When using the sub-expression purely for filtering, and not for
accessing the value in the resultset, .alias() is potentially faster
since it does not pull the value in as well.
migrate the following endpoints from @has_request_variables
to @typed_endpoint :
- upgrade()
- remote_realm_upgrade()
- upgrade_page()
- remote_server_upgrade()
Creates a new "realm_deactivated" email that can be sent to realm
owners as part of `do_deactivate_realm`, via a boolean flag,
`email_owners`.
This flag is set to `False` when `do_deactivate_realm` is used for
realm exports or changing a realm's subdomain, so that the active
organization owners are not emailed in those cases.
This flag is optional for the `deactivate_realm` management command,
but as there is no active user passed in that case, then the email
is sent without referencing who deactivated the realm.
It is passed as `True` for the support analytics view, but the email
that is generated does not include information about the support
admin user who completed the request for organization deactivation.
When an active organization owner deactivates the organization, then
the flag is `True` and an email is sent to them as well as any other
active organization owners, with a slight variation in the email text
for those two cases.
Adds specific tests for when `email_owners` is passed as `True`. All
existing tests for other functionality of `do_deactivate_user` pass
the flag as `False`.
Adds `localize` from django.util.formats as a jinja env filter so
that the dates in these emails are internationlized for the owner's
default language setting in the "realm_deactivated" email templates.
Fixes#24685.
It's going to be helpful in the future to record the reason for realm
deactivation.
- For information tracking
- For making a distinction between cases where we can allow realm owners
to reactivate their realm via a self-serve flow (e.g.
"owner_request") vs where we can't (ToS abuse).
In #23380, we are changing all occurrences of uri with url in order to
follow the latest URL standard. Previous PRs #25038 and #25045 has
replaced the occurences of uri that has no direct relation with realm.
This commit changes just the model property, which has no API
compatibility concerns.
This also now allows user to upgrade to plus plan from pricing page.
Note that since we don't pass customer_plan on pages like self-hosting
and for/business, `Current plan` status is not displayed on these pages.
When a customer with plan's status 'DOWNGRADE_AT_END_OF_FREE_TRIAL'
visits /billing page on the free-trial end date before the invoice
cron runs, the 'make_end_of_cycle_updates_if_needed' downgrades the
plan.
Earlier, when such a customer visited /billing page in this time window
it resulted in an assertion error.
This commit fixes the incorrect behaviour by redirecting to '/plans'
page in such cases.
If the remote realm registered after the legacy plan on server
ENDED, we never migrate the plan to the remote realm. So, we need
to check the server of remote realm whenever we are check remote
realm for legacy plan.
Refactors the Cloud support view to pass in any sponsorship or
discount information about the Customer object for the realm,
which allows us to display any information submitted in a
sponsorship request.
The remote support view now returns results for deactivated remote
servers with those results sorted to the end and formatted to
visually stand out.
Forms to change sponsorship and discount fields on the customer
for the remote server or realm are not shown, but the data stored
on the customer object is shown, including any sponsorship request
information (if the customer had a sponsorship request pending when
it was deactivated).
Forms to schedule a plan are also not shown for deactivated servers
and their associated remote realms.
Forms and information for any current plan or scheduled plan, for
either the deactivated remote server or its associated remote
realms, are shown so that support staff can update those plans if
necessary.
As a follow-up to commit d66b7ad853, where we send internal emails
when an active paid plan is on a locally deleted remote realm, we
need search queries in the remote support view to return results
for these deactivated remote realms, instead of excluding them.
Only get the customer information once from the database.
Extract logic for any next plan (either scheduled or an offer) data
into a separate function and do not hit database twice when getting
the number of licenses at the next plan renewal.
Removes prefetch of remote realms on the remote server query
because, by excluding the system bot realm when this is referenced,
we end up hitting the database again.
Strips whitespace from query string and makes a few small updates
for readability.
We no longer want to migrate Legacy plans from server to realms, since
Legacy plans are not really a thing in the original sense anymore, since
February 15th.
Now they're just a tool to give temporary extensions of access to the
push notification service for users, when needed. And as such, it makes
no sense to migrate like that.
The remaining code in this function is for migrating (any) plan from the
server object to the realm object, if the server has just a single
realm.
The logic in the case where there's only one realm and the function
tries to migrate the server's plan to it, had two main unhandled edge
cases that would throw exceptions:
1.
```
remote_realm = RemoteRealm.objects.get(
uuid=realm_uuids[0], plan_type=RemoteRealm.PLAN_TYPE_SELF_MANAGED
)
```
This could throw an exception if the RemoteRealm exists, but has an
active e.g. Legacy plan. Then there'd be no object matching the
plan_type in the query, raising RemoteRealm.DoesNotExist.
2. If the RemoteRealm had e.g. a Legacy plan in the past, that's now
expired, then it'd have a Customer object. Meaning that the attempt
to move the server's customer to the realm:
`server_plan.customer = remote_realm_customer`
would trigger an IntegrityError since a RemoteRealm can't have two
Customer objects.
In simple cases the situation in (2) can still be easily migrated, by
moving the plan from the server's customer to the realm's customer.
In commit 230294c, the logic for creating the support links in the
remote activity chart were broken. Updates the constants so that
the links have the correct server information for the search query.
Expands the main query for remote servers to get the audit log
event datetime for when the server was created/registered.
The remote realm object has a field for when the remote realm
was created on the remote server.
Adds a link on the upgrade and billing pages that opens a stripe
billing portal for the customer to update their name and address
that will appear on invoices and receipts.
On the billing page, updating the credit card information will
no longer update the customer billing address, since they can
now do this directly through the billing portal. To be consistent
with the credit card form on the upgrade page, we still require
inputting a billing address for the card.
Note that, once an invoice is paid/complete, then changes to the
customer's name and address will not be applied to those invoices.
Instead of charging the customer using the attached payment
method and then creating the invoice, we create an invoice and
force an immediate payment for the invoice via the attached
payment method.
This is useful in the support view in case the audit log data is
stale and user counts are not updated for billing.
Also, renames formatting function for optional datetimes that is
used in the support and activity views/charts. And instead of
showing these datetime strings in the eastern US timezone, we
now show and label them as UTC.