`--no-init-db` is used to silence the need for `--hostname` and
`--email` arguments; it is a proxy for "this is not a frontend host."
We would ideally like to use `has_class` to know if the user's
provided puppet classes are include an `app_frontend`, and thus
`--hostname` and `--email` are required -- but doing that requires
several other steps, and we would like this feedback to be immediate.
We make the presence of `--puppet-classes` equivalent to
`--no-init-db`, since nearly every configuration with
`--puppet-classes` does not install both a database and a frontend,
which is what is required to initialize a database.
This contains two more complex changes:
- The default versions of sorter and matcher assume that ItemType is a
string. But the Typeahead class works on a generic ItemType and I'm
not aware of a way to assert that this function is only called for
typeaheads with string items. For `matcher`, we can assert that the
items are strings. `sorter` is now a required option instead of an
optional one that could fall back to the default.
- `element` can be either an `input` element or a `contenteditable`
`div`. We distinguish between them using `.is("[contenteditable]"))`
but TypeScript doesn't understand that. So we replaced `this.$element`
with `this.input_element` where `input_element` is an object with the
`$element` and also a `type` specifying which type of element it is
(input or contenteditable).
Previously, #26419 addressed the majority of these calls, but did not
prevent more from creeping in. Remove the one remaining
callsite (after the cleanup from the previous commits), and ban any
future use of the pattern.
9bd340957f changed the headers; while we no longer store the
changelog text in the Github release object, we should still output
the changelog to STDOUT correctly.
Verified using the original test plan detailed in #18124, checking that the output
is similar, and error handling is correct if the virtualenv is not available.
Fixes#18124.
To improve onboarding experience, this commit adds a
one-time modal which introduces the recent conversations view.
Users see this one-time modal on visiting the recent
conversations view.
Fixes#29073.
To improve onboarding experience, this commit adds
a one-time modal which introduces the inbox view.
Users see this one-time modal on visiting the inbox view.
Fixes part of #29073.
Replace a separate call to subprocess, starting `node` from scratch,
with an optional standalone node Express service which performs the
rendering. In benchmarking, this reduces the overhead of a KaTeX call
from 120ms to 2.8ms. This is notable because enough calls to KaTeX in
a single message would previously time out the whole message
rendering.
The service is optional because he majority of deployments do not use
enough LaTeX to merit the additional memory usage (60Mb).
Fixes: #17425.
The migration requires some new assert statements as well as a change
in how the `return undefined` case is spelled to match the types declared by
Tippy upstream.
This makes no immediate reloads the default for runtornado, matching
the production configuration, and changes the development incantation
to be the one to specify the departure from the norm, with
--immediate-reloads.
For spectators, the chunk of page_params that originates from
do_events_register isn’t assigned until ui_init.js. That means the
TypeScript type of page_params is mostly a lie during module load
time: reading a parameter too early silently results in undefined
rather than the declared type, with unpredictable results later on.
We want to make such an early read into an immediate runtime error,
for both users and spectators consistently, and pave the way for
runtime validation of the page_params type. As a first step, split
out the subset of fields that pertain to the current user.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Also, makes small updates to `next_plan_forms_support.html`.
Removes unneeded "btn" and "btn-default" classes, and updates
the placeholder text for the input as not marked for translation.
Also, renames `ad_hoc_query.html` to `activity_table.html`,
`realm_summary_table.html` to `installation_activity_table.html`,
and `activity_details_template.html` to `activity.html`.
Removes the style attribute in the installation activity template
and uses a CSS class, "installation-activity-header", to center the
h3 and p tags instead. This removes an exception from the custom
lint check.
View functions in `analytics/views/support.py` are moved to
`corporate/views/support.py`.
Shared activity functions in `analytics/views/activity_common.py`
are moved to `corporate/lib/activity.py`, which was also renamed
from `corporate/lib/analytics.py`.
The previous version of the script did not quote VAGRANTUSERNAME, which caused
an error when running the script if the username contained `-` or other characters
that affect the Postgres syntax. Fix this using double-quotes.
Rename and restructure these comparison variables such that we don't
have a possibly impossible case for presence.last_connected_time being
None.
Fixes#25498.
The way the flow goes now is this:
1. The user initiaties login via "Billing" in the gear menu.
2. That takes them to `/self-hosted-billing/` (possibly with a
`next_page` param if we use that for some gear menu options).
3. The server queries the bouncer to give the user a link with a signed
access token.
4. The user is redirected to that link (on `selfhosting.zulipchat.com`).
Now we have two cases, either the user is logging in for the first time
and already did in the past.
If this is the first time, we have:
5. The user is asked to fill in their email in a form that's shown,
pre-filled with the value provided inside the signed access token.
They POST this to the next endpoint.
6. The next endpoint sends a confirmation email to that address and asks
the user to go check their email.
7. The user clicks the link in their email is taken to the
from_confirmation endpoint.
8. Their initial RemoteBillingUser is created, a new signed link like in
(3) is generated and they're transparently taken back to (4),
where now that they have a RemoteBillingUser, they're handled
just like a user who already logged in before:
If the user already logged in before, they go straight here:
9. "Confirm login" page - they're shown their information (email and
full_name), can update
their full name in the form if they want. They also accept ToS here
if necessary. They POST this form back to
the endpoint and finally have a logged in session.
10. They're redirected to billing (or `next_page`) now that they have
access.