The name avatar_bucket was confusing for a boolean, and
in some places it was used for non-S3 paths.
I considered the more concise 'is_avatar', but that
was still confusing when you are processing multiple
files, because you think it's a calculated property
on one file instead of an overall codepath switch.
I also considered splitting up some functions, but
there is a lot of common logic between handling
file uploads and avatars that's not trivial to extract
into helpers, especially on the S3 side.
I did some minor moving around of code that made us have
one fewer function without any additional conditional
logic. The names are more explicit about saying
"from_local" and "from_s3". Also, there is less clutter
now in do_export_realm(), which is evolving into more of
a dispatcher and less of a worker.
This is pretty minor cleanup, but it makes it a little more
explicit what we're writing to the shard file, and it allows
us to use a more specific mypy type when calling
floatify_datetime_fields.
We no longer have an in-process code path to export
UserMessage rows. We want to only maintain the
subprocess code, which we'll always use in production,
and which will work fine in dev.
Adds a new field default language in the zerver_realm model.
This realm level default language will be used as default language
for newly created users. Realm level default language can be
changed from the administration page.
Fixes#1372.
I also fixed some small things like removing unnecessary return
statements, and adding a TODO.
In some cases I explicitly cast stuff at run-time to set() or
str() to appease mypy, as well as make it clear to somebody
reading the code that the callee might not respect ordering
or tolerate unicode.
The previous export tool would only work properly for small realms,
and was missing a number of important features:
* Export of avatars and uploads from S3
* Export of presence data, activity data, etc.
* Faithful export/import of timestamps
* Parallel export of messages
* Not OOM killing for large realms
The new tool runs as a pair of documented management commands, and
solves all of those problems.
Also we add a new management command for exporting the data of an
individual user.
Define Integration and WebhookIntegration classes.
Change webhook part of integration's guide.
Replace hardcoded webhook urls to generating
based on WEBHOOKS list.
The old behavior was to raise an exception, but Django was catching
the exception and doing unexpected things. For instance, in the
manage.py shell, printing out a ModelReprMixin object (with
__unicode__ not implemented) would result in nothing being printed,
rather than it raising a error or otherwise alerting the programmer as
to what was going on.
This fixes a regression where missed message emails would not be sent
at all in the event that EMAIL_GATEWAY_PATTERN was unset.
The overall experience still isn't great, but it's better than crashing.
Fixes: #1411
[commit message expanded by tabbott]
This will lead to minor differences in the warnings that
people see when they run tests that are slow. We call out
the slowness a little more clearly from a visual standpoint,
and we simplify the calculation of the slowness threshold.
We still allow more time for tests with the `@slow` decorator
to run, but we don't use their expected_run_time.
Our flush functions update user profile cache entries which can cause
confusing race conditions (see e.g. #1257). To resolve this, we move
all the user_profile flush functions to delete the entry instead of
updating it -- it will then be fetched as part of the next request
that needs to access the user object.
There are still races here, and there is perhaps an argument that a
better fix for this would be to re-fetch the object and then put it
into the cache, but this resolves the main cache correctness problem
we had with the previous implementation.
Fixes: #1322.
This makes us more consistent, since we have other wrappers
like client_patch, client_put, and client_delete.
Wrapping also will facilitate instrumentation of our posting code.
This function is only called in cases where user_profile isn't None,
and the code reads better if we just check that first rather than
checking it on every line that accesses user_profile.
This allows the frontend to fetch data on the subscribers list (etc.)
for streams where the user has never been subscribed, making it
possible to implement UI showing details like subscribe counts on the
subscriptions page.
This is likely a performance regression for very large teams with
large numbers of streams; we'll want to do some testing to determine
the impact (and thus whether we should make this feature only fully
enabled for larger realms).
There were a bunch of authorization and well-formedness checks in
zerver.lib.actions.do_update_message that I moved to
zerver.views.messages.update_message_backend.
Reason: by convention, functions in actions.py complete their actions;
error checking should be done outside the file when possible.
Fixes: #1150.
This is controlled through the admin tab and a new field in the Realms table.
Notes:
* The admin tab setting takes a value in minutes, whereas the backend stores it
in seconds.
* This setting is unused when allow_message_editing is false.
* There is some generosity in how the limit is enforced. For instance, if the
user sees the hovering edit button, we ensure they have at least 5 seconds to
click it, and if the user gets to the message edit form, we ensure they have
at least 10 seconds to make the edit, by relaxing the limit.
* This commit also includes a countdown timer in the message edit form.
Resolves#903.