Commit Graph

3 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
sahil839 c7a68d60f3 realm owner: Add frontend implementation of owner role.
This commit adds the option of owner role in user role dropdown
and also takes care of the restrictions while adding/removing
owner status of the user.
This commit also handles the places where we dispaly role of
the user in UI.
2020-06-14 21:20:30 -07:00
sahil839 9fa60672e6 users: Modify update user API endpoint to accept role as parameter.
This commit changes the update user API endpoint to accept role
as parameter instead of the bool parameters is_guest and is_admin.

User role dropdown in user info modal is also modified to use
"dropdown_options_widget".

Modified by tabbott to document the API change.
2020-05-29 14:29:17 -07:00
Steve Howell d5cadbcec2 user settings: Separate code for bot form.
When editing a bot, there are only two fields
that are similar to humans--full name and
email--which are trivial.

Before this commit we used a single codepath
to build the human form and the bot form.

Now we have two simple codepaths.

The tricky nature of the code had already led
to ugly things for the bot codepath that
fortunately weren't user facing, but which
were distracting:

    - For bots we would needlessly set things
      like is_admin, is_guest in the template
      data.

    - For bots we would needlessly try to update
      custom profile fields.

The code that differs between bots and humans
is nontrivial, and the code was both hard to read
and hard to improve:

    - Humans don't have bot owners.

    - Bots don't have custom profile fields.

The bot-owner code is nontrivial for performance
reasons.  In a big realm there are tens of thousands
of potential bot owners.  We avoid the most egregious
performance problems (i.e we don't have multiple
copies of the dropdown), but we may still want
to refine that (at least adding a spinner).

The custom-profile-fields code is nontrivial due
to the dynamic nature of custom profile fields,
which can bring in specialized widgets like
pill fields.

Now each form corresponds to a single endpoint:

    * human -> /json/users
    * bot -> /json/bots

Before we had a lot of conditional logic in
the template, the code to build to views, and
the code to submit the data.  Now everything is
much flatter.

The human code is still a bit messy (more work
coming on that), but the bot code is fairly
pristine.  All three components of the bot code
fit on a page, and there are no conditionals:

    - admin_bot_form.hbs
    - open_bot_form
    - handle_bot_form

We may want to grow out the bot code a bit
to allow admins to do more things, such as
adding services, and this will be easier now.
It would also be easier for us now to share
widgets with the per-user bot settings.

Note that the form for editing human data will
continue to be invoked from two panels:

    - Users
    - Deactivated users

There are some minor differences between
users and deactivated users, but the shape of
the data is the same for both, so that's still
all one codepath.

We eliminate `reset_edit_user` here, since
it was never used.

One nice thing about these forms was that they
had very little custom CSS attached to them
(at form-level specificity), and it turned out
all the custom CSS was for the human-specific
form.
2020-05-09 10:22:37 -07:00