When searching for links inside a topic name, the question mark (?)
was used to split the topic. If a URL had a query after the URL
(e.g., "?foo=bar"), then the query was trimmed from the URL.
Removing the question mark from `basic_link_splitter` is sufficient
to fix this issue. The `get_web_link_regex` function then removes
the trailing punctuation if any, including literal question marks.
Fixes#26368.
Fixes#11767.
Previously multi-character emoji sequences weren't matched in the
emoji regex, so we'd convert the characters to separate images,
breaking the intended display.
This change allows us to match the full emoji sequence, and
therefore show the correct image.
This commit completes the notifications part of the @topic
wildcard mention feature.
Notifications are sent to the topic participants for the
@topic wildcard mention.
The active realm emoji are just a subset of all your
realm emoji, so just use a single cache entry per
realm.
Cache misses should be very infrequent per realm.
If a realm has lots of deactivated realm emoji, then
there's a minor expense to deserialize them, but that
is gonna be dwarfed by all the other more expensive
operations in message-send.
I also renamed the two related functions. I erred on
the side of using somewhat verbose names, as we don't
want folks to confuse the two use cases. Fortunately
there are somewhat natural affordances to use one or
the other, and mypy helps too.
Finally, I use realm_id instead of realm in places
where we don't need the full Realm object.
This commit adds a boolean field `mentions_topic_wildcard`
to the `MessageRenderingResult` dataclass.
The field is set to true only if message rendering determines
the message has an actual topic wildcard mention in it (and not,
e.g., topic wildcard mention syntax inside a code block).
The rendered content for topic wildcard mention is
'<span class="topic-mention">{wildcard}</span>'.
The 'topic-mention' class is the identifier for the wildcard
mention being a topic wildcard mention.
We don't use 'data-user-id="*"' and "user-mention" class for
topic wildcard mentions and eventually plan to remove them for
stream wildcard mentions too in a separate mini-project.
Updates find_proper_insertion_index to check for the inline image
classes as matching at least one of the classes in the element's
attrib["class"] so that cases where an inline preview image has
multiple classes, like YouTube video previews, will have the
correct insertion index.
Fixes#26186.
This prep commit replaces the 'wildcard' keyword in the codebase
with 'stream_wildcard' at some places for better readability, as
we plan to introduce 'topic_wildcards' as a part of the
'@topic mention' project.
Currently, 'wildcards = ["all", "everyone", "stream"]' which is an
alias to mention everyone in the stream, hence better renamed as
'stream_wildcards'.
Eventually, we will have:
'stream_wildcard' as an alias to mention everyone in the stream.
'topic_wildcard' as an alias to mention everyone in the topic.
'wildcard' refers to 'stream_wildcard' and 'topic_wildcard' as a whole.
Twitter removed their v1 API. We take care to keep the existing cached
results around for now, and to not poison that cache, since we might
be able replace this with something that can still use the existing
cache.
This swaps out url_format_string from all of our APIs and replaces it
with url_template. Note that the documentation changes in the following
commits will be squashed with this commit.
We change the "url_format" key to "url_template" for the
realm_linkifiers events in event_schema, along with updating
LinkifierDict. "url_template" is the name chosen to normalize
mixed usages of "url_format_string" and "url_format" throughout
the backend.
The markdown processor is updated to stop handling the format string
interpolation and delegate the task template expansion to the uri_template
library instead.
This change affects many test cases. We mostly just replace "%(name)s"
with "{name}", "url_format_string" with "url_template" to make sure that
they still pass. There are some test cases dedicated for testing "%"
escaping, which aren't relevant anymore and are subject to removal.
But for now we keep most of them as-is, and make sure that "%" is always
escaped since we do not use it for variable substitution any more.
Since url_format_string is not populated anymore, a migration is created
to remove this field entirely, and make url_template non-nullable since
we will always populate it. Note that it is possible to have
url_template being null after migration 0422 and before 0424, but
in practice, url_template will not be None after backfilling and the
backend now is always setting url_template.
With the removal of url_format_string, RealmFilter model will now be cleaned
with URL template checks, and the old checks for escapes are removed.
We also modified RealmFilter.clean to skip the validation when the
url_template is invalid. This avoids raising mulitple ValidationError's
when calling full_clean on a linkifier. But we might eventually want to
have a more centric approach to data validation instead of having
the same validation in both the clean method and the validator.
Fixes#23124.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
Ever since we started bundling the app with webpack, there’s been less
and less overlap between our ‘static’ directory (files belonging to
the frontend app) and Django’s interpretation of the ‘static’
directory (files served directly to the web).
Split the app out to its own ‘web’ directory outside of ‘static’, and
remove all the custom collectstatic --ignore rules. This makes it
much clearer what’s actually being served to the web, and what’s being
bundled by webpack. It also shrinks the release tarball by 3%.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Black 23 enforces some slightly more specific rules about empty line
counts and redundant parenthesis removal, but the result is still
compatible with Black 22.
(This does not actually upgrade our Python environment to Black 23
yet.)
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
The max inline preview limit was previously increased to 10 by #20789.
However, as issue #23624 shows, it's still causing confusion for users
when they include more than 10 links.
Bump this limit up to 24, which is a multiple of the 4 image preview
per line logic.
This uses the linkifier index among the list of linkifiers in the
replacement as the priority to order the replacement order for
patterns in the topic. This avoids having multiple overlapping matches
that each produce a link.
The linkifier with the lowest id will be prioritized when its pattern
overlaps with another. Linkifiers are prioritized over raw URLs.
Note that the same algorithm is used for local echoing and the
backend markdown processor.
Fixes#23715.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
The same pattern being matched multiple times in a topic cannot be
properly ordered using topic_name.find(match_text) and etc. when there
are multiple matches of the same pattern in the topic.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
9381a3bd45 added support for linkifier pattern URLs containing
`%20`-style escapes, but only did so for the codepath which is used in
the message body -- topic links did not understand them.
Expand the support to include when they are substituted into topics.
Due to mismatches between the URL parsers in Python and browsers, it
was possible to hoodwink rewrite_local_links_to_relative into
generating links that browsers would interpret as absolute.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Now the following characters are allowed before @-mentions and stream
references (starting with #) for proper rendering - {, [, /.
This commit makes the markdown rendering consistent with autocomplete
(anything that is autocompleted is also rendered properly).