Server settings should just be added to the context in build_email, so that
the individual email pathways (and later, the email testing framework)
doesn't have to worry about it.
Realm.notifications_stream is not a boolean, Text or integer field, and
thus doesn't fit into the do_set_realm_property framework. Added function
to update it in actions.py. Altered the view, realm.py, to accept
stream-id. Also, notifications stream can be disabled by sending a
negative id.
When the last user on a private stream is removed, the stream is no
longer possible to administer, and thus should be marked as
deactivated, so that default streams entries are removed and it no
longer appears in the UI as a non-administerable broken stream.
If you deactivated a default stream, we would correctly remove it from
the list of default streams in the organization. However, we did not
call `send_event`, so browsers would still display it as a default
stream until the next reload.
This fixes that issue by calling do_remove_default_stream instead of
doing the database query directly.
This makes it possible for Zulip administrators to delete messages.
This is primarily intended for use in deleting early test messages,
but it can solve other problems as well.
Later we'll want to play with the permissions model for this, but for
now, the goal is just to integrate the feature.
Note that it saves the deleted messages for some time using the same
approach as Zulip's message retention policy feature.
Fixes#135.
Previously, all notification preference setting had a dedicated test
and setter. Now, all are handled through a modular function using the
property_types framework.
We now pre-populate the streams in DEFAULT_NEW_REALM_STREAMS
(social/general/zulip, unless somebody changes settings.py) with
welcome messages. This makes the streams appear to be active
right away, and it also gives the Zulip realm less of a
blank-slate feeling when you create it.
This change only affects the normal web-based create-realm flow.
It doesn't impact the management commands for creating realms
or setting default streams.
This makes the new user experience in an active community like
chat.zulip.org substantially nicer, since the new user will have the
same level of initial messages to populate topics (etc.) as an
existing user who is caught up.
Without this, there was an undue level of fading-for-inactivity in the
default streams.
Relies on the fact that all the email template names now follow the same
pattern.
Note that there was some template_prefix-like computation being done in
send_confirmation (conditioned on obj.realm.is_zephyr_mirror_realm); that
computation is now being done in the callers.
This increase in the list of needed fields carries a small performance
cost, but it should be very small, and this change is needed to
support outgoing webhooks without additional database queries.
Also puts them into a processing queue, though the queue processor
does nothing.
Rewritten by tabbott to avoid unnecessary database queries in
do_send_messages.
This is a better solution to the problem of how _pg_re_escape should
handle the null character. There's really no good reason to have a
null character in a stream name.
The new function takes a full UserProfile object for the sender,
which allows us to avoid O(N) calls when creating the stream to
find the user profile of the notification bot. (The calls were
already cached, so this won't necessarily be a huge performance
win.)
We also don't have to worry about sending a blank subject any more.
The new, more direct interface for prepping internal stream
messages circumvents the bug-prone extract_recipients() method,
which has the pitfall that it will try to parse a stream name
as JSON. It also takes a UserProfile object for the sender, so
it's a bit more type-safe.
- Add file_name field to `RealmEmoji` model and migration.
- Add emoji upload supporting to Upload backends.
- Add uploaded file processing to emoji views.
- Use emoji source url as based for display url.
- Change emoji form for image uploading.
- Fix back-end tests.
- Fix front-end tests.
- Add tests for emoji uploading.
Fixes#1134
This moves the avatar_ fields in page_params to come from
register_ret. Unlike many fields, changing this had a bit of
complexity, because the avatar update events didn't actually contain
some of the details required for moving these into register_ret to
work correctly without races.
We fix that as part of this change.
Modified significantly by tabbott.
The function internal_prep_message is kind of awkward to
call, so I'm moving most of its implementation to
_internal_prep_message() for upcoming refactorings.
- Add aggregated info to real-time updated presence status.
- Update `presence events` test case with adding aggregated
information to presence event.
- Add test case for updating presence status for user which
send state from multiple clients.
Fixes#4282.
The previous logic was that anyone with a link to a file could send it
to other users, but only the owner could make a file realm-public.
This had some confusing corner cases.
The new logic is much simpler:
* Only the file's owner/uploader can include a file in a message for
the first time.
* Anyone with access to read a file can share it with others by
including it in messages they send.
* Once a file has been sent to a public stream, any user in the realm
can access it.
This replaces individual tests for realm properties with a generic
do_test_realm_update_api function to test each property in the
Realm.property_types attribute.
Addresses part of #3854.
Users editing messages or updating message flags are either already
recorded or not interesting from an audit perspective, and so there's
no need to use log_event with them.
This commit adds the backend support for a new style of tutorial which
allows for highlighting of multiple areas of the page with hotspots that
disappear when clicked by the user.
Modify `bot_owner_user_ids()` to return the user_ids of only
admins and bot owners instead of all the current active users.
This was causing a traceback on the frontend.
Fixes: #3391.
- Add message retention period field to organization settings form.
- Add css for retention period field.
- Add convertor to not negative int or to None.
- Add retention period setting processing to back-end.
- Fix tests.
Modified by tabbott to hide the setting, since it doesn't work yet.
The goal of merging this setting code now is to avoid unnecessary
merge conflicts in the future.
Part of #106.
This fixes 2 issues:
* Being added to an invite_only stream did not correctly update the
"streams" key of the initial state.
* Once that's resolved, subscribe_to_stream when called on a
nonexistant stream would both send a "create" event (from
create_stream_if_needed) and an "occupy" event (from
bulk_add_subscriptions).
The second event should just be suppressed in that case, and this
implements that suppression.
This makes it possible for us to do some convenient validation for
developers, checking whether the correct types are passed for each
each realm property.
zerver/lib/actions: removed do_set_realm_* functions and added
do_set_realm_property, which takes in a realm object and the name and
value of an attribute to update on that realm.
zerver/tests/test_events.py: refactored realm tests with
do_set_realm_property.
Kept the do_set_realm_authentication_methods and
do_set_realm_message_editing functions because their function
signatures are different.
Addresses part of issue #3854.
This makes get_stream match get_realm, get_user_profile_by_email,
etc., in interface, and is more convenient for mypy annotations
because `get_stream` now doesn't return an Optional[Stream].
We use the same strategy Zulip already uses for starred messages,
namely, creating a new UserMessage row with the "historical" flag set
(which basically means Zulip can ignore this row for most purposes
that use UserMessage rows). The historical flag is ignored, however,
in determining which users' browsers to notify about new reactions,
and thus the user will get to see the reaction appear when they click
a message (and any reactions other users later add, as well!).
There's still something of a race here, in that if some users react to
a message while the user is looking at the unsubscribed stream but
before the user reacts to that message, those reactions will not be
displayed to that user (so counts will be a bit lower, or something).
This race feels small enough to ignore for now.
Fixes#3345.
This adds an organization description field to the Realm model, as well as
an input field to the organization settings template. Added three tests.
Set the max length of the field to 100 characters.
Fixes#3962.
validate_user_access_to_subscribers_helper never uses
stream_dict['realm__domain']. I imagine it was there originally to do the
is_zephyr_mirror_realm check.
Previously we used the topic "Realm.domain" for new user signups, but topic
"Realm.string_id" for the realm creation. This changes the user signup
messages to be on the same topic thread as the realm creation.
All current calls to do_activate_user just use the default value of
timezone.now(). Having a date_joined other than timezone.now() raises an
interesting RealmAuditLog question (namely, which time should be used),
which we don't have to answer if we remove the argument.
This currently only supports this in emoji reactions, not in actual
emoji in message bodies, but it's a great start for people who want a
text-only view.
Tweaked to update the text by tabbott.
Fixes#3169.
Standardizing the Zulip codebase to use UTC everywhere. Note that unlike
many recent commits in this line, this changes does result in a change in
behavior.
When you pass a naive datetime to the Django ORM, it uses settings.TIME_ZONE
for the time zone. In the development environment, both settings.TIME_ZONE
and datetime.now() use 'America/New_York', so there is no change in behavior
there. (fromtimestamp with no tz argument uses the same timezone as
datetime.now)
We are soon going to change settings.TIME_ZONE to UTC, so need to remove
naive datetimes from queries to the ORM.
Fix administration page javascript issue of TypeError that occurs
due to undefined variable access in static/js/bot_data.js file.
Reactivating a bot was not updating the state in `bot_data`.
Sending an event on reactivating a bot fixes this issue.
Fixes: #2840
Change `from django.utils.timezone import now` to
`from django.utils import timezone`.
This is both because now() is ambiguous (could be datetime.datetime.now),
and more importantly to make it easier to write a lint rule against
datetime.datetime.now().
Modify the `bot_list` to hold all the bots owned by an user
irrespective of whether the bot is active or inactive. Also
include the `is_active` field in `active_bot_dict_fields` to
distinguish between inactive and active bots.
This adds to Zulip support for a user changing their own email
address.
It's backed by a huge amount of work by Steve Howell on making email
changes actually work from a UI perspective.
Fixes#734.
Our client code will now receive avatar_url in
page_params.people_list during page load, so it will be
able to use more current urls for old messages (the client
already had some logic for that and was just missing the
data).
We also add avatar_url to the realm_user/add event.
When we change the avatar, we make sure to always send a
realm_user/update event (even for bots).
We also needed to add avatar_version and
avatar_source to our active users cache.
This makes life a lot easier for people inviting users to a new Zulip
organization, since they can give some form of context now.
Modified by tabbott to clean up CSS, backend code flow, and improve
the formatting of the emails.
Fixes: #1409.
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.
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.
This is a fairly risky, invasive change that speeds up
stream deactivation by no longer sending subscription/remove
events for individual subscribers to all of the clients who
care about a stream. Instead, we let the client handle the
stream deactivation on a coarser level.
The back end changes here are pretty straightforward.
On the front end we handle stream deactivations by removing the
stream (as needed) from the streams sidebar and/or the stream
settings page. We also remove the stream from the internal data
structures.
There may be some edge cases where live updates don't handle
everything, such as if you are about to compose a message to a
stream that has been deactivated. These should be rare, as admins
generally deactivate streams that have been dormant, and they
should be recoverable either by getting proper error handling when
you try to send to the stream or via reload.
This fix prevents stream deactivation from being basically
un-usable for medium to large sites. Instead of calling
bulk_remove_subscriptions one at a time for every individual
member of the realm, we call it once for all the users that
care about the stream. This change makes a huge difference, but
the feature is still a bit clunky, and we should only temporarily
revert to this fix if future, more-invasive fixes have flaws.
Fixes#3631.
In some cases here we simplify things by calling avatar_url()
instead of get_avatar_url(), when we have a user_profile record
handy. For other cases we pass in an extra avatar_version
parameter to get_avatar_url(), including from avatar_url().
We have a field called user_profile.avatar_version that will
track avatar versions and be used tactically in avatar urls
to get browsers to refresh their caches (in future commits).
This commit bumps the avatar version when we update avatars.
We do this in do_change_avatar_fields(), which was
do_change_avatar_source() before this change.
Adarsh did the initial work here, and Steve Howell (showell) also
made changes.
I dug into why we never did this before, and it turns out we did, but
using `$.trim()` (which removes leading whitespace as well!). When
removing the `$.trim()` usage.
Fixes#3294.
This commit adds html versions of the invite and signup mails and renames
the existing .txt files to the preferred file extensions '.subject', '.html'
and '.txt'. The html versions of the mails are being sent along with the
text-only versions by the 'send_confirmation' function.
This fixes#3134.
This moves do_events_register, fetch_initial_state_data and friends to
a new file.
Modified significantly by tabbott for correctness and to remove unused
imports.
Fixes#3635.
Having `restricted_to_domain` set to True if there are no more aliases
left means the user is either confused or forgot to set it to False. It
should be set to False automatically when the last alias is deleted.
This fixes a regression introduced by our migration to track
subscribers for all public streams, where now users who are added to
an invite-only stream were receiving a mark_subscribed event
for a stream their browser didn't know existed, causing an exception.
To fix this, we now send a stream create event to the browser just
before the user receives the notification that it was added to the
invite-only stream.
This old helper has for years been used only by populate_db, and got
buggy (as of a recent refactoring). So we just call do_send_messages
directly instead.
Fixes the provisioning error we currently get in Travis CI.
This is a pretty minor change, but it makes it clear that we
have user_id in all the relevant states/events, so we might as
well use that for the check, since email is mutable and
slightly more difficult to reason about.
This changes bugdown to use the realm passed in by the caller (if any)
for rendering, fixing a problem where bots such as the notification
bot would have their messages rendering using the admin realm's
settings, not the settings of the realm their messages are being sent
into.
Also adds a test for the notification bot case.
Fixes#3215.
A lot of care has been taken to ensure we're using the realm that the
message is being sent into, not the realm of the sender, to correctly
handle the logic for cross-realm bot users such as the notifications
bot.
In order to correctly handle messages sent by cross-realm bots, we
need to specify the realm that the messages are being sent into in the
send message code path. The commit and its successors convert that
code path to include the realm the message is being sent to explicitly.
Finishes the refactoring started in c1bbd8d. The goal of the refactoring is
to change the argument to get_realm from a Realm.domain to a
Realm.string_id. The steps were
* Add a new function, get_realm_by_string_id.
* Change all calls to get_realm to use get_realm_by_string_id instead.
* Remove get_realm.
* (This commit) Rename get_realm_by_string_id to get_realm.
Part of a larger migration to remove the Realm.domain field entirely.
Removes the dependence on postmonkey, which is a wrapper around
MailChimp API v1.3. MailChimp recommends using their v3.0 API directly,
rather than through a wrapper library.
While this may not have created a clear user-facing bug, it seems less
confusing for do_invite_users to only create PreregistrationUser
objects for users who actually received an email invitation.
This adds support for only allowing normal users with account age
equal or greater than a "waiting period" threshold to create streams;
this is useful for open organizations that want new members to
understand the community before creating streams.
If create_stream_by_admins_only setting is set to True, only admin users
were able to create streams. Now normal users with account age greater
or equal than waiting period threshold can also create streams.
Account age is defined as number of days passed since the user had
created his account.
Fixes: #2308.
Tweaked by tabbott to clean up the actual can_create_streams logic and
the tests.
This includes making the default stream description setting into a
dict. That is an API change; we'll discuss it in the changelog but it
seems small enough to be OK.
With some small tweaks by tabbott to remove unnecessary backwards
compatibility code for the settings.
Fixes#2427.
This change adds support for displaying inline open graph previews for
links posted into Zulip.
It is designed to interact correctly with message editing.
This adds the new settings.INLINE_URL_EMBED_PREVIEW setting to control
whether this feature is enabled.
By default, this setting is currently disabled, so that we can burn it
in for a bit before it impacts users more broadly.
Eventually, we may want to make this manageable via a (set of?)
per-realm settings. E.g. I can imagine a realm wanting to be able to
enable/disable it for certain URLs.
This commit adds support for removing reactions via DELETE requests to
the /reactions endpoint with parameters emoji_name and message_id.
The reaction is deleted from the database and a reaction event is sent
out with 'op' set to 'remove'.
Tests are added to check:
1. Removing a reaction that does not exist fails
2. When removing a reaction, the event payload and users are correct
This commit adds the following:
1. A reaction model that consists of a user, a message and an emoji that
are unique together (a user cannot react to a particular message more
than once with the same emoji)
2. A reaction event that looks like:
{
'type': 'reaction',
'op': 'add',
'message_id': 3,
'emoji_name': 'doge',
'user': {
'user_id': 1,
'email': 'hamlet@zulip.com',
'full_name': 'King Hamlet'
}
}
3. A new API endpoint, /reactions, that accepts POST requests to add a
reaction to a message
4. A migration to add the new model to the database
5. Tests that check that
(a) Invalid requests cannot be made
(b) The reaction event body contains all the info
(c) The reaction event is sent to the appropriate users
(d) Reacting more than once fails
It is still missing important features like removing emoji and
fetching them alongside messages.
Refactor list_to_streams and create_streams_if_needed to take a list
of dictionaries, instead of a list of stream names. This is
preparation for being able to pass additional arguments into the
stream creation process.
An important note: This removes a set of validation code from the
start of add_subscriptions_backend; doing so is correct because
list_to_streams has that same validation code already.
[with some tweaks by tabbott for clarity]
Previously, if a new message arrived between when a user is subscribed
to the default streams and when the user's initial messages are
queried, we would try to create two UserMessage rows for the same
Message, resulting in an IntegrityError crash. We fix this and add a
test for that race condition.
send_event() expects a list of user ids (ints) except for the special case
of messages. This commit:
1. Fixes this in the call to send_event() in do_send_typing_notification()
2. Renames the variables in do_send_typing_notification() to better reflect
their content (for example, recipient_ids instead of recipients).
3. Renames the id field in the dicts sent in the typing event body (sender,
recipients) to user_id.
4. Adds assertions to the tests to verify that the tornado event user ids
are the same as the recipients in the event body.
5. Adds assertions to the tests to verify that the tornado event user
ids and the recipient user ids (in the event body) are the same as the
expected user ids (obtained from the emails using
get_user_profile_by_email)
6. Changes all assertTrues to assertEquals in the tests
This fixes#2151.
If a stream is public, we now send notifications to all realm users
if the name or description of the stream changes. For private
streams, the behavior remains the same.
We do this by introducing a method called
can_access_stream_user_ids().
(showell helped with this fix)
Fixes#2195
Previously, we set restrict_to_domain and invite_required differently
depending on whether we were setting up a community or a corporate
realm. Setting restrict_to_domain requires validation on the domain of the
user's email, which is messy in the web realm creation flow, since we
validate the user's email before knowing whether the user intends to set up
a corporate or community realm. The simplest solution is to have the realm
creation flow impose as few restrictions as possible (community defaults),
and then worry about restrict_to_domain etc. after the user is already in.
We set the test suite to explictly use the old defaults, since several of
the tests depend on the old defaults.
This commit adds a database migration.
We now send dictionaries for cross-realm bots. This led to the
following changes:
* Create get_cross_realm_dicts() in actions.py.
* Rename the page_params field to cross_realm_bots.
* Fix some back end tests.
* Add cross_realm_dict to people.js.
* Call people.add for cross-realm bots (if they are not already part of the realm).
* Remove hack to add in feedback@zulip.com on the client side.
* Add people.is_cross_realm_email() and use it in compose.js.
* Remove util.string_in_list_case_insensitive().
In preparation for a change to do_create_realm where we will use the
database default for restricted_to_domain rather than computing it within
do_create_realm, and due to which do_create_realm will no longer know
whether we are creating an open realm or not.
Does a database migration to rename Realm.subdomain to
Realm.string_id, and makes Realm.subdomain a property. Eventually,
Realm.string_id will replace Realm.domain as the handle by which we
retrieve Realm objects.
We now simply exclude all cross-realm bots from the set of emails
under consideration, and then if the remaining emails are all in
the same realm, we're good.
This fix changes two behaviors:
* You can no longer send a PM to an ordinary user in another realm
by piggy-backing a cross-realm bot on to the message. (This was
basically a bug, but it would never manifest under current
configurations.)
* You will be able to send PMs to multiple cross-realm bots at once.
(This was an arbitrary restriction. We don't really care about this
scenario much yet, and it fell out of the new implementation.)
This is a preliminary step towards eliminating the realm.domain field
in favor of realm.subdomain. Includes a database migration to create
these for existing realms.
When we added data on never_subscribed streams to what
populate_subscribers is called on, we failed to add the corresponding
data on subscribers to email_dict, the mapping of user IDs to emails
for the subscribers.
Because in the Zephyr world, stream names can be a secret, and also
Zephyr mirroring tends to involve many thousands of streams, we
shouldn't send this data.
POST to /typing creates a typing event
Required parameters are 'op' ('start' or 'stop') and 'to' (recipient
emails). If there are multiple recipients, the 'to' parameter
should be a JSON string of the list of recipient emails.
The event created looks like:
{
'type': 'typing',
'op': 'start',
'sender': 'hamlet@zulip.com',
'recipients': [{
'id': 1,
'email': 'othello@zulip.com'
}]
}
We now send peer_remove events to folks who have never subscribed
to the streams (except for private streams and zephyr).
We also use logic that is more similar to how
bulk_add_subscriptions() works.
There are two reasons for this change. First, we want to be
consistent with notify_subscriptions_added(), which doesn't
handle "peer" events. Second, we want to fix this code in a
subsequent commit not to do one user at a time, which is
inefficient.