This changes bugdown to use the realm passed in by the caller (if any)
for rendering, fixing a problem where bots such as the notification
bot would have their messages rendering using the admin realm's
settings, not the settings of the realm their messages are being sent
into.
Also adds a test for the notification bot case.
Fixes#3215.
Before this commit, provisioning was done by executing provision.py,
which printed the log directly to stdout, making debugging harder.
This commit creates a wrapper bash script 'provision' in tools, which
calls 'zulip/scripts/tools/provision_vm.py' (the new location of
provision.py) and prints all the output to
'zulip/var/log/zulip/zulip_provision.log' via 'tee'.
Travis tests and docs have been modified accordingly.
Contributor visualization showing the avatar, user name and number
of commits for each contributors. The JSON data would be updated
upon deployment, triggered by the `update-prod-static` script.
Whether the emoji is valid is already being checked elsewhere, and
this duplicate regular expression makes it harder to understand what's
going on with Zulip's validation of emoji.
This should substantially improve the clarity of the code, since
inside bugdown, this is only being used as a hash key that happens to
usually be a realm ID, not used as a Realm ID.
- Change `stream_name` into `stream_id` on some API endpoints that use
`stream_name` in their URLs to prevent confusion of `views` selection.
For example:
If the stream name is "foo/members", the URL would be trigger
"^streams/(?P<stream_name>.*)/members$" and it would be confusing because
we intend to use the endpoint with "^streams/(?P<stream_name>.*)$" regex.
All stream-related endpoints now use stream id instead of stream name,
except for a single endpoint that lets you convert stream names to stream ids.
See https://github.com/zulip/zulip/issues/2930#issuecomment-269576231
- Add `get_stream_id()` method to Zulip API client, and change
`get_subscribers()` method to comply with the new stream API
(replace `stream_name` with `stream_id`).
Fixes#2930.
Remove events that don't exist.
Move handling issue events to separate function.
Make formatting strings using format function.
Change camelCase variable name convetion to using underscores.
Make unknown events error more clear.
Add issue_event_type_name param to all fixtures.
Previously, test_failed_signup_due_to_restricted_domain used a realm with
restricted domains, but also with invite_required = True. We didn't have a
test that tested for a failed signup in an open realm with restricted
domain, so edited test_failed_signup_due_to_restricted_domain to test for
that.
Bump up max length queries in `test_bulk_message_fetching()` to 11
in `zerver/tests/test_messages.py` to avoid test failing when run
this test alone.
Fixes#3087.
Finishes the refactoring started in c1bbd8d. The goal of the refactoring is
to change the argument to get_realm from a Realm.domain to a
Realm.string_id. The steps were
* Add a new function, get_realm_by_string_id.
* Change all calls to get_realm to use get_realm_by_string_id instead.
* Remove get_realm.
* (This commit) Rename get_realm_by_string_id to get_realm.
Part of a larger migration to remove the Realm.domain field entirely.
Add test about avatar image was uploaded properly or not in
`tests.BotTest.test_add_bot_with_user_avatar` and
`tests.BotTest.test_patch_bot_avatar`.
Add `get_test_image_file()` and `avatar_disk_path()` in
`zerver.lib.test_helpers` and deduplicate some codes.
Fixes#1276.
Previously, we included a special subscribe button in new stream
notifications, but that had 2 problems:
(1) The subscribe button would render badly if the stream was renamed.
(2) There wasn't an easy way to look at the stream when deciding
whether to subscribe.
This fixes the second problem, but not really the first.
This adds support for only allowing normal users with account age
equal or greater than a "waiting period" threshold to create streams;
this is useful for open organizations that want new members to
understand the community before creating streams.
If create_stream_by_admins_only setting is set to True, only admin users
were able to create streams. Now normal users with account age greater
or equal than waiting period threshold can also create streams.
Account age is defined as number of days passed since the user had
created his account.
Fixes: #2308.
Tweaked by tabbott to clean up the actual can_create_streams logic and
the tests.