The current logic that we have is as follows:
* If a message is locally echoed, the draft is stored via the locally
rendered message, and that system takes care of it. So no need to
store it here.
* If the message isn't locally echoed, we don't close the compose box
until, so the content is safe here as well. It'll be saved as a draft
if the compose box is later closed due to a failure sending.
We now make tests that call EventsRegisterTest.do_test()
explicitly specify whether calls to apply_events() would
change the state of initially fetched data. Generally
these tests exist to test that logic (as well as verifying
schemas of events), so if they stop testing that logic, it
is usually a broken test.
Some tests are exempted from the check here, because I think
they don't really change state--such as updating messages or
notifications. You can set state_change_expected to False
for those tests.
For all the tests that deal with flipping boolean flags, I
set their value to False before calling do_test twice now.
For the authentication backends, I mock the settings so that
more backends are "supported" and therefore part of the event
and the fetched state.
Finally, for the bot tests, I make sure to use a bot the user
can access.
This replaces the settings toggle which had the same markup as the
current component toggle, but not the same JavaScript, along with
having an issue with inline-block spacing, with the new JS generated
one.
We now call activity.build_user_sidebar when we initialize
the user sidebar, which avoids some janky jQuery code
that was intended for partial updates.
With 2000 users in dev, the amount of time to build the sidebar
decreases from 1100ms to 700ms in my tests. (Times vary a bit,
but it does seem consistently faster now.)
Activity.update_users() is still used to handle partial
updates of users in the buddy list, but now all the places
that want to re-build the whole widget go through
build_user_sidebar().
The original include_subscribers implementation did not correctly
update the apply_events code path to avoid adding 'subscribers' dicts
to things. This corrects that oversight.
There's a new option, `include_subscribers`, that controls whether the
API sends down subscriber data for the various streams you are
subscribed to.
This has significant performance savings for large realms with naive
clients, and saves a bunch of bandwidth as well.
The pinned streams were sorted in alphabetic order (i.e. Verona appears
before devel). The reason is that after we plucked pinned streams out from
stream_data.subscribed_streams(), we didn't sort them again, so they
remained in the alphabetic order used in stream_data.
However, we did sort unpinned streams explicitly by using custom compare
function in stream_list.js (by default sort by lowercase stream name,
but when there are more than 40 subscribed streams, sort active streams
first). That's why this issue only relates to pinned streams.
Changes were made to sort pinned streams by lowercase stream name, always,
whether they are active or not (different from unpinned streams).
Tests were added to ensure this overall sort order is correct, i.e.
1. pinned streams are always sorted by lowercase stream name.
2. pinned streams are always before unpinned streams.
3. unpinned streams are sorted by lowercase stream name, if there are more
than 40 subscribed streams, sort active streams at the top, among active
and inactive streams, still sorted by lowercase stream name.
Fixes#3701
User search for streams will now return results where the stream
description (but not the stream name) include the string in the
user query.
The filtering process first obtains the streams whose names match the
user search query, then sorts and displays them. From the remaining
streams, it obtains streams whose description matches the query and
displays them in sorted order after the name match results. Other
streams are not displayed.
Fixes: #2674.
This fixes a performance regression loading the Zulip homepage.
While it decreases the utility of the display of messages, it's only
so much loss (because the display recipient for PMs was totally broken
anyway).
* Now queue_workers.py sorts queue names and prints them on their own
line. Previously it's output was nondeterministic.
* Simplified grep strategy for removing the "test" worker.
When an admin deactivate a stream, we now remove the
appropriate row from the default streams tables for other
folks viewing default streams in the admin tables.
We add a default_streams_table() function that builds an
object encapsulating the defaults streams table in the admin
system.
This function allows us to simplify the click handler code by
closing on row/stream_name rather than picking those values out
of the DOM.
Fixes#268.
Modified significantly by tabbott to:
* improve code cleanliness / repetition
* add missing translation tags
* move code into message_edit.js
* correspond with the new backend.
* not display the option for messages only topic-edited
This makes it super easy for frontend code using this view code to
produce a nice display of the history.
This also fixes an off-by-one error with the timestamps.
This list was likely to end up out of date quickly, since it wasn't
documented that you need to update it when adding a queue. The best
solution is to just not require it to be updated.
Our lists of rabbitmq queues was likely to end up out of date, since
there was nothing enforcing that the various lists of queues were
correct or the same as each other.
Based on work by Kartik Maji in #1204.
This has a few significant changes from the original version:
* We correctly handle filling in data for topic edits
* Has a complete test suite verifying correctness of the logic
* Currently, it doesn't include a special "start" entry
Things we may want to further change include:
* Adding a special "start" entry.
* Reversing the order of the history data returned for clarity.
This is important for, in the future, being able to display who edited
the topic of a message if that wasn't the person who originally sent
the message.