Message_edit.js had a bug where if the inline topic_edit failed, it
would not show an error because it attempted to make a look up for
the message_id as though it were a message row edit, which would not
work. That was changed in a refactor, which made it apparent that
there was no error being rendered at all. This commit corrects it by
rendering the error, it also adds some styling to ensure the error
message is displayed inline and it makes a change to the template so
the error is rendered before the spinner.
This commit cleans up the dirty if/else structure of
handle_edit_keydown by switching to switch case statements, and also
separates the handler for inline_topic_edits and that for message
row edits.
This commit makes it so that inline (recipient bar) topic edits follow
a different path from full message row edits in `message_edit.js`.
This commit:
- deletes `.save()` endpoint and replaces all calls to it with
`.save_message_row_edit()` and `.save_inline_topic_edit()`
- deletes `.end()` endpoint and replaces all calls to it with calls to
either ".end_message_row_edit()" and ".end_inline_topic_edit()".
Some extraneous zrequires were added in
3bc818b9f7
This is not a huge deal, but it makes it
appear as if data modules are dependent
on things that they don't really care
about. The tests should provide a bit
of signal on how "deep" an object's
dependencies go.
As long as the current narrow isn't already a search narrow or empty,
we add a single space at the end of the current filter so that the
user can just press the right arrow key and begin typing their search
term, instead of having to add a space themselves.
The set_up_muted_topics_ui and templates have been
refactored to use list_render.
This is done to support filtering and sorting of
the muted stream topics.
This also includes the addition of a new Date muted header.
We have two different digest schemes to make
sure we keep the database up to date. There
is the migration digest, which is NOT in the
scope of this commit, and which already
used the mechanism we use for other tools.
Here we are talking about the digest for
important files like `populate_db.py`.
Now our scheme is more consistent with how we
check file changes for other tools (as
well as the aformentioned migration files).
And we only write one hash file, instead of
seven.
And we only write the file when things have
actually changed.
And we are explicit about side effects.
Finally, we include a couple new bot settings
in the digest:
INTERNAL_BOTS
DISABLED_REALM_INTERNAL_BOTS
NOTE: This will require a one-time transition,
where we rebuild both databases (dev/test).
It takes a little over two minutes for me,
so it's not super painful.
I bump the provision version here, even
though you don't technically need it (since
the relevant tools are actually using the
digest files to determine if they need to
rebuild the database). I figure it's just
good to explicitly make this commit trigger
a provision, and the user will then see
the one-time migration of the hash files
with a little bit less of a surprise.
And I do a major bump, not a minor bump,
because when we go in the reverse direction,
the old code will have to rebuild the
database due to the legacy hash files not
being around, so, again, I just prefer it
to be explicit.
Fixes#14595.
Invalid HTTP requests could end up in an unhandled exception in
skip_200_and_304 due the record not having the status_code attribute
set. With this change we'll avoid the exception
Example:
curl -X POST -H 'Transfer-Encoding : chunked' --data-binary 'a' 'http://zulipdev.com:9991/json/messages/57'
2020-04-21 10:56:22.007 WARN [django.server] "POST /json/messages/57 HTTP/1.1" 405 95
2020-04-21 10:56:22.007 INFO [django.server] code 400, message Bad request syntax ('a')
2020-04-21 10:56:22.008 WARN [django.server] "a" 400 -
This will work around https://bugs.python.org/issue34939 when we
convert the type comment to a Python 3.6 style annotation.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
This commit makes sure that we replace the text in the search box
every time a user calls `exit_search()` eg via the escape hotkey or by
clicking the `x` icon, so that the search box discards any input and
always starts at the current narrow.
We now have helpers for the two places where
we create databases.
There was already one helper in place, and
I gave it a more concrete name, to match
its actual database name in postgres.
So `generate-fixtures` only ever did 9 lines of code (really
3 lines of actual code) in its normal mode of operation.
But it was cluttered with lots of stuff that really only
happened when you called it with the `-force` option, which
was only invoked by `rebuild-test-database`.
Now we inline most of the code into `rebuild-test-database`.
And now `generate-fixtures` is simple (and doesn't support
a `-force` flag.
We remove the `generate_fixtures` option here mostly
for simplicity, but in particular to facilitate
an upcoming commit to simplify the job of
`generate-fixtures` (and remove its `--force` option).
The command line option here for `test-backend`
was really calling `generate_fixtures --force`,
which we're about to rename `tools/rebuild-test-database`.
The `test-backend` tools is already smart about catching
up on migrations, so we generally don't need to tell it
to repair the database.
And if the database does get corrupt, you can just do
it directly with `tools/rebuild-test-database`.
This eliminates the `use_force` flag in
`update_test_databases_if_required`, which was easy
to confuse with `rebuild_test_database`.
The other caller wasn't using `use_force`.
The new tools now have more concise, more parallel names:
- rebuild-dev-database
- rebuild-test-database
The actual implementations are still pretty different:
rebuild-dev-database:
mostly delegates to 5 management scripts
rebuild-test-database:
is a very thin wrapper for generate-fixtures
We'll try to clean that up a bit soon.
Somewhat confusingly, we have two types of different
digests related to databases. The migration digests
are pragmatic, since changes to migrations are a bit
more frequent for certain use cases and don't
necessitate a complete rebuild of the database.
Anyway, these are just more specific names.
Versions should not be pinned in *.in unless specific circumstances
merit an exception to this rule. Every existing exception is
commented.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
Generated by autopep8 --aggressive, with the setup.cfg configuration
from #14532. In general, an isinstance check may not be equivalent to
a type check because it includes subtypes; however, that’s usually
what you want.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
Generated by autopep8, with the setup.cfg configuration from #14532.
I’m not sure why pycodestyle didn’t already flag these.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
This refactors `extract_python_code_example` to accept an
`example_regex` parameter. It can now be used to extract code examples
from javascript_examples.py.
Upgrade libthumbor in main zulip venv. This version drops support
for python 2 and runs on py>=3.6.
As such, it is our first commit taking advantage of our having dropped support
for Debian Stretch and Ubuntu Xenial, our previous Python 3.5-based platforms.
The div containing options for filtering streams was placed in the
centre. Aligned it towards the right. Had to pass a special check
variable in subs.js:540 to add the specific class for this purpose.
This was a specific scenario where this sort of CSS was to be added,
hence had to make a specific case.
Also, fixed the bottom border color of the search streams bar for night
mode.
Previously, the send_custom_email code path leaked files in paths that
were not `.gitignored`, under templates/zerver/emails.
This became problematic when we added automated tests for this code
path, as it meant we leaked these files every time `test-backend` ran.
Fix this by ensuring all the files we generate are in this special
subdirectory.
This tool was part of a very ad hoc investigation
during 2017 into our JS dep dependencies.
It's very out of date, and it has a non-trivial
maintenance cost, as these type of tools seem
to come up in every code sweep.
Previously, we would always pick up the stream and topic name from
compose_state. This would work for message edits as well when the
composebox was open.
Now, if we are in a message edit, we get the stream and topic of the
message being edited before falling back on trying to populate using
the composebox state.
Fixes#14545.