This is controlled through the admin tab and a new field in the Realms
table. This mirrors the behavior of the old hardcoded setting
feature_flags.disable_message_editing. Partially resolves#903.
For a long time, rest_dispatch has had this hack where we have to
create a copy of it in each views file using it, in order to directly
access the globals list in that file. This removes that hack, instead
making rest_dispatch just use Django's import_string to access the
target method to use.
[tweaked and reorganized from acrefoot's original branch in various
ways by tabbott]
This changes the type annotations for the cache keys in Zulip to be
consistently text_type, and updates the annotations for values that
are used as cache keys across the codebase.
As documented in https://github.com/zulip/zulip/issues/441, Guardian
has quite poor performance, and in fact almost 50% of the time spent
running the Zulip backend test suite on my laptop was inside Guardian.
As part of this migration, we also clean up the old API_SUPER_USERS
variable used to mark EMAIL_GATEWAY_BOT as an API super user; now that
permission is managed entirely via the database.
When rebasing past this commit, developers will need to do a
`manage.py migrate` in order to apply the migration changes before the
server will run again.
We can't yet remove Guardian from INSTALLED_APPS, requirements.txt,
etc. in this release, because otherwise the reverse migration won't
work.
Fixes#441.
We can't just check that the realms are the same because ist.mit.edu is an open
realm and uses @mit.edu email addresses.
(imported from commit 7dbaa81cea6e4f82563dfc0cfe67a61fe9378911)
This allows bot owners to configure which streams messages are delivered
to without needing to change webhook URLs or configuration files.
(imported from commit 32a0c26657c145b001cd8cb3ce0a0364d48902ce)
If we call exclude_muting_conditions() with a non-stream
narrow, it will now include a condition to exclude streams
that are not in your home view. As of now, this code only
executes during testing, but it sets the stage for doing
better in:home queries on the back end.
(imported from commit bbd764bd0e9588a50e4a82c915e82a2c1b99d73e)
If we are already narrowing to a stream, then we can disregard
muted topics in all the other streams and create a simpler query
for the DB to execute.
(imported from commit 35a074a76eec99922034a381741355da3fdd5b39)
Due to the way we store muted topics, it is possible that a
muted topic stream name may no longer exist, and we need to
handle that case gracefully.
(imported from commit 4d18ec55e45213657a67e160848229678f212765)
Previously, we assumed that num_before or num_after would be always be non-zero
after adjustment for the anchor. However, we don't adjust num_before or
num_after when a narrow is specified.
(imported from commit 9239fef140e109b11bdfbeef42e9fbed78660ad1)
Behind a feature flag you can now do searches like this:
-pm-with:othello@example.com is:private
The "-" in front of "pm-with" tells us to exclude messages
with Othello from our search. We support "-" in front of
all operators, although the behavior for "-search:" and
and "-near:" doesn't really change in this commit.
Note that the filtering out of "negated" predicates only
happens on the client side in this commit. On the server
side we ignore negated predicates and send back a superset
of the results.
(imported from commit 6cdeaf32f2d493fbbb838630f0da3da880b1ca18)
This commit doesn't change any functionality, and it is
designed to make diffs for upcoming changes related to
negated conditions a bit easier to read. This diff
looks a bit noiser than it really is due to some
reindentation of continuation lines.
(imported from commit 64c1cba98faa4bad4eaad122dd3de119caa880c0)