream members were not updated unconditionally.
This commit prefixes stream names in urls with stream ids,
so that the urls don't break when we rename streams.
strean name: foo bar.com%
before: #narrow/stream/foo.20bar.2Ecom.25
after: #narrow/stream/20-foo-bar.2Ecom.25
For new realms, everything is simple under the new scheme, since
we just parse out the stream id every time to figure out where
to narrow.
For old realms, any old URLs will still work under the new scheme,
assuming the stream hasn't been renamed (and of course old urls
wouldn't have survived stream renaming in the first place). The one
exception is the hopefully rare case of a stream name starting with
something like "99-" and colliding with another stream whose id is 99.
The way that we enocde the stream name portion of the URL is kind
of unimportant now, since we really only look at the stream id, but
we still want a safe encoding of the name that is mostly human
readable, so we now convert spaces to dashes in the stream name. Also,
we try to ensure more code on both sides (frontend and backend) calls
common functions to do the encoding.
Fixes#4713
This will essentially run the code paths to go from whatever you were
at before to /all and back in the case of /new, which will call the
render function three times (!!), so remove this call because it isn’t
really necessary anyways.
Currently the new streams user list will populate twice when you click
the new stream button (or “+”), because it is triggered once directly
by the button click and then once by the hash change to /new, so we
want to ignore the changes by the hash change.
Previously, if you had the streams overlay open (but no active stream
clicked) while another user edited your subscriptions state, we'd
throw an exception handle the get_events call, because the code for
rerendering the subscribers list didn't consider the possibility that
there was no active stream.
When re-subscribing by way of the "Subscribe" button in the right
side settings panel, the row will now be marked as active to
highlight that the row is still selected and being looked at.
Fixes: #6955.
Previously it was called before the event was processed by the server
and the subscription was updated to have the user subscribed to a
stream, so there was a race condition that would make it iso that
sometimes the stream line would disappear on the next render pass due
to the event not having completed yet.
This makes it so that the re-render happens after the event is
processed in `stream_events.js`.
Fixes: #6797.
The current behavior is that when you subscribe to a new stream
the scroll position moves back up to the top because the list updates,
when in reality the user shouldn't notice this, so we record the
previous scroll position and then apply it once the DOM update is
finished before the next paint cycle.
Fixes: #6606.
We used to have code scattered in multiple places to
calculate things like admin options, preview urls,
subscriber counts, and rendered descriptions for
streams before we rendered templates in the "Manage
Stream" code.
These are all consolidated into a new function
called stream_data.update_calculated_fields().
This is mostly code cleanup, but it also fixes a bug where
the "View Stream" button would not work for a newly created
stream.
Despite the length of this commit, it is a very straightforward
moving of code from narrow.js -> narrow_state.js, and then
everything else is just s/narrow.foo()/narrow_state.foo()/
(with a few tiny cleanups to remove some code duplication
in certain callers).
The only new functions are simple setter/getters that
encapsulate the current_filter variable:
narrow_state.reset_current_filter()
narrow_state.set_current_filter()
narrow_state.get_current_filter()
We removed narrow.predicate() as part of this, since it was dead
code.
Also, we removed the shim for narrow_state.set_compose_defaults(),
and since that was the last shim, we removed shim.js from the app.
This code makes the right pane work in "Manage Streams" when
you are editing a stream subscription. It handles basic
functionality (submitting forms, etc.), live updates, and
showing the pane as needed.
Most of the code here was simply moved from subs.js, but some
functions were pulled out of larger functions:
live update:
add_me_to_member_list
update_stream_name
update_stream_description
collapse/show:
collapse
show_sub
We also now export subs.show_subs_pane.
We eventually want stream_edit not to call into subs.js, and
this should be fairly easy--we just need to move some shared
methods to a new module.
This new modules handles the UI to create streams. It mostly moves
code from subs.js.
It introduces an API around what used to be called meta.stream_created:
reset_created_stream()
set_name()
get_name()
It only partially moves new_stream_clicked().
This commit forces the files that create modals to create their own
modal closing function instead of creating all of them in the modals
file. These functions are then passed to the modals.close object. This
is intended to remove modals.js's dependencies on these other files.
This is mostly just moving methods out of compose.js.
The variable `is_composing_message`, which isn't a boolean, has
been renamed to `message_type`, and there are new functions
set_message_type() and get_message_type() that wrap it.
This commit removes some shims related to the global variable
`compose_state`; now, `compose_state` is a typical global
variable with a 1:1 relationship with the module by the same
name.
The new module has 100% line coverage, most of it coming
via the tests on compose_actions.js. (The methods here are
super simple, so it's a good thing that the tests are somewhat
integrated with a higher layer.)
Prevent switching of stream rows on pressing arrow key when focussed
on the 'Create stream' section (this would cancel the curren stream
creation flow).
The subscriber data is currently pulled from the web needlessly
when it exists in memory. This processes data returned from
the `stream_data.get_sub_by_id(n).subscribers` and the
`people.get_person_from_user_id(n).email` methods to build the
same list of subscribers that is sent from the server.
Fixes: #4314.
On filling out the name and description for new stream,
and changing the tab (e.g. by clicking on a stream on the left),
then come back to 'Create streams', it should restore stream name
similar to the stream description.
Fix#4311.
This is kinda hacky and probably not how we want this to work
long-term, but I think it's a larger refactoring project to make this
part of the model make sense.
If a url is present in stream description, it will be
rendered as a clickable link under /streams page.
Tweaked by tabbott to use the separate rendered_description element to
avoid duplicate rendering and to live-update.
Fixes#1435.
On realms with ``should_list_all_streams() == False``, previously, we
would subscribe a user to a stream, but also incorrectly show the stream
creation dialog.
Instead, we act as if the stream was newly created.
This consolidates all actions to close modals into modals.js and
triggers the correct cleaning/collapsing function dependent on what the
data-overlay attribute is labeled as.
It also ensures these all have an e.stopPropagation().
Fixes#4029.
This fixes the mobile web experience for Chrome on iOS.
Apparently, Chrome-on-iOS silently has a `viewport` module that
overrides and user-defined module by that name, causing all of our
code that accesses the viewport module to not work on that platform.
We fix this by renaming it.
We pass in sub instead of stream_name, to support callers that
already do lookups by stream id.
And then we make the second optional argument be subscribers, since
that is all we were using from the old `attrs` argument.