We now no longer define any schemas in test_events--all
of them are in event_schema, which helps our tooling
cross-check schemas for openapi and node tests.
It happens that whether you add a reaction or remove
a reaction, we send the exact same fields, just using
a different op code.
This sort of symmetry is actually kind of rare, as
usually "add" events have more fields, and "remove" events
might just send an id of something to remove.
Our openapi schema treats these as two seperate events,
so we are more consistent with it, and it helps our
schema-checking tooling for node fixtures, too.
Note that we now have to exempt the two events from
our openapi checks, due to the is_mirror_dummy field
in the deprecated user block. We can decide how to
handle this later--one possibility is to just add it
as an optional field on the event_schema side.
Note that we use value_type for value instead of
bool, since properties can be non-bool things
like color, which we just don't test now. We
should test them.
We more than compensate for this by checking
the actual value of the value in
check_subscription_update.
There is a legacy format where we send
singular "message_id" instead of plural
"message_ids".
Then there are different fields for "private"
and "stream" message types.
Note that we make the schema for profile_data
slightly more realistic, but it doesn't actually get
exercised by our current tests (apart from
making sure it's a dict), since we don't have
profile data for our test realm.
We also don't have the optional fields for bots,
since our tests don't exercise that, nor
delivery_email.
So we exempt realm_user_add_event from openapi
checks for now.
When we try to match the openapi specs better, we
will probably want to add a few tests to test_events.
Obviously getting good coverage for adding users
would be nice for all these scenarios:
* delivery_email matters
* bots
* realm has profile fields
This is a prep commit for supporting "presence"
events, where the key of the dictionary is some
arbitrary string like "website" but the value
of the dictionary is another dictionary itself
with keys that are more like variable names.
This also forces us to create TupleType.
We exempt this from the openapi check,
since we haven't figured out how to model
tuples in openapi with the same precision
as event_schema (and it may be impossible).
Long term we just want to stop dealing in
tuples, of course.
StringDict is a data type for representing dictionaries where
all keys and values are strings. Add this data type to data_types.py
and edit other files so that this data type is put to use and tested.
(slightly tweaked by @showell to remove a comment and shorten
a var name now that we have a proper data type)
We also make our schema in event_schema reflect this,
which in turn makes us match the already accurate
openapi spec, so we no longer need to exempt four
types of events from our sanity checks.
We might want to rename the tool to something more
general now, since we are really reconciling three
things:
- node fixtures
- event_schema checkers for test_events
- openapi specs
The way we compare python and openapi schemas is
as follows:
- first convert openapi schemas to be build
from DictType, ListType, etc. with from_opeapi
- do a diff on the schemas
Most of the new code is just having the FooType
family of classes serialize themselves with schema().
This commit renames 'test_message_to_self' and
'test_api_message_to_self' tests to
'test_message_to_stream_by_name' and
'test_api_message_to_stream_by_name' to depict
the actual purpose of these tests.
This argument does not define if an endpoint "is a webhook"; it is set
for "/api/v1/messages", which is not really a webhook, but allows
access from webhooks.
If multiple filters match the same string, we run into an infinite
loop of converting string into urls. To fix it, we mark the matched
string as atomic after first conversion.
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.
In development and test, we keep the Tornado port at 9993 and 9983,
respectively; this allows tests to run while a dev instance is
running.
In production, moving to port 9800 consistently removes an odd edge
case, when just one worker is on an entirely different port than if
two workers are used.
When converting fenced code markdown, we add the language (if specified)
in a data-attribute by tweaking the HTML generated. Doing so, allows the
frontend to make use of this attr to display view-in-playground option
for codeblocks.
We use pygments to get the lexer subclass name and use that instead of
directly using the language in the data-attribute. Doing so, helps us
map different language aliases (like `js` and `javascript`) into a common
variable (like `JavaScript`) - and avoids the client from dealing with
multiple tags corresponding to the same language.
The html structure for a message like this:
``` js
..content..
```
would now be:
<div class="codehilite" data-codehilite-language="JavaScript">
<pre>..content..</pre>
</div>
Tests and fixtures amended.
Fixes#16284.
Most of the work for this was done when we implemented correct
behavior for guest users, since they treat public streams like private
streams anyway.
The general method involves moving the messages to the new stream with
special care of UserMessage.
We delete UserMessages for subs who are losing access to the message.
For private streams with protected history, we also create UserMessage
elements for users who are not present in the old stream, since that's
important for those users to access the moved messages.
Previously, S3UploadBackend.delete_export_tarball failed to strip the
leading ‘/’ from the export path. This mistake is now caught by Moto
1.3.15. I expect it caused deletion failures in the real S3, although
I haven’t verified this.
We store export_path in the audit log with a leading ‘/’, but the
actual S3 keys do not have a leading ‘/’. Changing either system
would require a migration. So the new convention is that the
variables named ‘export_path’ have a leading ‘/’, while variables
named ‘path_id’ or ‘key’ do not.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Django treats path("<name>") like re_path(r"(?P<name>[^/]+)") and
path("<path:name>") like re_path(r"(?P<name>.+)").
This is more readable and consistent than the mix of slightly
different regexes we had before, and fixes various bugs:
• The r'apps/(.*)$' regex was missing a start anchor ^, so it
incorrectly matched all URLs that included apps/ as a substring
anywhere.
• The r'accounts/login/(google)/$' regex was missing a start anchor ^,
so it incorrectly matched all URLs that ended with
accounts/login/google/.
• The type annotation of zerver.views.realm_export.delete_realm_export
takes export_id as an int, but it was previously passed as a string.
• The type annotation of zerver.views.users.avatar takes medium as a
bool, but it was previously passed as a string.
• The [0-9A-Za-z]+ pattern for uidb64 was missing the - and _
characters that can validly be part of a base64url encoded
string (although I think the id is actually a decimal integer here,
in which case only 012345ADEIMNOQTUYcgjkwxyz are present in its
base64url encoding).
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>