We currently have code to calculate the value of realm_icon_url,
admin_emails and default_discount in two diffrent places. With
the addition of showing confirmation links it would become three.
The easiest way to deduplicate the code and make the view cleaner
is by doing the calculations in template. Alternatively one can
write a function that takes users, realms and confirmations as
arguments and sets the value of realm_icon_url, admin_emails and
default_discount appropriately in realm object according to the
type of the confirmation. But that seems more messy than passing
the functions directly to template approach.
Most of the failures were due to parameters that are not intended to
be used by third-party code, so the correct fix for those was the set
intentionally_undocumented=True.
Fixes#12969.
MigrationsTestCase is intentionally omitted from this, since migrations
tests are different in their nature and so whatever setUp()
ZulipTestCase may do in the future, MigrationsTestCase may not
necessarily want to replicate.
Previously, the logic for determining whether to provide an LDAP
password prompt on the registration page was incorrectly including it
if any LDAP authentication was backend enabled, even if LDAP was
configured with the populate-only backend that is not responsible for
authentication (just for filling in name and custom profile fields).
We fix this by correcting the conditional, and add a test.
There's still follow-up work to do here: We may still end up
presenting a registration form in situations where it's useless
because we got all the data from SAML + LDAP. But that's for a future
issue.
This fixes a bug reported in #13275.
This is a follow-up to b69213808a.
We now actually send messages from the notification_bot, which
is the real usecase for this code.
Also, this cleans up the code and removes needless asserts like
`assertNotEqual(zulip_realm, lear_realm)` making the test easier
to read.
A confirmation object is already created when
do_send_confirmation_email is called just above.
Tweaked by tabbott to remove an unnecessary somewhat hacky database
query.
There are a few outstanding issues that we expect to resolve beforce
including this in a release, but this is good checkpoint to merge.
This PR is a collaboration with Tim Abbott.
Fixes#716.
Priviously, we rendered the topic links using the msg.sender.realm.
This resulted in issues with Zulip's internal bots not having access
to the realm_filters of the destination stream's realm. For example,
sending a message via the email gateway or notification would not
linkify any realm filters that a user would expect them to.
Even though required attribute of stream and stream_id params is marked
false in openapi specification, the API expects atleast one of the
params to be set. There is no way to specify relationships like this
openapi and they dont seem to have any plan to implement this in future.
https://github.com/OAI/OpenAPI-Specification/issues/256
One small change in behavior is that this creates an array with all the
row_objects at once, rather than creating them 1000 at a time.
That should be fine, given that the client batches these in units of
10000 anyway, and so we're just creating 10K rows of a relatively
small data structure in Python code here.
Fixes#1727.
With the server down, apply migrations 0245 and 0246. 0246 will remove
the pub_date column, so it's essential that the previous migrations
ran correctly to copy data before running this.
Apparently, our change in b8a1050fc4 to
stop caching responses on API endpoints accidentally ended up
affecting uploaded files as well.
Fix this by explicitly setting a Cache-Control header in our Sendfile
responses, as well as changing our outer API caching code to only set
the never cache headers if the view function didn't explicitly specify
them itself.
This is not directly related to #13088, as that is a similar issue
with the S3 backend.
Thanks to Gert Burger for the report.
This change adds the OpenAPI data needed to document the POST and
DELETE methods associated with this endpoint.
Descriptions edited slightly by tabbott.
Apparently, the Zulip notifications (and resulting emails) were
correct, but the download links inside the Zulip UI were incorrectly
not including S3 prefix on the URL, making them not work.
While we're at this, we rewrite the somewhat convoluted previous
system for formatting the data export output.
When using our EMAIL_ADDRESS_VISIBILITY_ADMINS feature, we were
apparently creating bot users with different email and delivery_email
properties, due to effectively an oversight in how the code was
written (the initial migration handled bots correctly, but not bots
created after the transition).
Following the refactor in the last commit, the fix for this is just
adding the missing conditional, a test, and a database migration to
fix any incorrectly created bots leaked previously.
This should dramatically improve the queue processor's performance in
cases where there's a very high volume of requests on a given endpoint
by a given user, as described in the new docstring.
Until we test this more broadly in production, we won't know if this
is a full solution to the problem, but I think it's likely. We've
never seen the UserActivityInterval worker end up backlogged without a
total queue processor outage, and it should have a similar workload.
Fixes#13180.
With the way these tests are, it's unnecessary to have 3 separate
classes, and it makes it confusing to decide where to add a potential
additional mm email test.
In a gigantic realm where we send several MB of `page_params`, it’s
slightly better to have the rest of the `<body>` available to the
browser earlier, so it can show the “Loading…” spinner and start
fetching subresources.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
This sidesteps tricky escaping issues, and will make it easier to
build a strict Content-Security-Policy.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
This brings us in line, and also allows us to style these more like
unordered lists, which is visually more appealing.
On the backend, we now use the default list blockprocessor + sane list
extension of python-markdown to get proper list markup; on the
frontend, we mostly return to upstream's code as they have followed
CommonMark on this issue.
Using <ol> here necessarily removes the behaviour of not renumbering
on lists written like 3, 4, 7; hopefully users will be OK with the
change.
Fixes#12822.
Also cleans up the interface between the management command and the
LDAP backends code to not guess/recompute under what circumstances
what should be logged.
Co-authored-by: mateuszmandera <mateusz.mandera@protonmail.com>
The order of operations for our LDAP synchronization code wasn't
correct: We would run the code to sync avatars (etc.) even for
deactivated users.
Thanks to niels for the report.
Co-authored-by: mateuszmandera <mateusz.mandera@protonmail.com>
Fixes#13130.
django_auth_ldap doesn't give any other way of detecting that LDAPError
happened other than catching the signal it emits - so we have to
register a receiver. In the receiver we just raise our own Exception
which will properly propagate without being silenced by
django_auth_ldap. This will stop execution before the user gets
deactivated.
So the reason 38f8cf612c seems
to be flaking is because the value of harry id switches between
1 and 2 in Xenial while in Bionic it would be fixed at 2. The
reason behind this is that Bionic ships with Python3.6 which
preserves dict insert order while Python3.5 that ships with Xenial
dont preserve the order. In initialize_stream_membership_dicts
we iterate user_data_map dict and the order in which the iteration
happens affects the ID of the users.
We have a very useful piece of code, _RateLimitFilter, which is
designed to avoid sending us a billion error emails in the event that
a Zulip production server is down in a way that throws the same
exception a lot. The code uses memcached to ensure we send each
traceback roughly once per Zulip server per 10 minutes (or if
memcached is unavailable, at most 1/process/10 minutes, since we use
memcached to coordinate between processes)
However, if memcached is down, there is a logging.error call internal
to the Django/memcached setup that happens inside the cache.set() call,
and those aren't caught by the `except Exception` block around it.
This ends up resulting in infinite recursion, eventually leading to
Fatal Python error: Cannot recover from stack overflow., since this
handler is configured to run for logging.error in addition to
logging.exception.
We fix this using a thread-local variable to detect whether we are
being called recursively.
This change should prevent some nasty failure modes we've had in the
past where memcached being down resulted in infinite recursion
(resulting in extra resources being consumed by our error
notifications code, and most importantly, the error notifications not
being sent).
Fixes#12595.
There's no reason for this to be a category of error that emails the
server administrator, since there's a good chance that fixing it will
need to be done in the Zulip codebase, not administrator action.
Fixes#9401.
This adds a FAKE_EMAIL_DOMAIN setting, which should be used if
EXTERNAL_HOST is not a valid domain, and something else is needed to
form bot and dummy user emails (if email visibility is turned off).
It defaults to EXTERNAL_HOST.
get_fake_email_domain() should be used to get this value. It validates
that it's correctly set - that it can be used to form valid emails.
If it's not set correctly, an exception is raised. This is the right
approach, because it's undesirable to have the server seemingly
peacefully operating with that setting misconfigured, as that could
mask some hidden sneaky bugs due to UserProfiles with invalid emails,
which would blow up the moment some code that does validate the emails
is called.
We’re about to start using PostgreSQL-specific syntax that can’t be
stringified without a specified dialect.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
Previously, several of our URL patterns accidentally did not end with
`$`, and thus ended up controlling just the stated URL, but actually a
much broader set of URLs starting with it.
I did an audit and fixed what I believe are all instances of this URL
pattern behavior. In the process, I fixed a few tests that were
unintentionally relying on the behavior.
Fixes#13082.
Historically, Zulip's implementation of wildcard mentions never
triggered either email or push notifications, instead being limited to
desktop notifications and the "mentions" counter.
We fix this just by plumbing the "wildcard_mentioned" flag through our
system.
Implements much of
https://github.com/zulip/zulip/issues/6040#issuecomment-510157264.
We're also now ready to seriously work on #3750.
After a new user joins an active organization, it isn't obvious what
to do next; this change causes there to be recent unread messages in
the stream sidebar for the user to click on to get a feel for what's
happening in the organization and experiment with Zulip.
Fixes#6512.
Previously, the unread_msgs data structure accounting (used for both
the web and mobile apps to determine the "Unread mentions" count
displayed in the UI) did not include wildcard mentions at all.
We fix this by adding the logic required to include properly that
data, with tests. As discussed in #6040, it makes sense to include
muted streams and topics for the purpose of this calculation.
Fixes part of #6040.
Rather than continually resetting the contents of an existing event
queue, we allocate a new one for each subtest.
We also fix a rather confusing bundle of comments.
Hopefully this does a better job of spurring people to action, and also
suggests a self-service fix if they don't (i.e. contacting the person that
invited them).
Add ability to search entire message history of all public streams at
once. It includes all subscibed, non subscribed public streams messages
and even historical public stream messages sent before user had joined
an organization or stream.
Fixes#8859.
Instead of having a hard-coded url, it seems better to replace it with
get_gravatar_url - which returns the correct url, without breaking if
the email/id of the example user changes.
Send the config_options for each supported incoming webhook bot along
with the initial state (not present in apply_events since this is
mostly just static data).
Without disturbing the flow of the existing code for configuring
embedded bots too much, we now use the config_options feature to
allow incoming webhook type bot to be configured via. the "/bots"
endpoint of the API.
This was used as a helper to construct the final display_recipient when
fetching messages. With the new mechanism of constructing
display_recipient by fetching appropriate users/streams from the
database and cache, this shouldn't be needed anymore.
Instead of having the rather unclear type Union[str,
List[UserDisplayRecipient]] where display_recipient of message dicts was
involved, we use DisplayRecipientT (renamed from DisplayRecipientCacheT
- since there wasn't much reason to have the word Cache in there), which
makes it clearer what is the actual nature of the objects and gets rid
of this pretty big type declaration.
Since the display_recipients dictionaries corresponding to users are
always dictionaries with keys email, full_name, short_name, id,
is_mirror_dummy - instead of using the overly general Dict[str, Any]
type, we can define a UserDisplayRecipient type,
using an appropriate TypedDict.
The type definitions are moved from display_recipient.py to types.py, so
that they can be imported in models.py.
Appropriate type adjustments are made in various places in the code
where we operate on display_recipients.
The user information in display_recipient in cached message_dicts
becomes outdated if the information is changed in any way.
In particular, since we don't have a way to find all the message
objects that might contain PMs after an organization toggles the
setting to hide user email addresses from other users, we had a
situation where client might see inaccurate cached data from before
the transition for a period of up to hours.
We address this by using our generic_bulk_cached_fetch toolchain to
ensure we always are fetching display_recipient data from the database
(and/or a special recipient_id -> display_recipient cache, which we
can flush easily).
Fixes#12818.
This restructures the API endpoints that we currently have implemented
more or less for exclusive use by the mobile and desktop apps (things
like checking what authentication methods are supported) to use a
system that can be effectively parsed by our test_openapi
documentation.
This brings us close to being able to eliminate
`buggy_documentation_endpoints` as a persistently nonempty list.
This add some regular expression manipulation hacks to make it
possible for us to validate the documentation for the presence
endpoint with a slightly more complex regular expression capture
group.
Previously, our OpenAPI documentation validation was failing for some
endpoints because it didn't account for the `in: path` type of
parameter, resulting in a mismatch between what was declared via REQ
and what was declared in the OpenAPI docs.
We fix this by excluding the path type parameters in both places from
what's considered by documentation using the `path_only` flag.
I doubt this is the correct long-term fix; in particular, I don't
think we're actually running the validators for these path-only
parameters. The examples that exist today are all IDs with validators
for being non-negative numbers, but longer-term I think we'll want to
do something different (possibly at the REQ layer, see the TODO).
Instead of just mocking some fake events, we use the code
path that generates slow query events and publishes them
to SlowQueryWorker.
This test improvement would have got a recent potential regression
caught in code review.
Our new curl example generation logic was broken, in that it hardcoded
localhost:9991 (without an HTTP method or anything) as the API URL.
It requires a bit of plumbing to make this possible.
Apparently, the filters written for the send_password_reset_email (and
some other management commands) didn't correctly consider the case of
deactivated users.
While some commands, like syncing LDAP data (which can include whether
a user should be deactivated) want to process all users, other
commands generally only want to interact with active users. We fix
this and add some tests.
The original seems to be unmaintained
(johnsensible/django-sendfile#65). Notably, this fixes a bug in the
filename parameter, which perviously showed the Python 3 repr of a
byte string (johnsensible/django-sendfile#49).
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
The `users/me/subscriptions` endpoint accidentally started returning
subscriber information for each stream. This is convenient, but
unnecessarily costly for those clients which either don't need it
(most API apps) or already acquire this information via /register
(including Zulip's apps).
This change removes that data set from the default response. Clients
which had come to rely on it, or would like to rely on it in future,
may still access it via an additional documented API parameter.
Fixes#12917.
I changed the class of the title in order to use the same styling as the
other similar pages (like `/accounts/go` or `/login`).
Changed the related test.
For the emails that are associated to an existing account in an
organisation, the avatars will be displayed in the email selection
page. This includes avatar data in what is passed to the page.
Added `avatar_urls` to the context in `test_templates.py`.
Apparently GitHub changed the email address for these; we need to
update our code accordingly.
One cannot receive emails on the username@users.noreply.github.com, so
if someone tries creating an account with this email address, that
person would not be able to verify the account.
The previous iteration still had the failure mode of not actually
testing anything, because it didn't trigger the data export code path
(and in fact was getting an HTTP 401 authentication denied error).
This test was broken due to using an empty `RealmAuditLog`
table. We fix this by mocking the creation of an export,
thus creating an entry, similar to what we do in our other
tests.
Previous cleanups (mostly the removals of Python __future__ imports)
were done in a way that introduced leading newlines. Delete leading
newlines from all files, except static/assets/zulip-emoji/NOTICE,
which is a verbatim copy of the Apache 2.0 license.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
Now that we can create cURL examples based on the OpenAPI
documentation. We can begin using simple one line tags in
the documentation instead of manually creating cURL examples.
Fixes part of #12878.
Now we can also include extra keyword arguments to specify
modifications in how the example code should be generated
in the generate_code_example template tag.
E.g. generate_code_example(curl, exclude=["param1", "param2"])