`cachify` is essentially caching the return value of a function using only
the non-keyword-only arguments as the key.
The use case of the function in the backend can be sufficiently covered by
`functools.lru_cache` as an unbound cache. There is no signficant difference
apart from `cachify` overlooking keyword-only arguments, and
`functools.lru_cache` being conveniently typed.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <359101898@qq.com>
This demonstrates a way to resolve the long-standing issue
of typing higher-order identity functions without using
`cast` and in a type-safe manner for decorators in `cache.py`.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <359101898@qq.com>
Zulip Server 3.0 is now about 21 months old, which is more than
18 months. Per the general policy in the "Client apps" section
below, that means it's time to drop support for older versions.
We released 4.0 in 2021-05, so around 2022-11 we can update this
further to say 4.0.
This reverts commit a8fd535955.
This reverts commit 944781e873.
In an attempt to introduce code from mobile into web to match literal
emojis, the author inadvertently introduced a buggy and smelly change.
Probably best to leave the implementation of this in mobile where there
is more context about the shape of the emoji object available. Web
doesn't actually benefit from the additional behavior anyway.
See https://github.com/zulip/zulip/pull/21723#pullrequestreview-937051603
This commits adds an wildcard_mention_array which would contain the
mention tokens according to the message type. In case of PMs, it uses
only "all" and "everyone" mentions.
Fixes part of #21643.
This commit attempts to fix the suggestions typeahead for wildcard
mentions in case of PMs by using a conditional which checks for the
current compose_state and changes the string in parentheses accordingly.
In case of PMs, it uses the "(Notify recipients)" string instead of
"(Notify stream)".
do_deactivate_user can't be run in an atomic block due to concerns
around revoking session in a transaction. See
62ba8e455d for more details.
Without the change in this commit, the process of deactivating a user
via SCIM is broken.
One of the links in the GSoC ideas section in docs/gsoc.md led to
a page with 0 results. This has now been replaced with the correct
link leading to a list of issues with the mentioned labels.
Adds and updates changelog documentation for
`POST /users/me/status` feature level 86 addition
of new emoji parameters.
Makes description text for emoji `reaction_type` consistent
throughout API documentation and also adds better description
of the `unicode_emoji` namespace.
Redirects emoji field links in `user_status` event to go to
the parameters in `/update-status` endpoint, which was not a
documented endpoint when the event documentation was created.
It's natural that someone might try a wrong password 5 times, and then
go through a successful password reset; forcing such users to wait
half an hour before typing in the password they just changed the
account to seems unnecessarily punitive.
Clear the rate-limit upon successful password change.
Failure to pull the default "zulip" value here can lead to
accidentally applying a `postgres_password` value which is unnecessary
and may never work.
For consistency, always skip password auth attempts for the "zulip"
user on localhost, even if the password is set. This mirrors the
behavior of `process_fts_updates`.
This rewrite is intended to help new contributors do an effective
self-review of their work, with reminders of many common mistakes made
when preparing pull requests.
Removes `token_kind` parameter being passed to
`remove_apns_device_token` and `remove_android_reg_id` code
paths / endpoints. Possibly missed in a refactor of this
function as the tests for adding these tokens do not pass
a `token_kind` parameter.
Removes `zulip_org_id` and `zulip_org_kay` from code testing
`deactivate_remote_server`. These parameters are passed when
a remote server is added, so possibly a copy and paste error
when these tests were written / last refactored.
`update_realm_custom_profile_field` does not take `field_type`
as a parameter, so this removes it from any related tests.
Possibly these test parameters were missed in a refactor of this
endpoint / code.
`service_interface` is not a parameter of `add_bot_backend`, but
`interface_type` is, and that has the same default value as what
was being provided by the test, so updated for the parameter name
change, which was possibly missed in a previous code refactor.
`update_default_stream_group_info` was being passed `op` and
`group_name` in various tests, which are not implemented as
parameters for that endpoint / code path. So this removes those
from the existing tests. This is not a documented API endpoint,
so perhaps these were just overlooked when these tests were
written / last refactored.
If an API request specified a `client` parameter, we were
already prioritizing that value over parsing the UserAgent.
In order to have these parameters logged in the `RequestNotes`
as processed parameters instead of ignored parameters, we add
the `has_request_variables` decorator to `parse_client` and
then process the potential `client` parameter through the REQ
framework.
Co-authored by: Tim Abbott <tabbott@zulip.com>
We remove the StackOverflow link because it is now so dated as to be
irrelevant -- it does not use `self.ident`, and cargo-cults the return
value of PyThreadState_SetAsyncExc.
As noted in the docstring for this function, the timeout is
best-effort only -- if the thread is blocked in a syscall, it will not
service the exception until it returns. It can also choose to catch
and ignore the TimeoutExpired; in either case it will still be running
even after the `timeout()` function returns.
Raising a vare TimeoutExpired it still somewhat accurate, but obscures
that the backend thread may still be running along merrily. Notice
such cases, and log a warning about them.
Having just thrown an exception into the thread, it is often useful to
know _what_ was the slow code that we interrupted. Raising a bare
TimeoutExpired here obscures that information, as any `exc_info` will
end there.
Examine the thread for any exception information, and use that to
re-raise. This exception information is not guaranteed to exist -- if
the thread didn't respond to the exception in time, or caught it, for
instance.
The quote in question originates in python/cpython@b8b6d0c2c6, when
the code was added. However, the code stopped having that comment,
and was no longer able to return anything but 1 or 0, starting in
python/cpython@4643c2fda1 -- Python 2.5.
Remove the block.
There is no guarantee that the code passed into parse_unicode_emoji_code
is valid unicode. In the case that it is not, it might be better to
return undefined instead of throwing an exception: to represent a
non-parseable code.
For context, mobile currently returns custom emojis as emojis with
string names in their code property, instead of actual unicode.