When using the sub-expression purely for filtering, and not for
accessing the value in the resultset, .alias() is potentially faster
since it does not pull the value in as well.
migrate the following endpoints from @has_request_variables
to @typed_endpoint :
- upgrade()
- remote_realm_upgrade()
- upgrade_page()
- remote_server_upgrade()
Creates a new "realm_deactivated" email that can be sent to realm
owners as part of `do_deactivate_realm`, via a boolean flag,
`email_owners`.
This flag is set to `False` when `do_deactivate_realm` is used for
realm exports or changing a realm's subdomain, so that the active
organization owners are not emailed in those cases.
This flag is optional for the `deactivate_realm` management command,
but as there is no active user passed in that case, then the email
is sent without referencing who deactivated the realm.
It is passed as `True` for the support analytics view, but the email
that is generated does not include information about the support
admin user who completed the request for organization deactivation.
When an active organization owner deactivates the organization, then
the flag is `True` and an email is sent to them as well as any other
active organization owners, with a slight variation in the email text
for those two cases.
Adds specific tests for when `email_owners` is passed as `True`. All
existing tests for other functionality of `do_deactivate_user` pass
the flag as `False`.
Adds `localize` from django.util.formats as a jinja env filter so
that the dates in these emails are internationlized for the owner's
default language setting in the "realm_deactivated" email templates.
Fixes#24685.
Migrate all `ids` of anything which does not have a foreign key from
the Message or UserMessage table (and would thus require walking
those) to be `bigint`. This is done by removing explicit
`BigAutoField`s, trading them for explicit `AutoField`s on the tables
to not be migrated, while updating `DEFAULT_AUTO_FIELD` to the new
default.
In general, the tables adjusted in this commit are small tables -- at
least compared to Messages and UserMessages.
Many-to-many tables without their own model class are adjusted by a
custom Operation, since they do not automatically pick up migrations
when `DEFAULT_AUTO_FIELD` changes[^1].
Note that this does multiple scans over tables to update foreign
keys[^2]. Large installs may wish to hand-optimize this using the
output of `./manage.py sqlmigrate` to join multiple `ALTER TABLE`
statements into one, to speed up the migration. This is unfortunately
not possible to do generically, as constraint names may differ between
installations.
This leaves the following primary keys as non-`bigint`:
- `auth_group.id`
- `auth_group_permissions.id`
- `auth_permission.id`
- `django_content_type.id`
- `django_migrations.id`
- `otp_static_staticdevice.id`
- `otp_static_statictoken.id`
- `otp_totp_totpdevice.id`
- `two_factor_phonedevice.id`
- `zerver_archivedmessage.id`
- `zerver_client.id`
- `zerver_message.id`
- `zerver_realm.id`
- `zerver_recipient.id`
- `zerver_userprofile.id`
[^1]: https://code.djangoproject.com/ticket/32674
[^2]: https://code.djangoproject.com/ticket/24203
In the activity and support views, we want to see the annual
revenue for fixed price plans. While on billing pages, we do
not display this information as these plans are renegotiated
annually.
Adds get_annual_recurring_revenue_for_support_data function
to BillingSession class, so that we can get the fixed price
plan data for these views without changing the logic for
what is displayed on the billing pages.
Adds a link to the stripe customer dashboard if the Customer
object for an active plan has a stripe_customer_id. If there
is no stripe ID to link to, then the icon is shown without
a link, which is the case for remote server/realm sponsorships
and legacy plans.
It's going to be helpful in the future to record the reason for realm
deactivation.
- For information tracking
- For making a distinction between cases where we can allow realm owners
to reactivate their realm via a self-serve flow (e.g.
"owner_request") vs where we can't (ToS abuse).
This commit adds include_realm_default_subscriptions parameter
to the invite endpoints and the corresponding field in
PreregistrationUser and MultiuseInvite objects. This field will
be used to subscribe the new users to the default streams at the
time of account creation and not to the streams that were default
when sending the invite.
In #23380, we are changing all occurrences of uri with url in order to
follow the latest URL standard. Previous PRs #25038 and #25045 has
replaced the occurences of uri that has no direct relation with realm.
This commit changes just the model property, which has no API
compatibility concerns.
This prevents users from hammering the invitation endpoint, causing
races, and inviting more users than they should otherwise be allowed
to.
Doing this requires that we not raise InvitationError when we have
partially succeeded; that behaviour is left to the one callsite of
do_invite_users.
Reported by Lakshit Agarwal (@chiekosec).
We use `error_description` in upgrade.ts to determine if the error was
related to customer's card. Doesn't seem like there is any harm
in doing so since we are explicitly handling "stripe.CardError" and
raising these errors with "card error" description.
This also now allows user to upgrade to plus plan from pricing page.
Note that since we don't pass customer_plan on pages like self-hosting
and for/business, `Current plan` status is not displayed on these pages.
Earlier, we were not verifying that the invoice which got paid is
for the fixed-price plan.
That could result in a bug where another support invoice with
collection_method = "send_invoice" got paid while a fixed-price
plam is already configured. The fixed-price plan would be falsely
activated.
This commit verifies the invoice before activating the fixed-price
plan.
For simiplicty's sake, we can avoid trying to do cache invalidation in
the variety of events that can cause the seat count to change - since
having an up to 1 day delay between users being added and the upload
limit going up is quite reasonable.
This might not be the most meaningful change of phrasing, but .is_paid()
sounds like it's a check for whether the customer has already paid their
invoice. is_a_paid_plan() reflects better the meaning that it's whether
it's a plan of a "paid" type.
We send customer an invoice at the start of free trial, if customer
pays we upgrade them to the active plan at the end of free trial,
else we downgrade them and show a custom message on the upgrade
page regarding the current status.