Earlier there was only a realm level setting for configuring
who can edit user groups. A new group level setting is also added
for configuring who can manage that particular group.
Now, a user group can be edited by a user if it is allowed from
realm level setting or group level setting.
This commit make changes to also use group level setting
in determining whether a group can be edited by user or not.
Also, updated tests to use api_post and api_delete helpers instead
of using client_post and client_delete helpers with different users
being logged in.
Earlier there was a single decorator function to check whether
user can create and edit user groups. This commit adds a new
decorator function to check whether user has permissions to
create user groups.
This was done because in future commits we will be adding a
realm level setting for configuring who can create user groups.
This was only used in the undocumented narrow_stream mode, and relied
on a deprecated synchronous XHR request.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
As explained in the comment, this is to prevent bugs where some strange
combination of codepaths could end up calling do_login without basic
validation of e.g. the subdomain. The usefulness of this will be
extended with the upcoming commit to add the ability to configure custom
code to wrap authenticate() calls in. This will help ensure that some
codepaths don't slip by the mechanism, ending up logging in a user
without the chance for the custom wrapper to run its code.
Switches from Django's default error page to Zulip standard error
template. Also updates template for 405 error code to not use the 404
art.
Fixes#25626.
This makes it possible for a self-hosted realm administrator to
directly access a logged-page on the push notifications bouncer
service, enabling billing, support contacts, and other administrator
for enterprise customers to be managed without manual setup.
`stack_info` shows the stack between where the error was raised and
where it was captured -- which is not interesting when we
intentionally raised it, and know where it will be captured.
Omit the `stack_info` when it will just fill the logs with
uninteresting data.
It is not clear why 84723654c8 added these lines, are they are not
related to status codes.
Using an explicit `capture_exception` causes the exception in Sentry
to not have a `logger` field, which is quite useful for filtering.
Pass the HttpRequest explicitly through the two webhooks that log to
the webhook loggers.
get_current_request is now unused, so remove it (in the same commit
for test coverage reasons).
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Because the third party might not be expecting a 400 from our
webhooks, we now instead use 200 status code for unknown events,
while sending back the error to Sentry. Because it is no longer an error
response, the response type should now be "success".
Fixes#24721.
Adds `is_webhook_view` boolean field to the RequestNotes class so
that (when implemented) `ignored_parameters_unsupported` feature
is not something that is applied to webhooks.
These were useful as a transitional workaround to ignore type errors
that only show up with django-stubs, while avoiding errors about
unused type: ignore comments without django-stubs. Now that the
django-stubs transition is complete, switch to type: ignore comments
so that mypy will tell us if they become unnecessary. Many already
have.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This change incorporate should_rate_limit into rate_limit_user and
rate_limit_request_by_ip. Note a slight behavior change to other callers
to rate_limit_request_by_ip is made as we now check if the client is
eligible to be exempted from rate limiting now, which was previously
only done as a part of zerver.lib.rate_limiter.rate_limit.
Now we mock zerver.lib.rate_limiter.RateLimitedUser instead of
zerver.decorator.rate_limit_user in
zerver.tests.test_decorators.RateLimitTestCase, because rate_limit_user
will always be called but rate limit only happens the should_rate_limit
check passes;
we can continue to mock zerver.lib.rate_limiter.rate_limit_ip, because the
decorated view functions call rate_limit_request_by_ip that calls
rate_limit_ip when the should_rate_limit check passes.
We need to mock zerver.decorator.rate_limit_user for SkipRateLimitingTest
now because rate_limit has been removed. We don't need to mock
RateLimitedUser in this case because we are only verifying that
the skip_rate_limiting flag works.
To ensure coverage in add_logging_data, a new test case is added to use
a web_public_view (which decorates the view function with
add_logging_data) with a new flag to check_rate_limit_public_or_user_views.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
This allows us to separate the zilencer paths from other JSON paths,
with explicit type annotation expecting `RemoteZulipServer` as the
second parameter of the handler using
authenticated_remote_server_view.
The test case is also updated to remove a test for a situation that no
longer occurs anymore, since we don't perform subdomain checks on
remote servers.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
Doing the dispatch to authenticated_json_view first lets us avoid
messing around with the skip_rate_limiting parameter.
Since rate_limit itself checks user.is_authenticated, there's no
potential downside to doing that check first here.
This refactoring is necessary to separate the expected type annotation
for view functions with different authentication methods. Currently the
signature aren't actually check against view functions because
`rest_path` does not support type checking parameter types, but it will
become useful once we do.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
`authenticated_rest_api_view` and `authenticated_json_view` essentially
remove `UserProfile` from the decorated function.
Note that `authenticated_log_and_execute_json` is removed to avoid
duplicating `ParamT` unnecessarily in the helper.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
This refactors rate limit related functions from `zerver.decorator` to
zerver.lib.rate_limiter.
We conditionally import `RemoteZulipServer`, `RequestNotes`, and
`RateLimitedRemoteZulipServer` to avoid circular dependency.
Most instances of importing these functions from `zerver.decorator` got
updated, with a few exceptions in `zerver.tests.test_decorators`, where
we do want to mock the rate limiting functions imported in
`zerver.decorator`. The same goes with the mocking example in the
"testing-with-django" documentation.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
This refactors `rate_limit` so that we no longer use it as a decorator.
This is a workaround to https://github.com/python/mypy/issues/12909 as
`rate_limit` previous expects different parameters than its callers.
Our approach to test logging handlers also needs to be updated because
the view function is not decorated by `rate_limit`.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
Decorators like `require_server_admin_api` turns user_profile into a
positional-only parameter, requiring the callers to stop passing it as a
keyword argument.
Functions like `get_chart_data` that gets decorated by both
`require_non_guest_user` and `has_request_variables` now have accurate
type annotation during type checking, with the first two parameters
turned into positional-only, and thus the change in
`analytics.views.stats`.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>