This alert bar thing was buggy and didn't look that good, so let's
just remove it. We can always write a nicer thing advertising the
desktop app later.
This makes the flow more intuitive, since the user sets a password
with the other parts of the form where they are configuring their own
account (as opposed to configuring the organization they are
creating).
In preparation for a change to do_create_realm where we will use the
database default for restricted_to_domain rather than computing it within
do_create_realm, and due to which do_create_realm will no longer know
whether we are creating an open realm or not.
Step 0 of a two step process:
1. Replace all occurances of get_realm(domain) with
get_realm_by_string_id(string_id)
2. Rename get_realm_by_string_id to get_realm.
Adds a database migration, adds a new string_id argument to the management
realm creation command, and adds a short name field to the web realm
creation form when REALMS_HAVE_SUBDOMAINS is False.
Does a database migration to rename Realm.subdomain to
Realm.string_id, and makes Realm.subdomain a property. Eventually,
Realm.string_id will replace Realm.domain as the handle by which we
retrieve Realm objects.
We now simply exclude all cross-realm bots from the set of emails
under consideration, and then if the remaining emails are all in
the same realm, we're good.
This fix changes two behaviors:
* You can no longer send a PM to an ordinary user in another realm
by piggy-backing a cross-realm bot on to the message. (This was
basically a bug, but it would never manifest under current
configurations.)
* You will be able to send PMs to multiple cross-realm bots at once.
(This was an arbitrary restriction. We don't really care about this
scenario much yet, and it fell out of the new implementation.)
We can currently send a PM to a user in another realm, as long
as we copy a cross-realm bot from the same realm. This loophole
doesn't yet affect us in practice--all cross-realm bots are
generally configured for the "admin" realm like the old zulip.com--
but we should lock it down in a subsequent commit.
Having each condition in a separate test was confusing to read,
especially since the tests were doing inconsistent setup, sometimes
calling user2 the user from 2.example.com realm and other times
calling user2 the cross-bot realm, etc.
When the render function is run now, it uses the partial_finder
function to search recursively through files for partials and add them
so that test writers don’t have to.
This means that we no longer have to do any manual work to maintain
the templates.js check that all handlebars templates are rendered by
the node tests.
Previously, var/casper/server.log was overwritten before every run of
run-casper. This commit implements the simplest form of log rotation,
by overwriting server.log only if it has more than 100kb.
Currently, message_edit.edit_message accesses elements of
message_edit_form.handlebars by a number of different means, and in a number
of different places. This commit is the first of two that standardizes it.
Previously we disabled fields in message_edit_form.handlebars that you
couldn't edit. This meant you could see the content of the field, but not
copy it. This commit marks those fields as readonly instead.
Previously,
* We displayed "(no topic)" in .message_edit_topic when there was no
topic;this commit changes that to a placeholder.
* We showed the .message_edit_topic_propagate dropdown when the user
cleared .message_edit_topic, despite the fact that one cannot save
or propagate an empty topic. This commit fixes the behavior.
Fixes#1273.