This is a feature of GNU readlink that isn't in the BSD readlink
found on macOS.
For using this and other GNU coreutils features in our scripts in
general, we could use a solution like mobile's tools/lib/ensure-coreutils.sh
to get GNU coreutils on the PATH -- check if it's there already,
if not then try to find a Homebrew install of it and use that, if not
then print a helpful message.
But even then there'd be a bootstrapping problem of how to find
ensure-coreutils.sh . That involves exactly the same problem as we
have for finding git-tools.sh in these lines. So in fact in mobile
for the task of finding ensure-coreutils.sh in the first place, we
do without `readlink -f` anyway.
The one consequence of this behavior-wise is that if you make a
symlink somewhere that points directly at that script (say in your
`~/bin/`), and try to run it using that symlink, it won't work.
(It'll still work just fine if there are symlinks somewhere higher
up in the paths involved -- just not for the script itself.)
An ideal CLI program really should support that, I think, but
lacking a better idea, this seems an acceptable compromise.
Currently the tools/build-docs was slow
because the clean option was rebulding everything.
But this is only required if one wants the left
sidebar to update.
So now set the default to exclude clean and
add clean option only if --clean is passed.
Also a warning is displayed if clean option is
not passed that the left sidebar won't update.
Fixes#17961.
Change the script to python. This is done
for the following reasons.
* It enables us to use the sanity_check.
* Later when we add warning to include
--clean flag we can use the pre-existing
WARNING from zulip_tools rather than using
terminal color codes.
TODO: Currently this script is slow as the
clean option is expensive so instead use only
html by default and clean only if --clean
option is passed.
Part of #17961.
Fixes#17795
In PR #17014, we added support for deactivate-own-user.
And while doing so, we first deactivated the client and
then reactivated it. But this implementation is a bit
hacky.
So, to fix this, we're now deactivating a test_user so that
we don't have to reactivate it. We did so by changing the value
of authentication_line.
As we want to keep endpoint code out of the
“test_curl_examples”, we changed the value of
authentication_line in `curl_param_value_generators.py`.
To work this out, we create a new global variable named
AUTHENTICATION_LINE in “curl_param_value_generators.py”
and change its value in function “deactivate_own_user” and
to use this change in “test_curl_examples,” we import
AUTHENTICATION_LINE.
AUTHENTICATION_LINE is of list data type because we want a
pointer to original mutable object so that changes made during
run time show across the module. Another way to do this is to change
the way we import variable, but that will be inconsistent to
the way we had in all other files.
To remove confusion between AUTHENTICATION_LINE and
authentication_line we renamed authentication_line
to default_authentication_line.
3f4d0f72fd adjusted the types in
preparation for extending the functionality, but only in later commits
that are not merged yet did it make these updates to the types.
In general, `./scripts/restart-server` will already work in any
circumstance where the server is already stopped and needs to be
started. However, it will output a couple minor warnings, and it is
not readily obvious that it *will* work correctly.
Add an alias for `restart-server` named `start-server`, for
parallelism with `stop-server`, which omits the steps of
`restart-server` which would stop the server first.
Using `supervisorctl stop all` to stop the server is not terribly
discoverable, and may stop services which are not part of Zulip
proper.
Add an explicit tool which only stops the relevant services. It also
more carefully controls the order in which services are stopped to
minimize lost requests, and maximally quiesce the server.
Locations which may be stopping _older_ versions of Zulip (without
this script) are left with using `supervisorctl stop all`.
Fixes#14959.
This reverses the policy that was set, but incompletely enforced, by
commit 951514dd7d. The self-closing tag
syntax is clearer, more consistent, simpler to parse, compatible with
XML, preferred by Prettier, and (most importantly now) required by
FormatJS.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Adds a setting UI to list all configured playgrounds
in a realm. The filter functionality can be used to
search playgrounds by its name or language.
Default sort is provided on the 'pygments_language'
field.
Front tests added to maintain server_event_dispatch
coverage. The `settings_playgrounds.js` file is added
to coverage exclusion list since it is majorly UI
based and will be tested using puppeteer tests (in
following commits).
To prevent breaking of the hardcoded playgrounds, we resort
to checking if realm_playgrounds is empty and falling back
to the hard-coded list if so. This logic is removed in the
followup commit which introduces the UI to add a playground.
I have added support for generating integration screenshots remotely by
adding a `realm_uri` parameter to `tools/message-screenshot.js` which we
then pass `realm.uri` to from within
`tools/generate-integration-docs-screenshot`.
I have made `tools/setup/optimize-svg` do the SVG optimization
automatically rather than just telling you the command to run if they
need optimizing. This included adding a `--check` parameter to use in
CI to only check as we previously did rather than actually running the
optimization.
I have also made `tools/setup/optimize-svg` execute
`tools/setup/generate_integration_bots_avatars.py` once it has run the
optimization to ensure it is always ran.
This makes it one less command to run when creating an integration,
but also means that we catch instances where a PNG has just been
copied into the `static/images/integrations/bot_avatars` folder as the
only instance where this won't be run is if `optimize-svg` has not
been run which would be caught in CI.
Fixes#18183. Fixes#18184.
I have updated `tools/run-dev.py` to output the correct subdomain such as
`http://zulip.username.zulipdev.org` so that the user knows the correct
subdomain to access the Zulip Dev realm on.
django.utils.translation.ugettext is a deprecated alias of
django.utils.translation.gettext as of Django 3.0, and will be removed
in Django 4.0.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This widget only filters the user's subscription -- it's only suggest
public streams that the user is not subscribed to. "Filter" is the
correct label for a widget with this use case.
I have suppressed errors for github.com by adding an function to
exclude domains as well as urls; this is necessary because GitHub has
marked this tool's User-Agent as a blocker crawler.
I have also suppressed reoccurring url errors that do definitely exist.
Fixes#17928.
Ideally, we'd print line numbers etc., but that's complicated because
the `translation.json` format doesn't include them, and usually it's
easy to find strings because you just added them anyway.
But adding a bit more of a `git grep` hint should help.
Fixes#14321.
Our aim is to use this library to remove use of bootstrap-tooltip
for showing popovers and tooltips. This will remove our
dependency on bootstrap for showing tooltips. Thus, bootstrap
can be upgrade more independently.
Because the logic in print_listeners doesn't have access to computed
settings in dev_settings.py, we need to duplicate the special
IS_DEV_DROPLET logic for computing the default hostname.
There's still a secondary problem that this URL 404s.
It does not seem like an official version supporting Webpack 4 (to say
nothing of 5) will be released any time soon, and we can reimplement
it in very little code.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
We use GIPHY web SDK to create popover containing GIFs in a
grid format. Simply clicking on the GIFs will insert the GIF in the compose
box.
We add GIPHY logo to compose box action icons which opens the GIPHY
picker popover containing GIFs with "Powered by GIPHY"
attribution.
We should still display the `source` advice when not in Vagrant or a
Droplet, since that's an important hint for anyone using local
installation on Linux.
We move the "If you are using Vagrant..." text a bit after to
highlight things nicely for folks who are running tools outside
Vagrant.
Also tighten text to avoid line-wrapping on an 80 character console.
The only downside of this is that it makes it harder to control the
order of these tests; which isn't that important. And the structure
of naming each with its test order fundamentally requires renaming
files when adding/deleting tests, so if we want to control the default
test order, we'd be better off doing that by just hardcoding a list in
the test runner code.
In `validate_account_and_subdomain` we check
if user's realm is not deactivated. In case
of failure of this check, we raise our standard
JsonableError. While this works well in most
cases but it creates difficulties in handling
of users with deactivated realms for non-browser
clients.
So we register a new REALM_DEACTIVATED error
code so that clients can distinguish if error
is because of deactivated account. Following
these changes `validate_account_and_subdomain`
raises RealmDeactivatedError if user's realm
is deactivated.
This error is also documented in
`/api/rest-error-handling`.
Testing: I have mostly relied on automated
backend tests to test this.
Fixes#17763.
In validate_account_and_subdomain we check if
user's account is not deactivated. In case of
failure of this check we raise our standard
JsonableError. While this works well in most
cases but it creates difficulties in handling
of deactivated accounts for non-browser clients.
So we register a new USER_DEACTIVATED error
code so that clients can distinguish if error
is because of deactivated account. Following
these changes `validate_account_and_subdomain`
raises UserDeactivatedError if user's account
is deactivated.
This error is also documented in
`/api/rest-error-handling`.
Testing: I have mostly relied on automated
backend tests to test this.
Partially addresses issue #17763.
This adds the is_user_active with the appropriate code for setting the
value correctly in the future. In the following commit a migration to
backfill the value for existing Subscriptions will be added.
To ensure correct user_profile.is_active handling also in tests, we
replace all direct .is_active mutation with calls to appropriate
functions.
We had used 2>&1 to redirect stderr to stdout so it could be piped
into ts, but commit dd3cdd6ec5 (#17611)
removed ts, so we no longer need the redirection.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
As the hotkey might cause the page to be scrolled, thus capturing
the wrong area, I view the message by id instead of using
'#narrow/near' and remove the 'selected_message' class from the
message box to remove the selection highlight on it.
Fixes: #17878
We support Debian as an OS for setting up the Zulip server. But the CI
does not run on pull request to test the setting up of the server on
Debian. Hence, add the check to CI.
This is a mostly verbatim extraction.
I re-phrased one line of code to work around a lint
false alarm. (Look for `preamble` in the diff.)
There are about 8 lines missing coverage here, so
the new module might be a good candidate to get
100% line coverage on.
Before this change, you would need to remove 74
edges from our dependency graph to make it
acyclic. Now it's 72.
Commit 0200f48a12 (#17407) removed the
navigate global variable. Use the K hotkey instead of evaluating
navigate.up().
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
When running some tests multiple times in the same call,
were failing because of the data duplication.
This commit resolves that issue by resetting the test
environment (i.e: Re-cloning test database and clearing
cache) after each run.
Fixes#17607.
Currently, there was no markdown page for deactivate-own-user API
endpoint. Created deactivate-own-user.md for the API page and
created a new owner client in test-api to reactivate the client
deactivated during testing.
Also changed endpoint name from deactivate-my-account to
deactivate-own-user, for better consistency with other endpoints.
Fixes#16163.
This helper was added in eac6463031 and
used by the "message.handlebars" file. This is no current call for
this helper in the codebase, hence it is removed to improve coverage.
This commit also marks template.js to have 100% test coverage.
In the openapi specs, the update_message_flags event is documented as
having a `operation` (deprecated) field, alongside the modern `op`.
This causes check_schemas warnings like this:
NEED SCHEMA to match OpenAPI update_message_flags_add_add_event
NEED SCHEMA to match OpenAPI update_message_flags_remove_remove_event
as check_schemas uses both `op` and `operation` for constructing the
event name.
Being deprecated (and really only still there for
backwards-compatibility with the original error of having it present),
`operation` will be removed eventually, therefore we can safely
ignore it from being used in openapi schema validation.
Part of #17568.
This also fixes the suggestions for the following words: disabled,
disables, disabling, implemented, implementing, implements, kept,
made, took, using.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
We basically move all the tests from backend and frontend test
files to zulip-ci workflow. This results in GitHub Actions
nicely displaying all the tests separately.
We have disabled CircleCI and are using GitHub Actions for automated
testing.
docs: Changed context from CircleCI to Github Actions and wrote
some documentation specific to GH Actions.
tools: Replaced env checks for CIRCLECI with GITHUB_ACTION.
README: Use GitHub Actions build status badge.
GitHub Actions supports doing more than just CI,
and so in some contexts it's less obvious that we're
talking about just the CI if we refer to it instead of CircleCI.
This commit sets the system default locale to `en_US.UTF-8` before
running the tests.
This was necessary because when running tests with Firefox, it was
failing on some test verifies the results of locale-aware sorting.
When exception is raised inside an exception handler, Python 3
helpfully prints both tracebacks separated by “During handling of the
above exception, another exception occurred:”. But when we’re using
an exception handler to retry the same operation, multiple tracebacks
are just noise. Suppress the earlier one using PEP 409 syntax.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
./tools/test-all had a short option -f which was used for running it
by skipping provision check. This short option paired well with its
long version --force, but in an effort to provide more clarity over
the use of force option it is renamed to --skip-provision-check.
Following this rename -f option for test-all does not pair well with
its long part which is now --skip-provision-check. Also, this option
is rarely used. So the short form -f is removed in this commit. We
now provide only its longer version --skip-provision-check.
This is a part of commits done to address issue #17455.
This commit changes help message for skip-provision-check argument
used with various test commands. The message is changed with an
intention to be more clear about what this option actually does.
This commit is in series of various changes done to provide clarity
over the use of --force option which is renamed to
--skip-provision-check.
Fixes: #17455
This commit renames --force argument used with various tests to
--skip-provision-check. As a consequence of this name change all other
files that set --force option for the test commands have been updated.
This change is done in order to provide more clarity for using this
option for runnning tests.
This commit addresses issue #17455.
This commit moves --force option used with various tests to
test-scripts.py to have it alongside the logic that does provisioning
status assertion.
This is a step towards providing more clarity over use of this
argument with tests as asked in issue #17455.
The "Narrow to PM with" notification above the composebox was
double-escaped, mangling names with single quotes in them. This removes
the escaping in i18next, causing the name to be escaped only in
handlebars.
Replaced methods/functions of moment.js with date-fns library.
The motive was to replace it with a smaller frontend timezone library.
Date-fns ~ 11.51 kb
moment.js ~ 217.87 kb
Some of the format strings change because date-fns encodes them
differently from how moment did.
Fixes#16373.
We often send only one field (away or status_text)
to be updated.
So we have to make our schema support optional
keys.
As a result of the more flexible schema, we no
longer need to exempt the node fixtures from
our schema checks.
Allowing any admins to create arbitrary users is not ideal because it
can lead to abuse issues. We should require something stronger that
requires the server operator's approval and thus we add a new
can_create_users permission.
f82cc4ed06 started checking all
zulip/zulip GitHub links in CI. Instead, it should have checked only
zulip/zulip file and directory links since checking other
links require making requests to GitHub servers.
This fixes a bug where the typeahead did not include the
zulip specific langs (such a `quote`, `spoiler` and `math`)
as these weren't passed to the typeahead's source.
Introduced in af64c52166.
Fixes#16862.
I added these hooks in Zulip Desktop 5.5.0; handling these events in
the frontend will let us remove the janky desktop-side fallback code
that uses fake click events on menu items with specific indexes.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Steve asked me to remove this, since the tictactoe game was always
intended as a proof of concept. Now that we have poll and todo
widgets, the sample code for tictactoe has much less value.
We replace the content and type in test_widgets.py to maintain
coverage.
There is only one PostgreSQL database; the "appdb" is irrelevant.
Also use "postgresql," as it is the name of the software, whereas
"postgres" the name of the binary and colloquial name. This is minor
cleanup, but enabled by the other renames in the previous commit.
This moves the puppet configuration closer to the "roles and profiles
method"[1] which is suggested for organizing puppet classes. Notably,
here it makes clear which classes are meant to be able to stand alone
as deployments.
Shims are left behind at the previous names, for compatibility with
existing `zulip.conf` files when upgrading.
[1] https://puppet.com/docs/pe/2019.8/the_roles_and_profiles_method
There was likely more dependency complexity prior to 97766102df, but
there is now no reason to require that consumers explicitly include
zulip::apt_repository.
Installing an updated linux kernel package, as can happen during the
`apt dist-upgrade` done by the installer, can cause grub to pop up a
prompt to update its configuration file. In an unattended headless
configuration, this will stop the installation.
Explicitly configure apt to be non-interactive, and prefer the newest
configuration, during the install.
We used to send occupy/vacate events when
either the first person entered a stream
or the last person exited.
It appears that our two main apps have never
looked at these events. Instead, it's
generally the case that clients handle
events related to stream creation/deactivation
and subscribe/unsubscribe.
Note that we removed the apply_events code
related to these events. This doesn't affect
the webapp, because the webapp doesn't care
about the "streams" field in do_events_register.
There is a theoretical situation where a
third party client could be the victim of
a race where the "streams" data includes
a stream where the last subscriber has left.
I suspect in most of those situations it
will be harmless, or possibly even helpful
to the extent that they'll learn about
streams that are in a "quasi" state where
they're activated but not occupied.
We could try to patch apply_event to
detect when subscriptions get added
or removed. Or we could just make the
"streams" piece of do_events_register
not care about occupy/vacate semantics.
I favor the latter, since it might
actually be what users what, and it will
also simplify the code and improve
performance.
I think it's important that the callers understand
that bulk_add_subscriptions assumes all streams
are being created within a single realm, so I make
it an explicit parameter.
This may be overkill--I would also be happy if we
just included the assertions from this commit.
In addition to being generally more correct, this works around a bug
in Node.js that causes webpack-dev-server to corrupt the terminal
state when exiting as a background process.
https://github.com/nodejs/node/issues/35536
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
It happens that whether you add a reaction or remove
a reaction, we send the exact same fields, just using
a different op code.
This sort of symmetry is actually kind of rare, as
usually "add" events have more fields, and "remove" events
might just send an id of something to remove.
Our openapi schema treats these as two seperate events,
so we are more consistent with it, and it helps our
schema-checking tooling for node fixtures, too.
Note that we now have to exempt the two events from
our openapi checks, due to the is_mirror_dummy field
in the deprecated user block. We can decide how to
handle this later--one possibility is to just add it
as an optional field on the event_schema side.
Note that we make the schema for profile_data
slightly more realistic, but it doesn't actually get
exercised by our current tests (apart from
making sure it's a dict), since we don't have
profile data for our test realm.
We also don't have the optional fields for bots,
since our tests don't exercise that, nor
delivery_email.
So we exempt realm_user_add_event from openapi
checks for now.
When we try to match the openapi specs better, we
will probably want to add a few tests to test_events.
Obviously getting good coverage for adding users
would be nice for all these scenarios:
* delivery_email matters
* bots
* realm has profile fields
This is a prep commit for supporting "presence"
events, where the key of the dictionary is some
arbitrary string like "website" but the value
of the dictionary is another dictionary itself
with keys that are more like variable names.
This also forces us to create TupleType.
We exempt this from the openapi check,
since we haven't figured out how to model
tuples in openapi with the same precision
as event_schema (and it may be impossible).
Long term we just want to stop dealing in
tuples, of course.
StringDict is a data type for representing dictionaries where
all keys and values are strings. Add this data type to data_types.py
and edit other files so that this data type is put to use and tested.
(slightly tweaked by @showell to remove a comment and shorten
a var name now that we have a proper data type)
We also make our schema in event_schema reflect this,
which in turn makes us match the already accurate
openapi spec, so we no longer need to exempt four
types of events from our sanity checks.
We might want to rename the tool to something more
general now, since we are really reconciling three
things:
- node fixtures
- event_schema checkers for test_events
- openapi specs
The way we compare python and openapi schemas is
as follows:
- first convert openapi schemas to be build
from DictType, ListType, etc. with from_opeapi
- do a diff on the schemas
Most of the new code is just having the FooType
family of classes serialize themselves with schema().
Defining types with an object hierarchy
of type classes will allow us to build
functionality that was impossible (or
really janky) with the validators.py
approach of composing functions.
Most of the changes to event_schema.py
were automated search/replaces.
This patch doesn't really yet take
advantage of the new FooType classes,
but we will use it soon to audit our
openapi specs.
SimpleBar 6.0.0-beta.2 through -beta.6 are built with ES6 syntax (I
assume inadvertently: https://github.com/Grsmto/simplebar/issues/523),
and its latest tag has moved back to 5.2.1 anyway.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
user_profile will be None for web_public_guests here. Hence, for
settings (of which most be inaccessible by web public guest),
which require a user_profile, we either set an empty value for
them or set them to a default value. This will help render
the frontend or extend support to our clients without breaking
a lot of code.
Tweaked by tabbott to add many comments.
The reason higher expected_time_to_clear_backlog were allowed for queues
during "bursts" was, in simpler terms, because those queues to which
this happens, intrinsically have a higher acceptable "time until cleared"
for new events. E.g. digests_email, where it's completely fine to take a
long time to send them out after putting in the queue. And that's
already configurable without a normal/burst distinction.
Thanks to this we can remove a bunch of overly complicated, and
ultimately useless, logic.
The race condition is described in the comment block removed by this
commit. This leaves room for another, remaining race condition
that should be virtually impossible, but nevertheless it seems
worthwhile to have it documented in the code, so we put a new comment
describing it.
As a final note, this is not a new race condition,
it was hypothetically possible with the old code as well.
We need this information in the frontend to:
* Display the 'view in playground' option for locally echoed messages.
* When we add a UI settings for realm admins to configure their
playground choices, we'll need to use these canonicalized aliases
for displaying the option.
Hence, this tweaks the tool which generates pygments_data.json to contain
the data we need.
Bumping major PROVISION_VERSION since folks need to provision in both
directions.
Tests amended.
css-loader@4 broke @import statements referencing files with
extensions other than .css, unless those @import statements are
compiled away by another loader. Upstream is more interested in
arguing that such @import statements are semantically incorrect than
applying the one line fix.
https://github.com/webpack-contrib/css-loader/issues/1164
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This was a broken abstraction that returned to its caller within
multiple forked processes on exceptions, and encouraged ignoring the
error code (as all of its callers did).
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
The specification says “any sibling elements of a $ref are ignored”,
so their presence, although not invalid, indicates a mistake. yamole
incorrectly merges these siblings into the referenced object, but we
should not rely on this nonstandard behavior.
https://swagger.io/docs/specification/using-ref/#sibling
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Any exception is an "unexpected event", which means talking about
having an "unexpected event logger" or "unexpected event exception" is
confusing. As the error message in `exceptions.py` already explains,
this is about an _unsupported_ event type.
This also switches the path that these exceptions are written to,
accordingly.
8e10ab282a moved UnexpectedWebhookEventType into
`zerver.lib.exceptions`, but left the import into
`zserver.lib.webhooks.common` so that webhooks could continue to
import the exception from there.
This clutters things and adds complexity; there is no compelling
reason that the exception's source of truth should not move alongside
all other exceptions.
There are three functional side effects:
• Correct an insignificant but mathematically offensive bias toward
repeated characters in generate_api_key introduced in commit
47b4283c4b4c70ecde4d3c8de871c90ee2506d87; its entropy is increased
from 190.52864 bits to 190.53428 bits.
• Use the base32 alphabet in confirmation.models.generate_key; its
entropy is reduced from 124.07820 bits to the documented 120 bits, but
now it uses 1 syscall instead of 24.
• Use the base32 alphabet in get_bigbluebutton_url; its entropy is
reduced from 51.69925 bits to 50 bits, but now it uses 1 syscall
instead of 10.
(The base32 alphabet is A-Z 2-7. We could probably replace all of
these with plain secrets.token_urlsafe, since I expect most callers
can handle the full urlsafe_b64 alphabet A-Z a-z 0-9 - _ without
problems.)
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
It was broken by commit aaedec1fdb which
moved it to tools/i18n without adjusting its relative path references,
and it contains a sketchy injectable os.system call that I’d like to
remove.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
In 6653e19e3a we added
the convenient line to tell folks about the coverage
report. But if we failed coverage checks, we didn't
show the link.
Arguably we should just always show this, even if
tests fail, but that can also be potentially confusing.
The code to run single files was added
in c15695e514,
and it's just kinda strange code.
We already do a lot of file logic in Python
to check for line-coverage, so it's easier
to just have all the logic in Python.
This adds a new feature--you can now specify
the actual file:
./tools/test-js-with-node frontend_tests/node_tests/people.js
(This is helpful if you just want to use
shell autocomplete.)
Another minor change is that if you specify
individual files, we won't sort them. This is
important when you're trying to hunt down test
leaks.
Finally, we have a nicer message if we can't find
the file.
nyc was added in 29f04511c0
All the stuff after "&&" was actually passed to
node, because we didn't use shell=True, so the
"nyc report" command didn't run, and the ugly
finder.js code just skipped over all the final tokens.
We lost the war against top level configuration files many moons ago.
This is what developers and tools expect. And it seems to be required
for eslint-import-resolver-webpack (there’s ostensibly a {"config":
"tools/webpack.config.ts"} option, but it doesn’t work correctly:
https://github.com/benmosher/eslint-plugin-import/issues/1861).
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This fixes the regression introduced in the pervious
commit to regain the 100% line coverage in `user_pill.js`
as well as `stream_pill.js`.
The new `stream_edit.js` mainly tests for:
* The stream related queries of the typeahead in `user_pill.js`
* The "Add subscribers" event handlers.
* The event handler which displays the settings for a stream.
We update the pills typeahead logic to also include
stream results and pass the "stream" key in `opts`
to enable this option for the Add subscriber form.
This commit implements the feature of adding all the
subscribers of another stream in the "Add subscribers"
UI, with the help of a new "stream_pill.js` file.
We temporarily add `user_pill.js` to the EXEMPT_FILES
list as typeahead will be set up in `stream_edit.js`
file which does not have any dedicated tests file.
Work towards #15186.
We merge bootstrap-responsive.css into bootsrap.css since that is
how bootstrap distributes it from this version onwards.
bootstrap.js has a lot of changes to it which completely breaks
our typeaheads and popovers, so we will have to override these
plugins with our version of these plugins. In future versions
of bootstrap when we use npm, we can just choose not to
import them.
The node package allow use to control xvfb apt package in puppeteer
tests. This help us create a fake display so we can run puppeteer in
headful (headless: false) mode, which is required to use the chrome
extension desktop capture API.
Now that all casper tests have been migrated to
puppeteer, there's no need for having casper
related things.
Removed the casperjs package and removed/replaced
casper in few places with puppeteer.
Only removed few of them which I'm confident
about. Also didn't make any changes in docs
as it would be easier to remove them while
adding puppeteer docs.
This rule is a bit marginal, in that we've only seen this mistake
once, but it is really subtle and took a while for translators to
notice it, so seems worth linting for anyway.
This commit adds automatic detection of extra output (other than
printed by testing library or tools) in stderr and stdout by code under
test test-backend when it is run with flag --ban-console-output.
It also prints the test that produced the extra console output.
Fixes: #1587.
There are file sharing issues with the macOS 10.15.6 and
vagrant. var/remote_cache_prefix was an empty file when using
VirtualBox and Docker on macOS.
Using parallels as a provider for vagrant fixes the issue.
Use --watch-poll which makes webpack to recompile
automatically on file changes, since inotify is not
working here too.
These weren’t wrong since orjson.JSONDecodeError subclasses
json.JSONDecodeError which subclasses ValueError, but the more
specific ones express the intention more clearly.
(ujson raised ValueError directly, as did json in Python 2.)
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Since our Webpack config passes pre-minified JS files to
script-loader, they can’t be used as modules. Use the normal
unminified version, letting Webpack minify it and give us source maps.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
The hash keys were missing hash for package.json and yarn.lock
because they were not present since we don't do a full checkout
in this job. We fix this by sending over those files and generating
hashes from them.
I usally verify these cache keys by clicking the Restore <cache>
step dropdown menu and then clicking the Run ... dropdown menu again
to see the generated hash.
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>
Prior to commit eb4a2b9d4e the center
area of the navbar was based on a structure that appended crumbs or
"tabs" as <li>s, forming a tab_bar and a tab_list.
However, in eb4a2b9d4e we apply a new
style and structure to the navbar which lets go of the convention of
tabs. Hence, we'd like to purge the tab_bar and tab_list labels from
our code base.
We purged tab_list in 1267caf5009118875f47fdafe312880af08024e1.
This commit purges tab_bar, it includes:
- A blanket search and replace of tab_bar with message_view_header.
- Splitting a single line comment in
tab_bar.js / message_view_header.js.
- The renaming of tab_bar.js to message_view_header.js.
- The renaming of tab_bar.hbs to message_view_header.hbs.
- A blanket search and replace of tab_data with
message_view_header_data.
- Replacing the single occurrence of tabbar with message_view_header
(it was within a comment.)
There were a lots of flakes in CI recently because typeahead didn't
appear when Enter was pressed and real emails are not accepted as
valid inputs. To fix this we wait for typeahead to appear and then
click that instead of Enter. We also use delay option to type the
email (100ms delay between keypresses) since without we'd also get
flakes.
Re-enable puppeteer test in CI after this fix too.
😛 should be the most general version, which is the one
with open eyes. Other apps do the same and it also means that :P, which
is converted to 😛 is rendered like the emoticon.
Fixes#15970.
This is used rarely enough that it’s easier to document how to use it
as a non-global than to document the horrifying things that might go
wrong as a global.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This makes sure out fixture data for node tests
is realistic, according to the schemas in
zerver/lib/event_schema.py.
Note that we are still in the process of extracting
schemas from test_events.py -> event_schema.py,
so the checks here are somewhat incomplete as of
now.
One nice thing is that the program will tell us
what checkers are missing, so this can motivate
us to move more checkers to event_schema.py.
I considered just making this happen as part of
tools/test-js-with-node, but it's convenient to
run by itself. Also, it currently requires
Django (although we could fix that), which makes
it just expensive enough that I wouldn't want
to always run it before the node tests.
The previous steps for standing up a new host were somewhat manual.
This further scripts the process, by using the AWS CLI to start the
instance, and pass it a "user data" script to provision itself upon
boot. This results in a hands-off provisioning process which
completes in 5min.
Additional settings are required for `~/.zulip-install-server.conf`.
It is not suited for all roles, as it assumes one instance type and
security group value. Additionally, not all of the post-provision
process is currently automated -- Nagios SSH key verification, for
instance, is still a manual step. There are also additional steps for
database or frontend servers. Regardless, this is a move toward
automated provisioning.
Including anon=1 in API requests will retrieve all contributors
of the repo. If there is no asscoiated GitHub account present for
the commits then the email and name of the author mentioned in
commit messages is returned.
Previously, we copied them to /tmp and from there we specified those
assets we copied in circleci config in presist_to_workspace step.
Copying it to a directory allows us to get rid of list in circleci
config and GitHub Actions's upload artifact (their version of
presist to workspace) doesn't allow us to specify indivivual files
so only is this cleaner but required.
As of commit 87e72ac8e2 (#15267), we
need to be an owner for some of the tested functionality, not just an
administrator.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Zulip converts :) to the 1F642 Unicode emoji and promotes the same emoji
in the popular section of the emoji picker.
Previously Zulip has labeled 1F642 as "slight smile". While that name
conforms to the Unicode standard (which describes the code point as
SLIGHTLY SMILING FACE), it didn't match our use case of the emoji.
If a user types :) or selects the first smile in the emoji picker they
probably mean to express a regular "smile" and not a "slight smile",
which raises the question why they are only smiling slightly.
This commit relabels 1F642 as 😄 and our previous 😄 263A as
:smiling_face:. Note that 263A looks different in our three supported
emoji sets, so it is not suited to be our "default smile".
This change does not require a migration since our emoji system stores
both unicode points and names and handles name changes transparently.
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>
A few major themes here:
- We remove short_name from UserProfile
and add the appropriate migration.
- We remove short_name from various
cache-related lists of fields.
- We allow import tools to continue to
write short_name to their export files,
and then we simply ignore the field
at import time.
- We change functions like do_create_user,
create_user_profile, etc.
- We keep short_name in the /json/bots
API. (It actually gets turned into
an email.)
- We don't modify our LDAP code much
here.
Fixes#12868.
We now also include python version in the format
'major.minor.patchlevel', when generating hash for a
requirement file. This was necessary since packages tend to
break on different versions of python, so it is important to
track the version on which the venv was setup.
WARN: This commit will force all zulip venvs to be recreated.
success-http-headers-bionic.txt and success-http-headers-focal.txt
differ only in the nginx version so this substitution will allow
us to have single file for both of them. Also this change helps
to avoid CI failure if Nginx version is updated in the OS.
The installer does not adjust the node name if the rabbitmq already
exists, and the default node name bakes in the
`zulip-install-bionic-base` hostname. As such, the resulting LXC
image does not properly start rabbitmq.
Remove rabbitmq, allowing the installer to install and configure it
with a nodename of `zulip@localhost`. This also lets the installed
image be successfully copied and booted under a new hostname without
breaking rabbitmq.
Doing service memcached start instead of restart fixed an issue on
focal build in GitHub actions, where it exits with code 1 when it
is done twice.It is done first in Install Dependencies step and then
again in last step where we call tools/ci/setup-backend again which
runs provision.
Furthermore, I don't belive there is a technical reason we use
restart over start; rather I think it was just a random choice with
the intend to just start the services in CI. I traced the code back
to commit 1f2f497cab if it helps.
Looking at the source code of memcached, the step that's failing is:
start-stop-daemon --stop --quiet --oknodo --pidfile $PIDFILE
which is equivilent to: service memcached stop, we can rule out the
service memcache start since it works. Ideally, we do figure out and
solve the issue of why memcached fails when executing service
memcached stop but I am not equipped with debugging it. And this
workaround seems reasonable rather than a "hacky" solution.
For the relevant code in memcached see:
https://github.com/memcached/memcached/blob/master/scripts/memcached-init.
Finally, the change to the rest of services is for consistency.
According to @showell:
> All the slow decorators can die. That was a failed experiment of
> mine from 2014 days. I have meaning to kill them for a couple years
> now. I wrote this with the best of intentions, but I believe it's
> now just cruft. We never made a "fast" mode, for one. And we kept
> writing more and more slow tests, haha.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Rename rest of function names, classes and comments containing bugdoown
to markdown in test_markdown.py. Also change the refactored classes and
functions occurences in other files.
This commit is part of series of commits aimed at renaming bugdown to
markdown.
Rename the file and all the refrences to file and module test_bugdown.py
to test_markdown.py.
This commit is part of series of commit that renames bugdown to markdown.
This commit is first of few commita which aim to change all the
bugdown references to markdown. This commits rename the files,
file path mentions and change the imports.
Variables and other references to bugdown will be renamed in susequent
commits.
Ubuntu 20.04 "focal" comes up to runlevel 5 several seconds before it
is able to successfully resolve hosts, causing `prepare-base` to fail
while fetching from the apt repositories.
Add an additional check to verify that outbound networking is running
before returning from `lxc-wait`.
As in the previous commit, we can no longer pre-install the wrong
version of postgres. Unfortunately, this leaves it out of the base
image and thus makes testing installs longer.
A generator that yields values without receiving or returning them is
an Iterator. Although every Iterator happens to be iterable, Iterable
is a confusing annotation for generators because a generator is only
iterable once.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Add arrow key navigation support for recent topics.
Simple jquery is used to allow navigation for filter buttons,
a grid system is used for navigation inside table.
Because of a security release that required a migration, there
are two migrations numbered 0261. To avoid breaking existing
installs renumbering the migrations, we skipped migration 0261
when running tools/renumber-migrations.
Previously, --interactive used to run tests from the start on a
repeated run triggered when tests failed and we decide to trigger
a re-run by pressing Enter key. Rerunning passed tests is of no interest.
It also used to run all tests in a loop even if all pass.
This commit fixes those both issues i.e it runs again from the
test that failed on pressing Enter and exits if all tests pass.
This fixes a bundle of issues where we were missing "" around
attributes coming from variables. In most cases, the variables were
integers or fixed constants from the Zulip codebase (E.g. the name of
an installed integration), but in at least one case it was
user-provided data that could potentially have security impact.
This adds support for a "spoiler" syntax in Zulip's markdown, which
can be used to hide content that one doesn't want to be immediately
visible without a click.
We use our own spoiler block syntax inspired by Zulip's existing quote
and math block markdown extensions, rather than requiring a token on
every line, as is present in some other markdown spoiler
implementations.
Fixes#5802.
Co-authored-by: Dylan Nugent <dylnuge@gmail.com>
The automated tests running in CircleCI don't actually use the `zulip`
db, so we can skip running migrations on it in some CircleCI shards to
save time.
NOTE: This only effects build jobs that run provision, except the
`production-build` job where we skip building the dbs altogether.
Migrations still run on `focal-backend` build job to ensure
we are testing all our development setup code.
These files can’t use f-strings yet because they need to run in Python
2 or Python 3.5.
Generated by pyupgrade.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
The psycopg2.SQL API unfortunately doesn’t work with
django.db.migrations.RunSQL, so we need to take a detour into
PL/pgSQL for EXECUTE and format.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Generated by pyupgrade --py36-plus --keep-percent-format.
Now including %d, %i, %u, and multi-line strings.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Use read-only types (List ↦ Sequence, Dict ↦ Mapping, Set ↦
AbstractSet) to guard against accidental mutation of the default
value.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
There seems to have been a confusion between two different uses of the
word “optional”:
• An optional parameter may be omitted and replaced with a default
value.
• An Optional type has None as a possible value.
Sometimes an optional parameter has a default value of None, or None
is otherwise a meaningful value to provide, in which case it makes
sense for the optional parameter to have an Optional type. But in
other cases, optional parameters should not have Optional type. Fix
them.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
To take screenshots, we log in as Desdemonia who doesn't seem
to have permissions to the streams where we capture screenshots.
This commit fixes it by logging in as Iago.
Also added a waitForNavigation until DOMContentLoaded to
avoid flakes that could occur because of us going to another URL
before Iago gets logged in.
Fixes#2665.
Regenerated by tabbott with `lint --fix` after a rebase and change in
parameters.
Note from tabbott: In a few cases, this converts technical debt in the
form of unsorted imports into different technical debt in the form of
our largest files having very long, ugly import sequences at the
start. I expect this change will increase pressure for us to split
those files, which isn't a bad thing.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Automatically generated by the following script, based on the output
of lint with flake8-comma:
import re
import sys
last_filename = None
last_row = None
lines = []
for msg in sys.stdin:
m = re.match(
r"\x1b\[35mflake8 \|\x1b\[0m \x1b\[1;31m(.+):(\d+):(\d+): (\w+)", msg
)
if m:
filename, row_str, col_str, err = m.groups()
row, col = int(row_str), int(col_str)
if filename == last_filename:
assert last_row != row
else:
if last_filename is not None:
with open(last_filename, "w") as f:
f.writelines(lines)
with open(filename) as f:
lines = f.readlines()
last_filename = filename
last_row = row
line = lines[row - 1]
if err in ["C812", "C815"]:
lines[row - 1] = line[: col - 1] + "," + line[col - 1 :]
elif err in ["C819"]:
assert line[col - 2] == ","
lines[row - 1] = line[: col - 2] + line[col - 1 :].lstrip(" ")
if last_filename is not None:
with open(last_filename, "w") as f:
f.writelines(lines)
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
The test_management_commands use in particular was causing pickling
errors when the test failed, because Python 3 filter returns an
iterator, not a list.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Run production suites on Ubuntu Focal.
Added separate success-http-headers files for Focal and Bionic.
Also excluded them from whitespace rules in lint.
memcached 1.5.22 in Ubuntu 20.04 has a bug where it looks for its SASL
configuration at /etc/sasl2/memcached.conf/memcached.conf instead of
/etc/sasl2/memcached.conf.
We already use a workaround for this while applying puppet configurations in
99e71f3786 but for docker builds we used
do memcached hack since we can not use systemd in docker containers.
This was written by Rishi for a very brief purpose a few years ago,
and it doesn't serve much purpose now other than to be a place we
update in code sweeps.
Generated by pyupgrade --py36-plus --keep-percent-format, but with the
NamedTuple changes reverted (see commit
ba7906a3c6, #15132).
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Since we use this option in our docker-zulip project also
so rather than using it as a test suite option we made it
more specific i.e. --build-release-tarball-only.
Some UTF-8 characters (★ for example) are not displayed correctly, with
fonts-liberation. Puppeteer recommends[1] installing fonts-freefont-ttf in
their docs on running Puppeteer in docker.
Provisioning forward is sufficient. There's no need to remove the
new font and replace it with the old font, I think.
[1]: https://github.com/puppeteer/puppeteer/blob/master/docs/troubleshooting.md#running-puppeteer-in-docker
We remove the "GROUP PMs" section that used
to be in the lower right sidebar.
Most of this is straightforward code removal.
A couple quick notes:
- The message fetching code now just
calls `huddle_data.process_loaded_messages`,
which we still need for search suggestions.
We removed `activity.process_loaded_messages`.
- The `huddle_data.process_loaded_messages`
function no longer needs to return `need_resize`.
- In `resize.js` we now just calculate
`res.buddy_list_wrapper_max_height` directly
from `usable_height`.
Fixes#14962
* codecov needs `.coverage` file in the pwd to upload coverage
results.
* concurrency='multiprocessing' forces `.coverage` file to have a
data_suffix, we explicity set it to "" for the file to have no suffix.
Filed issue as https://github.com/nedbat/coveragepy/issues/989
The bug this was working around does not affect our current toolchain,
as confirmed by grepping through the minified output.
(Also, this linter rule only matched calc(x + y) with two arguments
and we were already using calc($far_left_gutter_size + $left_col_size
+ 4px).)
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
mock is just a backport of the standard library’s unittest.mock now.
The SAMLAuthBackendTest change is needed because
MagicMock.call_args.args wasn’t introduced until Python
3.8 (https://bugs.python.org/issue21269).
The PROVISION_VERSION bump is skipped because mock is still an
indirect dev requirement via moto.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Previously, we handled this code only in message_list_view.js.
Now we support rendering stream descriptions and some dynamic
elements can be rendered in them, so we extract this new module
and use it in both the places.
This commit adds python code to call javascript_examples.js in its
two supported modes. tools/test-api asserts that the example output
is as expected, whereas the API markdown extension is used to render
these examples in the docs.
Otherwise, if someone tries to create a droplet with a mixed case username,
the existing DNS records (which are always lowercase) would not be deleted.
Also, existing droplets would not be destroyed(--recreate) if there is a mismatch
in case. Unlike DNS records, droplets are created with case sensitive
hostnames.
Plus it's neater to have lowercase hostnames.
As puppeteer tests are similar to casper i.e both being frontend
screen scraping tests, we need to use the same webpack setup as
that of casper's instead of `build_for_most_tests` which is used
mostly for backend related tests.
This sets env variable `CASPER_TESTS` to `1` which does all the
work to make it use the same setup of casper. We would want to
rename that to `PUPPETEER_TESTS` and make changes to do the
same as casper webpack setup when we completely replace casper
with puppeteer.
Zulip's openapi specification in zulip.yaml has various examples
for various schemas. Validate the example with their respective
schemas to ensure that all the examples are schematically correct.
Part of #14100.
We use this new widget in bot settings panels
(personal and org). It lets you re-assign a
bot to a new human user.
Ideally we can improve this code to use
our existing list widgets to make it more
performant for realms with lots of users.
While this functionality to post slow queries to a Zulip stream was
very useful in the early days of Zulip, when there were only a few
hundred accounts, it's long since been useless since (1) the total
request volume on larger Zulip servers run by Zulip developers, and
(2) other server operators don't want real-time notifications of slow
backend queries. The right structure for this is just a log file.
We get rid of the queue and replace it with a "zulip.slow_queries"
logger, which will still log to /var/log/zulip/slow_queries.log for
ease of access to this information and propagate to the other logging
handlers. Reducing the amount of queues is good for lowering zulip's
memory footprint and restart performance, since we run at least one
dedicated queue worker process for each one in most configurations.
We use cloud-config for setting up the SSH keys and executing
some commands. When cloud-config sets the SSH key it doesn't override
the existing keys. So we need to set the SSH keys manually using a command
instead. This means we no longer require cloud config. We can instead
pass a bash script as the user data instead of cloud-config.
I also included a command to set the SSH key of the root.
size_slug represents the plan the droplet should be created on.
Since the new base droplet is created on the cheaper but more
feature rich new plan we have to update the slug_size as well
to take advantage of the cheaper plan.
Previously a YAML syntax error resulted in an
UnhandledPromiseRejectionWarning and a successful exit code; now it
gives a clear message and a failing exit code.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
The major PROVISION_VERSION bump would not be needed, but it was
missing in commit 5ab62a3514 (#14834),
so I’m doing it here.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
We now use the `--streamlined` options for `run-dev.py`
when we use `test_server_running` for `test-api` and
`test-js-with-casper` (and its experimental
replacement, `test-js-with-puppeteer`).
This means we don't slow anything down with
processes like thumbor, process_fts_updates, etc.,
which aren't meaningfully exercised by these tests.
We may eventually want some tests to meaningfully
exercise those processes, and when that day comes,
we will need to add an extra argument to
`test_server_running`, probably, but until then,
we just always set `--streamlined` in that codepath.
There is actually a tool called `./tools/test-run-dev`
that we run in CI, and it will use the full mode.
It just doesn't verify much stuff--it mostly polls
the server without testing specific features.
This seems to save about 1s of the startup time on a system I use
(~10.6s -> ~9.7s).
For basic testing (either manual or automated), we
generally only need the server and tornado running.
Obviously, it's nice to test the complete system,
but if you're on a slow PC, the overhead can be
annoying.
Note that we don't launch any of these processes
in `--streamlined` mode:
process_queue
process_fts_updates
deliver_scheduled_messages
thumbor
And then by not launching process_queue, we avoid
several child processes.
Basic functionality like sending messages will
still work here.
The streamlined mode may be helpful in debugging
our generally slow server startup time. Obviously,
some of the problem with startup is the auxiliary
processes here, but removing them as a variable
could help us focus on getting the core stuff fast.
Note that we still have the webpack watcher running
in streamlined mode.
For the particular case of thumbor, note that we
modify the proxy server to explicitly print and
return an error if we get a `/thumbor/*` request.
We clean up the code related to launching
processes here.
We extract:
server_processes
We also extract these helper for webpack
stuff:
do_one_time_webpack_compile
start_webpack_watcher
And then we move the code to actually launch
them lexically within the file (so as not to
be obscured by various function definitions).
Here is the new output for displaying ports:
Zulip services will listen on ports:
9991: web proxy
9992: Django
9993: Tornado
9994: webpack
9995: Thumbor
Note to Vagrant users: Only the proxy port (9991) is exposed.
I tone down the yellow for the Vagrant warning, and I show
the web proxy in cyan to emphasize it.
I also extracted the code into a function, and I don't call
that function until after `app.listen()`. (The users probably
won't notice much difference in the timing of this message, but
the message won't show if the `listen` step fails for some
reason, which I think is what we want here.)
We remove the import-tools code that was plunked
right into the middle of our command line
arguments.
Then we add a local var called `DESCRIPTION` to
fix some ugly code formatting, and we stop with the
unnecessary `r` prefix to the multi-line string.
This does not rely on the desktop app being able to register for the
zulip:// scheme (which is problematic with, for example, the AppImage
format).
It also is a better interface for managing changes to the system,
since the implementation exists almost entirely in the server/webapp
project.
This provides a smoother user experience, where the user doesn't need
to do the paste step, when combined with
https://github.com/zulip/zulip-desktop/pull/943.
Fixes#13613.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This will give help up write new digest only if the db rebuild
succeeds. We were relying on the caller to
be successful in building db, this was hacky and unreliable.
We write new db digest once the caller succeeds, this ensures
that we write new digest after every successful attempt.
This fixes the anomality we were facing that Databases were rebuild
on the 2nd provision attempt with no changes to files or migrations.
This was happening because we didn't write a new digest for db
after the first provision (The case of DB didn't exist).
During the 1st provision, we check the template_status() of
Database both Dev and Test, but database_exists() of Databases
obviously returned false, and we rebuild the database,
but forgot to write_new_digest and hence the anomaly in the
second provision explained above.
Yes, it's slightly janky to create an
argparse.Namespace object like this, but it
saves us from shelling out to a script whose
only real value-add is parsing a single
`threshold_days` argument.
This saves about 130ms for a no-op provision.
We now just have two modes for setting up a dev/test
database. This makes it easy to see these things
side-by-side, when you're trying to understand how
the two different databases get built:
# dev:
USERNAME=zulip
DBNAME=zulip
STATUS_FILE_NAME=migration_status_dev
# test:
USERNAME=zulip_test
DBNAME=zulip_test
STATUS_FILE_NAME=migration_status_test
And then we make it more explicit the things that
are common between dev and test (which are
important things to understand when troubleshooting
provision-related glitches):
SEARCH_PATH=zulip,public
PASSWORD=$("$(dirname "$0")/../../scripts/get-django-setting" LOCAL_DATABASE_PASSWORD)
DBNAME_BASE=${DBNAME}_base
We lose some "generality" here, but passing in arbitrary
combinations of username/dbname/status_file to the script
would cause chaos for our digest checks, and all the different
template/base databases could cause confusion too.
We now prevent these variations:
* <hr/>
* <hr />
* <br/>
* <br />
We could enforce similar consistency for other void
tags, if we wished, but these two are particularly
prevalent.
Instead of figuring out the image path from the integration name in the
puppeteer script, we do it in the `generate-integration-docs-screenshot`
script and pass it as an argument to `message-screenshot.js`.
Since in travis we don't have root access so we used to add different
srv path. As now we shifted our production suites to Circle CI
we don't need that code so removed it.
Also we used a hacky code in commit-lint-message for travis which is
now of no use.