This changes the followup_day2 emails delay from one day later to two days
later if it is getting delivered on any working days(i.e. Mon - Fri).
For Thursday it is compromised to next day as it would be too late to
postponed to Monday and for Friday it should be Monday.
At last actually, emails should send one hour before the above calculated so
that user can catch them when they are dealing with these kinds of stuff.
Fixes: #7078.
These changes are in one commit, since the previous typing of check_url
does not match the centralized strict definition (object/Any vs Text),
actually already used elsewhere in validator.py, and also had a different
API.
check_url is updated here to match the API of the other check_* functions,
ie. val is an object (not Text) & returns Optional[str]. It also now checks
the value is text explicitly at run-time, which was only type-checked
previously. Tests are updated accordingly.
Currently, when other private stream subscriber add realm admin to
stream, new copy private stream is created in realm admin's streams.
Which resulted in error, cause there are two similar stream element
in stream settings.
If new subscriber is added to private stream, we first send them
stream `create` event, cause private stream are not visible until
user don't get subscribed at least once. But realm admins can now
always access private stream, so when realm admin is subscribed to
stream, realm admin get stream `create` event even if stream already
exist in on realm admin client side.
Fix this by extracting realm admins from stream `create` event on
`add` subscription operation and sending private stream `create`
event to all realm admins on stream creation operation.
Fixes#8695
These are the straightforward ones.
Note that there is a line in zerver.lib.test_classes.build_webhook_url
that lost test coverage. That's because most of our tests test using
stream messages so the webhook URLs being tested always have a query
parameter. So the line that accounts for there being no query
parameters never gets called, which is fine, but we should still
keep it.
This commit adds a generic function called check_send_webhook_message
that does the following:
* If a stream is specified in the webhook URL, it sends a stream
message, otherwise sends a PM to the owner of the bot.
* In the case of a stream message, if a custom topic is specified
in the webhook URL, it uses that topic as the subject of the
stream message.
Also, note that we need not test this anywhere except for the
helloworld webhook. Since helloworld is our default example for
webhooks, it is here to stay and it made sense that tests for a
generic function such as check_send_webhook_message be tested
with an actual generic webhook!
Fixes#8607.
We solved the problem the TODO raised by using a different type
annotation syntax, and I'm not sure whether that refactor would
actually improve the code.
The previous system would crash with some files (because for some
reason the comment count was 1 but there was no "initial comment") and
also the file comment and file name were sorta redundant.
The 'make_new_dir' bool value was used to create a new directory
every time True is passed. Now that avatars and uploads directory
are being created seperately, we don't need this anymore.
If an emoji that was deleted was the only realm emoji, or more
generally if all realm emoji were deleted, then we would just leave
the reaction unchanged, with an `emoji_code` that is now corrupt.
Instead, treat this case the same as if only this emoji was deleted
while others remain.
The domain name is being set in the helper function
'slack_workspace_to_realm', but it should be set in the main function
'do_convert_data', as we need it in other child functions of
'do_convert_data'.
This code was originally written when we were using the old South
system, and hasn't been used in a few years. It probably doesn't
work, and thus only serves to clutter the codebase.
Many declarations were previously annotated with
Callable[..., HttpResponse]; this is equivalent to ViewFuncT, so here we
switch to it.
To enable this migration, the WrappedViewFuncT alias is removed; this is
equivalent to the simple & legible Callable[[ViewFuncT], ViewFuncT], so
for relatively no space change, a clearer return type is possible.
Originally was going to centralize this in zerver/lib/request.pyi, but this
file is not visible at run-time, being only a stub. The matching request.py
file seemed inappropriate, as it doesn't actually use ViewFuncT.
Namely, annotate as best as possible, and add notes to indicate preference,
if QuerySet develops generic typing.
Note that the return values of functions with annotations changed in this
commit are used elsewhere as QuerySets, so the Sequence[T] approach used
for some functions in models.py is not applicable.
Other functions took the form of returning Sequence[T] when the QuerySet
functionality is unused beyond the function, with T being the objects
filtered for in the function body; this commit follows that practice for the
one remaining python2 comment-annotated function, completing the transition
of models.py to py3.5 function annotations.
A note is also added to another function regarding a need to return a
QuerySet, and ideally a QuerySet[T] in line with the other functions, as and
when QuerySet becomes annotated as a generic.
We now consistently set our query limits so that we get at
least `num_after` rows such that id > anchor. (Obviously, the
caveat is that if there aren't enough rows that fulfill the
query, we'll return the full set of rows, but that may be less
than `num_after`.) Likewise for `num_before`.
Before this change, we would sometimes return one too few rows
for narrow queries.
Now, we're still a bit broken, but in a more consistent way. If
we have a query that does not match the anchor row (which could
be true even for a non-narrow query), but which does match lots
of rows after the anchor, we'll return `num_after + 1` rows
on the right hand side, whether or not the query has narrow
parameters.
The off-by-one semantics here have probably been moot all along,
since our windows are approximate to begin with. If we set
num_after to 100, its just a rough performance optimization to
begin with, so it doesn't matter whether we return 99 or 101 rows,
as long as we set the anchor correctly on the subsequent query.
We will make the results more rigorous in a follow up commit.