An HTML document sent without a charset in the Content-Type header
needs to be scanned for a charset in <meta> tags. We need to pass
bytes instead of str to Beautiful Soup to allow it to do this.
Fixes#16843.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
We export a realm's data, and disable the realm, because the user
is moving from Zulip Cloud (e.g. https://example.zulipchat.com/) to
self-hosting or another platform (e.g. https://zulip.example.com/)
which we do not control. This commit adds a field in the realm object
called deactivated_redirect to store the url to which the realm has
moved.
This simplifies the code, as it allows using the mechanism of converting
JsonableErrors into a response instead of having separate, but
ultimately similar, logic in RateLimitMiddleware.
We don't touch tests here because "rate limited" error responses are
already verified in test_external.py.
In 1bcb8d8ee8 I made
it so the webapp doesn't include "streams" in its
state from `fetch_initial_state_data`, but I didn't
address all the places in apply_event.
For 3000 messages and 400 users, this saved
about 30 seconds.
We only do two queries per batch of messages
now, and the algorithm is easier to analyze,
as it's just three nested loops.
Note that we are much more efficient about finding
active users here:
- we do one query per realm (instead of per-user)
- we pass the cutoff date to the database
- we get back just a list of distinct ids
This function is going away completely soon. It is
querying everybody's entire UserActivity history instead
of passing the cutoff date to the database!
The query counts increase here for somewhat
contrived reasons. The tests before this
commit reflected a successful trip to the
UserProfile cache, but that's not actually
realistic in practice.
The code we deleted here was no longer
doing anything.
Maybe the code was always dead, or maybe it
was written during a time when topics_by_diversity
and topics_by_length actually had different keys.
But now it's clearly cruft.
If we have 4 or more topics, then the code above
it would already have populated the list with 4
elements, and the `if num_convos < 4` condition
would evaluate to False.
And if we had 3 or fewer topics, then we would
have already put all possible topics into our
result, and the `topics_by_diversity[num_convos:4]`
slice would be empty.
It's possible that we should just have a simple
heuristic for topic hotness like `10*num_senders
+ messages`, so we don't have to maintain this
fiddly function, and we can just do something like
`topics_by_score[:4]`.
I now use sets for stream_ids in more of the digest
code.
As part of this I replaced exclude_subscription_modified_streams
with streams_recently_modified_for_user.
It's easier for the caller to just ask for ids
to delete from its callee than it is to pass
in a set/list to mutate.
The simpler boundary between the functions makes
the tests easier to write--you can see the
`filtered_streams` logic goes away in this diff.
I also make the tests a bit more thorough by using
combinations of Cordelia/Othello and Verona/Denmark
to try to find multiple possible flaws.
And I make the time intervals longer than 1s to
avoid false negatives from slow CI boxes.
If we have multiple users, this reduces the amount
of queries we need to do, because we get all
subscriptions for all users in a single query
to Subscription.
For the single-user case, we are introducing an
extra query hop, but the database is doing
roughly the same work, because we are just breaking
up this complex query into two hops:
messages =
select ... from message
where recipient__type_id in (
select stream_id from subscription
where ...
)
Now it's more like:
stream_ids =
select stream_id from subscription
where ...
messages =
select ... from message
where recipient__type_id in stream_ids
Note that we are not changing anything semantically
or algorithmically yet. The only overhead here
for the single-user case is boxing and unboxing
data into single-item dicts and lists.
The interfaces for callers in the view and the
queue processor remain the same for now.
This extraction will make a bit more sense when
we start doing bulk operations on a realm to
get digests, but even now, it encapsulates the
slightly complex way we cherry-pick the top 4
topics for a user.
This prep step is mostly for diff hygiene; the next
commit will make the code a bit nicer.
The original code here had the nice property that
most (but not all) of the DB work happened up
front in `handle_digest_email`, and none of the
DB work was delegated to the callers. But I
prefer the tradeoff of making the helpers a bit
more cohesive--let them get the data they need.
And we have query-count coverage in our tests,
so there's no real danger of having helpers
down in the stack insidiously doing a bunch of
extra DB hops.
In 709493cd75 (Feb 2017)
I added code to render_markdown that re-fetched the
sender of the message, to detect whether the message is
a bot.
It's better to just let the ORM fetch this. The
message object should already have sender.
The diff makes it look like we are saving round trips
to the database, which is true in some cases. For
the main message-send codepath, though, we are only
saving a trip to memcached, since the middleware
will have put our sender's user object into the
cache. The test_message_send test calls internally
to check_send_stream_message, so it was actually
hitting the database in render_markdown (prior to
my change).
Before this change we were clearing the cache on
every SQL usage.
The code to do this was added in February 2017
in 6db4879f9c.
Now we clear the cache just one time, but before
the action/request under test.
Tests that want to count queries with a warm
cache now specify keep_cache_warm=True. Those
tests were particularly flawed before this change.
In general, the old code both over-counted and
under-counted queries.
It under-counted SQL usage for requests that were
able to pull some data out of a warm cache before
they did any SQL. Typically this would have bypassed
the initial query to get UserProfile, so you
will see several off-by-one fixes.
The old code over-counted SQL usage to the extent
that it's a rather extreme assumption that during
an action itself, the entries that you put into
the cache will get thrown away. And that's essentially
what the prior code simulated.
Now, it's still bad if an action keeps hitting the
cache for no reason, but it's not as bad as hitting
the database. There doesn't appear to be any evidence
of us doing something silly like fetching the same
data from the cache in a loop, but there are
opportunities to prevent second or third round
trips to the cache for the same object, if we
can re-structure the code so that the same caller
doesn't have two callees get the same data.
Note that for invites, we have some cache hits
that are due to the nature of how we serialize
data to our queue processor--we generally just
serialize ids, and then re-fetch objects when
we pop them off the queue.
Steve asked me to remove this, since the tictactoe game was always
intended as a proof of concept. Now that we have poll and todo
widgets, the sample code for tictactoe has much less value.
We replace the content and type in test_widgets.py to maintain
coverage.
This reverts commit 564b199fe6, which
was part of #16308.
Escaping is either required or incorrect; it is never “defensive”.
This escaping is incorrect. lxml already escapes attributes during
serialization (any other behavior would be a serious bug), and
additional escaping just results in double escaping.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Initally, when writing two or more quotes, having
a blank line in between them, merges those quotes.
This created confusion especially in "quote and reply".
This commit fixes such issues. Now two or more quotes
having a blank line in between them, will not get merged.
This change is correct both for usability and for improving our
compatibility with CommonMark.
Fixes#14379.
By registering a post_delete handler to clear appropriate caches in a
nicer way, we can get rid of the ugly flush-memcached call in the
delete_realm command.
This commit removes mock.patch with assertLogs().
* Adds return value to do_rest_call() in outgoing_webhook.py, to
support asserting log output in test_outgoing_webhook_system.py.
* Logs are not asserted in test_realm.py because it would require to users
to be queried using users=User.objects.filter(realm=realm) and the order
of resulting queryset varies for each run.
* In test_decorators.py, replacement of mock.patch is not done because
I'm not sure if it's worth the effort to replace it as it's a return
value of a function.
Tweaked by tabbott to set proper mypy types.
Boto3 does not allow setting the endpoint url from
the config file. Thus we create a django setting
variable (`S3_ENDPOINT_URL`) which is passed to
service clients and resources of `boto3.Session`.
We also update the uploads-backend documentation
and remove the config environment variable as now
AWS supports the SIGv4 signature format by default.
And the region name is passed as a parameter instead
of creating a config file for just this value.
Fixes#16246.
While working on shifting toward native browser time zone APIs
(#16451), it was found that all but very recent Chrome and Node
versions reject certain legacy timezone aliases like US/Pacific
(https://crbug.com/364374).
For now, we only canonicalize the timezone property returned in user
objects and not the timezone setting itself.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
During the new user creation code path, there can be no existing
active clients for the user being created, so we can skip the code to
send events to that user's clients.
The tests here reflect that we need to send fewer events, and do fewer
queries that would have been spent computing data for these..
Fixes#16503, combined with the long series of recent changes by Steve
Howell to fix super-linear behavior in this code path.
We no bulk up peer_add/peer_remove events by user if the
same user has subscribed to multiple streams (and just
that single user).
This mostly optimizes the new-user codepath, but the
algorithm is a bit more general in nature.
See commit 8b002040e0 and #86. The
development environment bug that necessitated this handler has long
been irrelevant.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
We now can send an implied matrix of user/stream tuples
for peer_add and peer_remove events.
The client code basically does this:
for stream_id in event['stream_ids']:
for user_id in event['user_ids']:
update_sub(stream_id, user_id)
We used to send individual events, which gets real
expensive when you are creating new streams. For
the case of copy-to-stream case, we should see
events go from U to 1, where U is the number of users
added.
Note that we don't yet fully optimize the potential
of this schema. For adding a new user with lots
of default streams, we still send S peer_add events.
And if you subscribe a bunch of users to a bunch of
private streams, we only go from U * S to S; we can't
optimize it down to one event easily.
All the fields of a stream's recipient object can
be inferred from the Stream, so we just make a local
object. Django will create a Message object without
checking that the child Recipient object has been
saved. If that behavior changes in some upgrade,
we should see some pretty obvious symptom, including
query counts changing.
Tweaked by tabbott to add a longer explanatory comment, and delete a
useless old comment.
This saves us a query for edge cases like when
you try to unsubscribe from a public stream
that you have already unsubscribed from.
But this is mostly to prep for upcoming
optimizations.
This doesn't change anything yet, but the goal is
to eventually optimize events for the case where
one user (typically a new user) gets subscribed
to multiple public streams.
Initially markdown titles were overridden by Youtube and Vimeo preview titles.
But now it will check if any markdown title is present to replace Youtube or
Vimeo preview titles, if preview of linked websites is enabled.
Fixes#16100
Upstream has slightly changed the whitespace around stashes. Take
this opportunity to clean up the extra blank lines we were outputting.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
There was no need to put "stream_id" on the sub
dictionary here. It's kinda annoying to introduce
the little helper here, but I feel
that's better than crufting up the sub data
structure.
The is_web_public flag is already in Stream.API_FIELDS,
so there is no reason for all this complicated logic.
There's no reason to hack it on to the subscription
object.
We replace all_streams_id with a map.
We also use it to populate never_subscribed_streams.
And all_streams_map is a superset of stream_hash,
which we will soon kill off as well.
Apparently I put these parens in the code as
part of 73c30774cb
during 2017.
It looks like I extracted is_public during
the middle of my change and forgot to remove
the unnecessary parens. (The code was correct,
but it makes it look like a tuple if you're
skimming it too quickly.)
That class is an artifact of when Stream
didn't have recipient_id. Now it's simpler
to deal with stream subscriptions.
We also save a query during page load (and
other places where we get subscriber
info).
Let the callers access stream.recipient as needed.
It costs the same, and some of the callers can
actually stop caring about the actual Recipient
object.
We already trust ids that are put on our queue
for deferred work. For example, see the code for
"mark_stream_messages_as_read_for_everyone"
We now pass stream_recipient_id when we queue
up work for do_mark_stream_messages_as_read.
This generally saves about 3 queries per
user when we unsubscribe them from a stream.
We get two speedups:
* The query to get existing subscribers only
gets the two fields we need. We no longer
need all the overhead of user_profile
and recipient data being returned in the
query.
* We avoid Django making extra hops to the
database to get user info.
Previously, the transaction.atomic() was not properly scoped to ensure
that RealmAuditLog entries were created in the same transaction,
making it possible for state changes to not be properly recorded in
RealmAuditLog.
When apps like mobile register for "streams", we
will now just use active streams as our baseline,
rather than "occupied" streams.
This means we will send a stream that is active,
even if it happens to have zero occupants. It's
actually pretty rare that a stream has zero occupants,
and it's not exactly clear that we want to exclude
a non-occupied but otherwise active stream from
our list of streams.
It also happens to be fairly expensive to compute
whether a stream is occupied.
This change only affects API clients (including
possibly our mobile app). The main webapp never
used the data from this codepath.
We replace get_peer_user_ids_for_stream_change
with two bulk functions to get peers and/or
subscribers.
Note that we have three codepaths that care about
peers:
subscribing existing users:
we need to tell peers about new subscribers
we need to tell subscribed user about old subscribers
unsubscribing existing users:
we only need to tell peers who unsubscribed
subscribing new user:
we only need to tell peers about the new user
(right now we generate send_event
calls to tell the new user about existing
subscribers, but this is a waste
of effort that we will fix soon)
The two bulk functions are this:
bulk_get_subscriber_peer_info
bulk_get_peers
They have some overlap in the implementation,
but there are some nuanced differences that are
described in the comments.
Looking up peers/subscribers in bulk leads to some
nice optimizations.
We will save some memchached traffic if you are
subscribing to multiple public streams.
We will save a query in the remove-subscriber
case if you are only dealing with private streams.
This will ensure that we always fully execute the database part of
modifying subscription objects. In particular, this should prevent
invariant failures like #16347 where Subscription objects were created
without corresponding RealmAuditLog entries.
Fixes#16347.
We don't need the select_related('user_profile')
optimization any more, because we just keep
track of user info in our own data structures.
In this codepath we are never actually modifying
users; we just occasionally need their ids or
emails.
This can be a pretty substantive improvement if
you are adding a bunch of users to a stream
who each have a bunch of their own subscriptions.
We could also limit the number of full rows in this
query by adding an extra hop to the DB just to
get colors (using values_list), and then only get
full sub info for the streams that we're adding, rather
than getting every single subscription, in full, for each user.
Apart from finding what colors the user has already
used, the only other reason we need all the columns
in Subscription here is to handle streams that
need to be reactivated. Otherwise we could do
only("id", "active", "recipient_id", "user_profile_id")
or similar. Fortunately, Subscription isn't
an overly wide table; it's mostly bool fields.
But by far the biggest thing to avoid is bringing
in all the extra user_profile data.
We have pretty good coverage on query counts here,
so I think this fix is pretty low risk.
This class removes a lot of the annoying tuples
we were passing around.
Also, by including the user everywhere, which
is easily available to us when we make instances
of SubInfo, it sets the stage to remove
select_related('user_profile').
We used to send occupy/vacate events when
either the first person entered a stream
or the last person exited.
It appears that our two main apps have never
looked at these events. Instead, it's
generally the case that clients handle
events related to stream creation/deactivation
and subscribe/unsubscribe.
Note that we removed the apply_events code
related to these events. This doesn't affect
the webapp, because the webapp doesn't care
about the "streams" field in do_events_register.
There is a theoretical situation where a
third party client could be the victim of
a race where the "streams" data includes
a stream where the last subscriber has left.
I suspect in most of those situations it
will be harmless, or possibly even helpful
to the extent that they'll learn about
streams that are in a "quasi" state where
they're activated but not occupied.
We could try to patch apply_event to
detect when subscriptions get added
or removed. Or we could just make the
"streams" piece of do_events_register
not care about occupy/vacate semantics.
I favor the latter, since it might
actually be what users what, and it will
also simplify the code and improve
performance.
The query to get "occupied" streams has been expensive
in the past. I'm not sure how much any recent attempts
to optimize that query have mitigated the issue, but
since we clearly aren't sending this data, there is no
reason to compute it.
Using web_public_guest for anonymous users is confusing since
'guest' is actually a logged-in user compared to
web_public_guest which is not logged-in and has only
read access to messages. So, we rename it to
web_public_visitor.
We no longer do O(N) queries to get existing streams.
This is a somewhat contrived use case--generally, we
are not trying to re-subscribe a user to several
streams. Still, we want to avoid this.
This commit also makes `test_bulk_subscribe_many`
do more work, and the change to the test helped
me discover this bug.
If a user asks to be subscribed to a stream
that they are already subscribed to, then
that stream won't be in new_stream_user_ids,
and we won't need to send an event for it.
This change makes that happen more automatically.
Let
U = number of users to subscribe
S = number of streams to subscribe
We were technically doing N^3 amount of work
when we sent certain events, or to be more
precise, U * S * S amount of work. For each
stream, we were looping through a list of tuples
of size U * S to find the users for the stream.
In practice either U or S is usually 1, so the
performance gains here are probably negligible,
especially since the constant factors here
were just slinging around Python data.
But the code is actually more readable now, so
it's a double win.
We rename needs_new_sub (which sounds like
a boolean!) to new_recipient_ids, and we
calculate it explicitly within the loop, so
that we don't need to worry as much about
subsequent passes through the loop mutating it.
This allows us to also remove recipient_ids,
which in turn lets us remove recipients_map,
albeit with a small tweak for stream_map.
I also introduce the my_subs local, which
I use to more directly populate used_colors,
as well as using it as the loop var.
I think it's important that the callers understand
that bulk_add_subscriptions assumes all streams
are being created within a single realm, so I make
it an explicit parameter.
This may be overkill--I would also be happy if we
just included the assertions from this commit.
This function now does all the work that we used
to do with notify_subscriptions_added happening
inside a loop.
There's a small fine-tuning here, where we only
get recent traffic on streams that we're actually
sending events for.
We now just pass in all_subscribers_by_stream, rather
than a callback.
We also move sub_tuples_by_user closer to the
loop where we call notify_subscriptions_added.
This preserves the alpha layer on GIF images that need to be resized
before being uploaded. Two important changes occur here:
1. The new frame is a *copy* of the original image, which preserves the
GIF info.
2. The disposal method of the original GIF is preserved. This
essentially determines what state each frame of the GIF starts from
when it is drawn; see PIL's docs:
https://pillow.readthedocs.io/en/stable/handbook/image-file-formats.html#saving
for more info.
This resolves some but not all of the test cases in #16370.