django commit 596564e80808 stores the user id in the session as a
string, which broke our code that extracts the user id and compares
it to the id of a UserProfile object.
(imported from commit 99defd7fea96553550fa19e0b2f3e91a1baac123)
Fixes
[
File "/srv/zulip/zerver/lib/actions.py", line 605, in recipient_for_emails
if not (normalized_emails & admin_realm_admin_emails or normalized_emails & settings.CROSS_REALM_BOT_EMAILS):
TypeError: unsupported operand type(s) for &: 'set' and 'list'
(imported from commit f39a95dad7b3207e9188fc03926cd116061ef3f3)
Include new field on Realm to control whether e-mail invitations are required
separately from whether the e-mail domain must match.
Allow control of these fields from admin panel.
Update logic in registration page to use these fields.
(imported from commit edc7f0a4c43b57361d9349e258ad4f217b426f88)
Truthfully, the actual way to do this is going to be a bit
more involved and also involves changing Realm.NOTIFICATION_STREAM_NAME,
probably on a realm-by-realm basis.
(imported from commit b6a05849d215e07ee6716d116ff5e2c819d5b4be)
This way if two browsers are disagreeing about your active status, the
active one wins. The active browser continues to update your timestamp,
and the idle browser's changes are discarded until the timestamp on your
active status expires.
(imported from commit dc29e013d045c4b72793097f611ba6802c58e57a)
We still don't show this in the frontend, aside from our usual "Not
delivered" message that we also show when you send to a non-existent
user.
Addresses #2349
(imported from commit 2f348b15a4d539987ddbcccbbf40e2be87c1f92d)
In a test run with a hand-constructed query, this sped up the query time from
280ms to 50ms.
(imported from commit 8cbe199ca50a487491d13d6d6ef940ea668c1038)
Adds APIs edit a bot's default_to_stream, default_events_register_stream
and default_all_public_streams.
(imported from commit c848a94b7932311143dad770c901d6688c936b6d)
Support setting default_to_stream, default_events_register_stream, and
default_all_public_streams during in the bot creation API.
(imported from commit bef484dd8be9f8aacd65a959594075aea8bdf271)
This allows bot owners to configure which streams messages are delivered
to without needing to change webhook URLs or configuration files.
(imported from commit 32a0c26657c145b001cd8cb3ce0a0364d48902ce)
Before saving a Message object, call update_calculated_fields()
to set the has_attachment/has_image/has_link fields.
Note that the pre_save hook we added here does not get called
if you call bulk_create, hence the explicit call to
update_calculated_fields() in do_send_messages().
(imported from commit 1d60ae5908ef186aa5ff1e39277dbb2b765e60d4)
A stream is vacant when it has no subscribers and occupied when it has at least
one subscriber.
We have a slightly odd model where stream creation is conflated with
subscription creation. Streams are created by attempting to subscribe to a
stream that doesn't exist. We also hide streams with no subscribers from users
to make it seem like they've gone away. However, we can't actually remove those
streams because we want to preserve history.
This commit moves us towards a separation of these two concepts. By sending
events for stream creation, occupation, vacancy, and deletion, we allow clients
to directly observe the global state of streams rather than indirectly observing
subscription information. A more complete solution would involve adding a view
for explicitly creating streams without subscribing to them.
This commit does not handle the intricacies of invite-only streams. We
currently simply do not send these events for invite-only streams.
(imported from commit 5430e5a5eecefafcdba4f5d4f9aa665556fcc559)
We now allow the list of recipients to be sent as a
comma-delimited string with optional JSON encoding.
(imported from commit e928b037bbd258348eb5b2ecca486d0bb77f593e)
Have the server send down the stream's id for removal
events, and have the client use that id to look up the
stream in its internal data structures. This sets the
stage for eventually just sending the stream id (and not
the stream name) down to clients, once all our clients
are ready to use the stream id.
(imported from commit 922516c98fb79ffad8ae7da0396646663ca54fd0)
Our overall guideline is the type names for events are singular, and the list of
events of that type are plural. 'subscriptions' was not following this guideline
and (potentially as a result) had a bug where it was impossible for clients to explicitly
subscribe to subscription change events properly.
(imported from commit 7b3162141fd673746e0489199966c29ea32ee876)