This is a prep commit, which renames some variables
and functions involved in topic muting to include
the word "topic" in them.
This is done to have clarity when similar code
will be added as a part of the mute-user in
future commits.
We also streamline some of the error handling code
by doing everything up front. This will prevent
scenarios where a single bad stream_id/user_id causes a
bunch of the same warnings in an inner loop.
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.
The changes made in this commit are as follows:
* The `remove_messages` is moved to the `message_events.js`
file from `ui.js`.
* We refactor `MessageListData.change_message_id` to no
longer require an `opts` parameter as this function
just returns whether we need to rerender or not.
The blueslip error block can be removed since we made
the change to no long defer the data updates in
commit 3b5ba6b2c1,
this case can no longer occur.
We now can send an implied matrix of user/stream tuples
for peer_add and peer_remove events.
The client code basically does this:
for stream_id in event['stream_ids']:
for user_id in event['user_ids']:
update_sub(stream_id, user_id)
We used to send individual events, which gets real
expensive when you are creating new streams. For
the case of copy-to-stream case, we should see
events go from U to 1, where U is the number of users
added.
Note that we don't yet fully optimize the potential
of this schema. For adding a new user with lots
of default streams, we still send S peer_add events.
And if you subscribe a bunch of users to a bunch of
private streams, we only go from U * S to S; we can't
optimize it down to one event easily.
We were not updating the trailing bookend on deactivation of stream
if the user was narrowed to deactivated stream and this commit fixes
this.
For subscribed streams, we just show the trailing bookend with
content as 'This stream has been deactivated' and hide the
Unsubscribe button.
For unsubscribed streams, we change the content of trailing bookend
to 'This stream has been deactivated' and hide the Subscribe button.
Fixes#15999.
Fixes#15992.
If the last message of the topic was deleted, we update the stored
message_id in the topic history so that the topic order in topic_list
is updated correctly.
ES and TypeScript modules are strict by default and don’t need this
directive. ESLint will remind us to add it to new CommonJS files and
remove it from ES and TypeScript modules.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This is a pretty straightforward conversion.
The bulk of the diff is just changing emoji.js
to ES6 syntax.
There is one little todo that can be deferred
to the next commit--we are now set up to have
markdown.js require emoji.js directly, since
it is no longer on `window`.
The main thing here is that we check that the
actual data got put into our data structures.
(In general we want to move away from stubbing
data modules; any place where we stub data modules
is a relic of earlier days, where we were just
trying to set the bar for 100% line coverage,
even though some of the original coverage was
quite shallow.)
I also use real stubs instead of noops for
the calls out to UI-oriented modules.
In passing I tweak some comments in the actual
dispatch code.
This makes it so that the authoritative holder
of all emoji data is emoji.js, and all our
UI components that need emoji data consistently
pull data from emoji.js as needed.
Or to put it another way, we no longer need the
dispatch module to know that emoji_picker is
coupled to emoji precisely by the active_realm_emojis
data; it can now make fewer assumptions.
This is an easy prep step to help out phase
out page_params.realm_emoji.
All callers pass in what's effectively
page_params.realm_emoji. (The dispatch
code does it indirectly.)
Prettier would do this anyway, but it’s separated out for a more
reviewable diff. Generated by ESLint.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Prettier would do this anyway, but it’s separated out for a more
reviewable diff. Generated by ESLint.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Previously, the navbar sub count would not live update as users
subscribed or unsubscribed, this commit adds the relevant calls in
stream events.
It would have been better to just have a single call within
server_events_dispatch but it seems difficult due to the way of
mark_subscribed and mark_unsubscribed are structured.
stream_events.mark_unsubscribed conditionally calls
subs.update_settings_for_unsubscribed which calls
subs.rerender_subscriptions_settings and as such handles the update
for the subscriptions modal on its own. Hence, we simply rely on the
stream_data.update_calculated_fields to ensure the subscriber counts
are updated and make a call to
tab_bar.maybe_rerender_title_area_for_stream(sub).
stream_events.mark_subscribed is similar.
This commit changes stream_data.remove_subscriber to use stream id
instead of stream name. We are using stream ids so that we can
avoid bugs related to live update after stream rename.
Thsi commit changes stream_data.add_subscriber to use stream_id
instead of stream name. We are using stream ids so that we can
avoid bugs related to live update after stream rename.
This commit removes stream_edit.rerender function. We directly
call subs.rerender_subscriptions_settings directly from
server_events_dispatch.js, which was the only caller of rerender
function, as we already have sub object.
We are using stream ids so that we can avoid bugs related to live
update after stream rename.