We will later use this data to include text like:
`<sender> mentioned @<user_group>` instead of the current
`<sender> mentioned you` when someone mentions a user group
the current user is a part of in email/push notification.
Part of #13080.
We will use this later to display which user group was mentioned
in push and email notifications.
`mentioned_user_group_ids` is kept as a List (not Set) to ensure proper
test coverage of the function, since it depends on the order of iteration,
and we cannot change the order of iteration for a set (which we'll need
to do for proper testing).
Part of #13080.
The absence of __init__.py was preventing mypy from following any of
the zerver.openapi imports. These errors were being silenced by
ignore_missing_imports.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
An organization with at most 5 users that is behind on payments isn't
worth spending time on investigating the situation.
For larger organizations, we likely want somewhat different logic that
at least does not void invoices.
get_public_upload_root_url and construct_public_upload_url_base were
both doing basically the same thing in the same. We deduplicate this,
making them share the same code, using the approach from
get_public_upload_root_url of using urljoin.
Using a format string is not a great idea, as it doesn't handle the case
of the URL already having parts that will be interpreted as format
string metacharacters. On the downside, this approach negatively affects
performance:
```
...: s = time.time()
...: for i in range(0, 250):
...: r = u.get_public_upload_url("foo")
...: print(time.time()-s)
0.020366191864013672
```
up from 0.001 before this change.
As we have changed the tab selector above from "Settings" to "Personal
settings", we can simply change "Your bots" to "Bots" as "Bots" is
clear enough given the personal settings context.
We also need to update the API documentation for bots accordingly.
This commit fixes the documentation of settings as we have
replaced "Your account" section into two new sections -
"Profile" and "Account & privacy".
This commit also fixes a comment in the test for settings
documentation in test_middleware.py.
JsonableError has two major benefits over json_error:
* It can be raised from anywhere in the codebase, rather than
being a return value, which is much more convenient for refactoring,
as one doesn't potentially need to change error handling style when
extracting a bit of view code to a function.
* It is guaranteed to contain the `code` property, which is helpful
for API consistency.
Various stragglers are not updated because JsonableError requires
subclassing in order to specify custom data or HTTP status codes.
The previous string was bold, potentially confusing, and doesn't
explain clearly what's happening. We replace this with a string that's
more or less copied from what we do in email notifications with the
similar setting enabled.
When a user has disabled message content in mobile push notifications,
we send a fixed string (currently "REDACTED") as the content of the
notification. Previously, this string was not tagged for translation;
we fix that here.
Additionally, because mobile push notifications are generated in a
queue worker, they do not have the user's language set by the Django
middleware. Our email notifications solve that problem using
`override_language`; we do the same here.
We choose to do override_language in get_message_payload_apns and
get_message_payload_gcm, rather than the caller, in order to be
consistent with tests.
Tested end-to-end by tabbott by setting a translation for "REDACTED"
manually in German.
Fixes#18713.
We modify check_send_webhook_message to make it accept three new
parameters: only_events and exclude_events that are retrieved using REQ,
and complete_event_type, which is passed by the incoming webhook view
that is filtered according to the former two parameters.
Part of #18525.
Since FIXTURE_DIR_NAME is the name of the folder that contains the view
and tests modules of the webhook and another folder called "fixtures" that
store the fixtures, it is more appropriate to call it WEBHOOK_DIR_NAME,
especially when we want to refer to the view module using this variable.
* Move content on moving topics between streams to a dedicated
article. We advertise it as "move content" to hint that one can move
messages or split topics, and link to it.
* This deletes change-the-topic-of-a-message, because the same content
is already covered in rename-a-topic.
* This commit mostly just moves content between articles. Most of that
content was redundant with the first few paragraphs of the surviving
"rename a topic" article. The former "This is useful for" se ntence
was adapted to the remaining article.
* This commit also adds a redirect for the removed article, and
updates related links.
This adds a new class called MessageRenderingResult to contain the
additional properties we added to the Message object (like alert_words)
as well as the rendered content to ensure typesafe reference. No
behavioral change is made except changes in typing.
This is a preparatory change for adding django-stubs to the backend.
Related: #18777
This PR adds a basic .md template that is followed by lot of /api
pages. Since we have recently done the migration work to ensure that
our REST API documentation pages for individual endpoints are almost
all identical files following a common pattern, we can now get the
payoff of deleting them all in favor of a shared template.
This removes 2000 lines of somewhat finicky configuration from the
codebase, and thus should save significant effort when documenting new
API endpoints in the future.
The markdown files for endpoints or other pages which deviate from the
standard template remain, and the docs are instead generated from
those files using the existing system.
Currently, the message that no parameters are accepted by
the endpoint is displayed if there are no parameters in
OpenAPI data, but it is possible that information is
encoded in x-parameter-description (example in upload-file
endpoint), and we want to display that information rather
than the message.
Added an if condition to check the same.
This removes some complexity from the event_queue module.
To avoid code duplication, we reduce the `is_notifiable` methods to
internally just call the `trigger` methods and check their return value.
* Modify `maybe_enqueue_notifications` to take in an instance of the
dataclass introduced in 951b49c048.
* The `check_notify` tests tested the "when to notify" logic in a way
which involved `maybe_enqueue_notifications`. To simplify things, we've
earlier extracted this logic in 8182632d7e.
So, we just kill off the `check_notify` test, and keep only those parts
which verify the queueing and return value behavior of that funtion.
* We retain the the missedmessage_hook and message
message_edit_notifications since they are more integration-style.
* There's a slightly subtle change with the missedmessage_hook tests.
Before this commit, we short-circuited the hook if the sender was muted
(5a642cea11).
With this commit, we delegate the check to our dataclass methods.
So, `maybe_enqueue_notifications` will be called even if the sender was
muted, and the test needs to be updated.
* In our test helper `get_maybe_enqueue_notifications_parameters` which
generates default values for testing `maybe_enqueue_notifications` calls,
we keep `message_id`, `sender_id`, and `user_id` as required arguments,
so that the tests are super-clear and avoid accidental false positives.
* Because `do_update_embedded_data` also sends `update_message` events,
we deal with that case with some hacky code for now. See the comment
there.
This mostly completes the extraction of the "when to notify" logic into
our new `notification_data` module.
While importing a realm, the stream dictionaries in data['zerver_stream']
already contains the field named `rendered_description`, which is set to
`""`. This lead the code to assume that the stream rendered_description
was already set, due to which, it was not setting the rendered_description
field for any stream.
This is a prep commit for adding realm-level default for various
user settings. We add the language, in which the invite email will
be sent, to the dict added to queue itself to avoid making queries
in a loop when sending multiple emails from queue.
We also handle the case for old events in the queue.
We removed the use of email_body field in 47fcb27e39, but was
still passed in events from do_resend_user_invite_email and
in tests. So this commit removes the email_body field from
these places.
We already have this data in the `flags` for each user, so no need to
send this set/list in the event dictionary.
The `flags` in the event dict represent the after-message-update state,
so we can't avoid sending `prior_mention_user_ids`.
This is much faster than calling generate_presigned_url each time.
```
In [3]: t = time.time()
...: for i in range(250):
...: x = u.get_public_upload_url("foo")
...: print(time.time()-t)
0.0010945796966552734
```
Fixes#18915
This was very slow, causing performance issues. After investigating,
generate_presigned_url is the cheap part of this, but the
session.client() call is expensive - so that's what we should cache.
Before the change:
```
In [4]: t = time.time()
...: for i in range(250):
...: x = u.get_public_upload_url("foo")
...: print(time.time()-t)
6.408717393875122
```
After:
```
In [4]: t = time.time()
...: for i in range(250):
...: x = u.get_public_upload_url("foo")
...: print(time.time()-t)
0.48990607261657715
```
This is not good enough to avoid doing something ugly like replacing
generate_presigned_url with some manual URL manipulation, but it's a
helpful structure that we may find useful with further refactoring.
Previously, it was possible for an unusual series of topic-edit
actions to result in Notification Bot reporting that a topic was
marked as resolved that had already been marked as resolved, etc.
A buggy client might send a message_edit request to change the topic
field, sending the current topic as the new value. Previously, we
would treat that as a normal request to edit the topic; now we act as
though the API request had not requested a topic change. In the
common case that only the topic was in the edit request, this now
results in an error that should help client implementations identify
their bug.
This fixes a bad interaction with the "unresolve topic" logic, which
assumed that upstream logic had verified that the topic was actually
changing.