return_messages_immediately's return value is not returned, so the
argument validation in @has_request_variables didn't work correctly.
@has_request_variables would return a json_error, but
send_with_safety_check expects a dict.
(imported from commit 86b6bccb7861dbf523c06b606b87374e339059a4)
The original check has become too broad now that we have more buttons,
and specifically this lets you use the search hotkey to start a new
search after you've been searching up and down.
(imported from commit 0e691ff55ff9d4be8d406d1eb47fc2062758d28b)
This change substantially increases the number of view functions where
the API and JSON versions are actually identical code.
(imported from commit 2eee55a8943cf9a684bec2ba1f6d7afcb2b91948)
This is useful for trying out new versions of the forwarding code
while the mirroring bot is still running in production.
(imported from commit bcdaf91fed55ac0974b1efe31dd13ed006b6fd06)
Functions with the @has_request_variables decorator can have some of
their arguments extracted from the HTTP request. For each such
argument, its default value should be an instance of the POST class.
The arguments to the POST constructor control the request variable
name that the function parameter should be populated from (it
defaults to the same as the parameter name), whether the value should
be converted before being passed, and whether a default value should
be supplied if the parameter is missing from the request.
(imported from commit ba1c25d73ba3980e44abec1458e6496807fcdaa4)
No need for an 'if' if we're just returning a boolean. And using
QuerySet.exists() should be a little more efficient.
(imported from commit 69ec3cc9f2fe904ec40ea3b8a8687a06cd03f3f3)
login_required_api_view is misleadingly named. It accepts neither a Django
login session nor login credentials (username / password). The intent here is
authentication, whether stateful (login) or stateless (API key).
(imported from commit 7e9be552168396b399116737655bd7267fd5c1a3)
Previously we presented the server cert, then the intermediate, then the
CA. This caused some browsers to break.
To resolve the issue, we ran:
wget http://www.startssl.com/certs/ca.pem -O startcom.pem
wget http://www.startssl.com/certs/sub.class1.server.ca.pem
cat app.humbughq.com.crt sub.class1.server.ca.pem startcom.pem > app.humbughq.com.combined-chain.crt
(repeating the last step for each .humbughq.com.crt)
Note: The resultant .combined-chain. files contain different
certificates than they did previously.
(imported from commit 6544938ef2955d52c5e8d95f53c280322526a790)
This happens sometimes (especially when our server is restarting), and
isn't a _real_ problem -- it's much more important that we have a
completely reliable test that we can put a Nagios alert against.
(imported from commit 0add0b3dfc5447307014bbb9137366bd7141ade0)
Within 'except', 'raise' re-raises the current exception. But outside, it produces
TypeError: exceptions must be old-style classes or derived from BaseException, not NoneType
which is pretty confusing as a generic "something has gone wrong" exception.
(imported from commit 9fcd003a952b82df67726c26161dced079978a32)
django.utils.timezone.now returns an aware datetime object because USE_TZ =
True.
Fixes#80.
(imported from commit c60f491fe00a98626ecced94fc3ea1f71f939a38)