This commit refactors the code for stream message retentions setting
to match it with the other time limit settings -
- Rename the "Retain for N days after posting" option to "Custom".
We also update the option value from "retain_for_period" to
"custom_period".
- Change the label of custom input to "Retention period (days)"
as it is more descriptive and clear than just labelling it as "N".
- The custom input is also moved to be below the dropdown and
also has left margin as with the other time limit realm settings.
The tooltip for the "Announce Stream" hint was not consistent with the
rest of the settings so it has now been replaced with the standard tippy
tooltip. The "?" icon has also been replaced by the "i" icon to match
the other settings.
Fixes: #21312.
This commit solves the bug which keeps the announce stream checkbox checked
for non-admin users when users are only allowed to create private streams
and not public streams.
The desired behavior is to not allow users to announce private streams, so
we keep the checkbox unchecked and disabled.
This commit fixes the above mentioned bug by removing the if-else block which
was executed after update_announce_stream_state (the function which handles
updating the checkbox considering if the realm has notifications stream or
not and whether the stream being created is public or private) and only checks
whether the realm has notification stream or not to show or hide the announce
stream checkbox irrespective of privacy of the stream being created.
This commit also fixes the handler to update the checkbox state on changing
privacy to update the checkbox state only on changing privacy value and not
on toggling the checkbox itself or changing post policy.
Fixes#21705.
In stream edit and stream create replace the existing checkbox
format for choosing "stream post policy" with dropdown widget.
In "stream_types.hbs" implement the dropdown menu and remove
the checkbox format for selecting "stream post policy".
In "stream_create.js" and "stream_edit.js" edit the code for
"stream_post_policy" to extract the "stream post policy" value
from the dropdown menu after submitting the form.
The most notable change here is that when you are adding
subscribers to a stream as part of creating the stream,
you can now use the same essential pill-based UI for
adding users as we do when you edit subscribers for an
existing stream.
We don't try to exactly mimic the edit-stream UI or
implementation, since when you are adding subscribers
during create-stream, we are just updating a list in
memory, whereas in the edit-stream UI, we immediately
send info to the server.
Fixes#20499
We want to avoid submit handlers here, because we may
have embedded widgets that have their own forms or
buttons.
We use "finalize" here to distinguish the two Create
buttons related to streams. You hit one button to
start the UI and then the second button to finalize
the process.
I also fix the bad test idiom of clicking on the
sea-green button.
We should only consider visible choices while selecting the default
stream-privacy choice in stream creation form. Previously, we were
only checking whether the option is disabled, but this resulted in
a case where no option was selected when the realm-level setting
was set to not allow web-public streams as the choice was only
hidden and not disabled.
We select the first enabled radio button by default instead
of selecting "Public" because there can be case when a user
is allowed to create a private-stream only and the other
options are disabled in that case after some recent changes.
The stream creation form currently does not setup its own handler for
displaying the "N:" input when ".stream_message_retention_setting" is
changed.
Prior to e793ef7f62d280300afeeab2f4a086e99858a5a9, this form would
sometimes work as intended because stream_edit would set the handler
on this dropdown, when it was opened. However, after that commit, this
would simply never work.
Hence, in this commit, we make changes so that stream_create correctly
sets the handler on its dropdown. This causes us to repeat ourselves a
little and as such is not the cleanest solution, but this might be the
best we can do due to the complications of stream_edit opening a
modal.
This commit has the following changes -
- Adds dropdown for changing create_web_public_stream_policy and this
dropdown is visible only if settings.WEB_PUBLIC_STREAMS_ENABLED and
enable_spectator_access is set to True. This dropdown is live-udpated
on changing enable_spectator_access setting.
- The web-public stream option in stream creation form and stream privacy
modal is hidden if one of settings.WEB_PUBLIC_STREAMS_ENABLED or
enable_spectator_access is set to False except in stream privacy modal
when the stream is already web-public so that the user is not confused by
none of the options being selected.
- We disable the web-public stream option in stream creation form and
in stream-privacy modals of stream which are not already web-public
when the user is not allowed to create web-public streams as per
create_web_public_stream_policy setting.
- We use on_show parameter to hide or disable the options in stream-privacy
modal because we use the visible property of element to remove the bottom
border from last element in the stream-privacy choices and thus we have
to wait for the modal to be visible.
Fixes#20287. Fixes#20296.
We attach the DOM for the modal to the body element
to avoid style interference from other elements and having to choose
a separate parent element for every single dialog_widget.
Previously, Everytime the user triggers the Stream create UI
by pressing the `Create stream` button, the
`create_handlers_for_users` function would reinitialize which
created duplicate event handlers for its elements.
This could lead to multiple click events being triggered over the
same element.
One such example was filed as #19255, where the click event was
triggering twice and hence the "Copy from stream" dropdown
would remain folded (closed).
Fixed this by - Initializing the `create_handlers_for_users` function
within the main `set_up_handlers` function, which is triggered only
once upon the opening of Stream create UI.
Fixes#19255.
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.
We use subs as a common variable name for a collection of stream
data structure used in settings, in lot of modules. So this
rename clears a bunch of related shadowed variables.
This commit renames the html_yes_button parameter of confirm
dialog widget to html_submit_button and also all the related
variables in confirm_dialog.js.
This will help in keeping a general name when deduplicating
the code for confirm_dialog and edit_fields_modal.
Moved `subscription_invites_warning` modal to `confirm_dialog`
folder and renamed the modal to `confirm_subscription_invites_warning.hbs`
to follow the naming convention.
This improves the UX of creating a stream for atleast 1000+ users
realm by showing the the stream creation form much faster than
before.
Search, user addition, scrolling worked smoothly on 15k+
users realm as tested on dev setup.
Also, simplebar is used to replace the default scrollbar.
Fixes#16805
This is mostly a pure code move.
In passing I remove an unneeded call to
update_calculated_fields in the dispatch code,
plus some tests that don't need them.
Now when we want to measure how long a block
of code takes to execute, we just wrap it with
`blueslip.measure_time`, instead of the awkward
idiom from my original commit of getting a callback
function.
My rationale for the original scheme was that I
wanted to minimize diffs and avoid changing
`const` to `let` in a few cases, but I believe
now that the function wrapper is nicer.
In a few cases I just removed the blueslip timing
code, since I was able to confirm on czo that
the times were pretty minimal.
This de-clutters stream_data a bit. Since our
peer data is our biggest performance concern,
I want to contain any optimizations to a fairly
well-focused module.
The name `peer_data` is a bit of a compromise,
since we already have `subs.js` and we use
`sub` as a variable name for stream records
throughout our code, but it's consistent with
our event nomenclature (peer/add, peer/remove)
and it's short while still being fairly easy
to find with grep.
This sets us up to use better system-wide data structures
for tracking subscribers.
Basically, instead of storing subscriber data on the
"sub" objects in stream_data.js, we instead have a
parallel data structure called stream_subscribers.
We also have stream_create, stream_edit, and friends
use helper functions rather than accessing
sub.subscribers directly.