This commit changes the bot-edit modal to use dialog_widget instead of
edit_fields_modal.
This commit also removes edit_fields_modal module as it is no longer used.
This commit changes the edit-user-info modal to use
dialog_widget instead of edit_fields_modal.
The edit_fields_modal module will be removed in
further commits to avoid code duplication.
This commit changes the edit-linkifier modal to use
dialog_widget instead of edit_fields_modal.
The edit_fields_modal module will be removed in
further commits to avoid code duplication.
We show red color for confirmation modals and green for other
modals with input fields.
As of this commit, only confirmation modals use dialog_widget but
some other modals with input fields will be migrated to use
dialog_widget.
We used html_submit_button to pass text to be present in the modal
submit button. There are only two possible options as of now -
"Confirm" and "Save changes" and the correct one can be determined
using is_confirm_modal parameter. So, we remove this paramter for
now and we can add it later if we have more type of modals using
this widget.
This commit adds a new dialog_widget.js file containing most
of the code of confirm_dialog.js with some minor changes and
changes confirm_dialog to be a wrapper around dialog_widget.js.
We pass 'is_confim_dialog' as true in dialog_widget for a
confirm_dialog modal. This commit also renames confirm_dialog.hbs
and confirm_dialog_heading.hbs to dialog_widget.js,
dialog_widget.hbs and dialog_widget_heading.hbs respectively.
This commit renames the variables, functions used in confirm_dialog.js
and classes and ids used in confirm_dialog.hbs.
This change is made so that we can easily migrate edit_fields_modal to
use this same code with some more changes.
We will change the file names and correspondingly import variables in
the next commit.
This concludes the HttpRequest migration to eliminate arbitrary
attributes (except private ones that are belong to django) attached
to the request object during runtime and migrated them to a
separate data structure dedicated for the purpose of adding
information (so called notes) to a HttpRequest.
This migrates some mocked Request class and mocked request achieved
with namedtuple in test_decorators and test_mirror_users to use the
refactored HostMockRequest.
Since weakref cannot be used with namedtuple, this old way of mocking a
request object should be migrated to using HostRequestMock. Only after
this change we can extract client from the request object and store it
via ZulipRequestNotes.
This includes the migration of fields that require trivial changes
to be migrated to be stored with ZulipRequestNotes.
Specifically _requestor_for_logs, _set_language, _query, error_format,
placeholder_open_graph_description, saveed_response, which were all
previously set on the HttpRequest object at some point. This migration
allows them to be typed.
We will no longer use the HttpRequest to store the rate limit data.
Using ZulipRequestNotes, we can access rate_limit and ratelimits_applied
with type hints support. We also save the process of initializing
ratelimits_applied by giving it a default value.
We create a class called ZulipRequestNotes as a new home to all the
additional attributes that we add to the Django HttpRequest object.
This allows mypy to do the typecheck and also enforces type safety.
Most of the attributes are added in the middleware, and thus it is
generally safe to assert that they are not None in a code path that
goes through the middleware. The caller is obligated to do manual
the type check otherwise.
This also resolves some cyclic dependencies that zerver.lib.request
have with zerver.lib.rate_limiter and zerver.tornado.handlers.
The expand-compose icon currently overlaps with the
recipient input field of private message compose box.
Reduce the size of the division to fix overlap.
We currently configure ‘APT::Get::Assume-Yes’ in our custom Docker
image, but this is the only place we rely on it (outside of the
Dockerfile itself), and it’s better not to.
Also ‘apt-get remove && apt-get purge’ is the same as just ‘apt-get
purge’.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Previously, we stored up to 2 minutes worth of email events in memory
before processing them. So, if the server were to go down we would lose
those events.
To fix this, we store the events in the database.
This is a prep change for allowing users to set custom grace period for
email notifications, since the bug noted above will aggravate with
longer grace periods.
This will be used to store the missedmessage events received
during the waiting time for email notifications (which is currently
2 minutes, hardcoded).
The change in `test_retention` is because we've set `on_delete=CASCADE`
for the message field this table.
The new query is like so:
```
DELETE FROM "zerver_missedmessageemailentry"
WHERE "zerver_missedmessageemailentry"."message_id" IN (
1545, 1546, 1547, 1548, 1549, 1550, 1551, 1552, 1553
)
```
This reduces loose strings in the codebase, and allows us to not worry
about the exact naming (`stream_email_enabled` or `stream_emails_enabled`?)
and tense (`mentioned` or `mention`?).
Ideally this new class should have been in `lib/notification_data.py`,
which is our file for things like this. But, the next commit requires
using this data in `models.py`, and importing from `notification_data.py`
to `models.py` causes recursive imports.
Added CSS property of cursor as pointer to the copy
icon in about_zulip section which indicates the
icon to be clickable.
(This minor adjustment was probably missed in a74b52db22)
As we want subscriber list to occupy rest of available space
in the tab, we use relative units (vh) and calc to set the
max-height property dynamically without losing scroll behavior
for stream list.
The operationId is directly used in URLs of API doc pages
to find the OpenAPI data to render. However, this is dash-
separated in the URLs, and having underscore_separated IDs
in OpenAPI data doesn't allow direct comparison of the two.
This commit changes all OperationIDs from underscore_separated
to dash-separated.
This commit adds a check to avoid the use of assertTrue
for cases like: assertTrue(len(data) == 2).
We should use assert_length, assertGreater, or
assertGreaterEqual, whatever suits, in cases like these.