We still create a Python 2 virtualenv for thumbor but that’s
separate (/srv/zulip-thumbor-venv from
scripts/lib/create-thumbor-venv).
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
Now, if you pass an api_key, we'll initialize the public room
subscribers to be whatever they were at the time the import happened.
Also, document the situation on the caveats section.
We had an inconsistent behavior when `LDAP_APPEND_DOMAIN` was set
in that we allowed user to enter username instead of his email in
the auth form but later the workflow failed due to a small bug.
Fixes: #10917.
This now sets the user-agent to something like:
ZulipOutgoingWebhook/2.0
(It uses the current ZULIP_VERSION.)
Before this change, the user-agent would be
something like `python-requests/2.18.4`.
Fixes#10741
Closes#11195. We add a management command to allow us to send emails
to the email mirror directly. The command doesn't require any
configuring of email sending or receiving for the email mirror,
it passes the emails directly using the process_message function.
In between releases, the following commit introduced
a bug where we agressively scroll to the top every
place we call `ui.update_scrollbar`:
092b73d0b7
The main symptoms were that the left and right sidebars
would go to the top for things like selecting a topic,
getting activity updates from the server, and resizing
the window. It was very jarring.
The recent commit looked innocuous--the root of the problem
was the original API expressed an intent to scroll to the
top, but didn't actually do it, so it was a bug in hiding.
There are **some** occasions where it's actually appropriate
to scroll to the top, mostly around search filtering, and
in those places we now call the new `ui.reset_scrollbar`
function.
This is a bit of an emergency fix, so particularly with
the settings stuff, we may get more reports of glitches here.
The important thing here is that you almost never want to
reset the scrollTop for sidebars.
We need to explicitly check for empty recipient lists in
send_message to ensure that internal_send_huddle_message doesn't
call Addressee.for_private with an empty recipient list.
The check for empty recipient lists (the "message_to" argument)
does not belong in check_message. As we implement support for
sending messages by user IDs (see #9474), we will be extending
much of the existing code in Addressee.legacy_build that validates
recipient lists. Therefore, Addressee.legacy_build is a much more
apt area to check for empty recipient lists.
Also, Addressee.for_private and Addressee.for_user_ids also need
to do their own validation, since not everything goes through
Addressee.legacy_build. It is okay to simply throw a 500 in these
cases because we expect that callers will be doing their own
validation for calls that don't go through Addressee.legacy_build().
This commit is a part of our efforts surrounding #9474.
Update the list of ciphers that nginx will use to the current
Mozilla recommended ones.
These are Intermediate compatibility ones suitable for clients
running anything newer than Firefox 1, Chrome 1, IE 7, Opera 5
and Safari 1. Modern compatibility is not suitable as it excludes
Andriod 4 which is still seen on ~1% of traffic.
More info: https://wiki.mozilla.org/Security/Server_Side_TLS
This seems like a small change (apart from all the
test changes), but it fundamentally changes how
the app finds "topic" on message objects. Now
all code that used to set "subject" now sets "topic"
on message-like objects. We convert incoming messages
to have topic, and we write to "topic" all the way up
to hitting the server (which now accepts "topic" on
incoming endpoints).
We fall back to subject as needed, but the code will
emit a warning that should be heeded--the "subject"
field is prone to becoming stale for things like
topic changes.
Feature of sending notification to the stream using notification bot
is added. user_profile is also passed to do_rename_stream for using
the name of user who renamed the stream in notification.
Notification is sent to the stream using
internal_send_stream_message in do_rename_stream.
Fixes#11034.
We recently added a feature to warn users that they
may need to scroll down to view messages that they
just sent, but it was broken due to various complexities
in the rendering code path.
Now we compute it a bit more rigorously.
It requires us to pass some info about rendering up
and down the stack, which is why it's kind of a long
commit, but the bulk of the logic is in these JS files:
* message_list_view.js
* notifications.js
I choose to pass structs around instead of booleans,
because I anticipate we may eventually add more metadata
about rendering to it, plus bools are just kinda brittle.
(The exceptions are that `_maybe_autoscroll`, which
is at the bottom of the stack, just passes back a simple
boolean, and `notify_local_mixes`, also at the bottom
of the stack, just accepts a simple boolean.)
This errs on the side of warning the user, even if the
new message is partially visible.
Fixes#11138
We now have two functions:
add_new_messages
add_old_messages
This is a lot easier on the eyes, and it will also
prevent us from exceeding line length in future commits.
We also remove an unneeded stub in the narrow_activate
tests.
This commit makes it a bit more explicit about
why we're updating 2 or 3 message lists every time.
It looks funny now to repeat the home-list updates
in both sides of the conditional, but this will be
more obvious in a subsequent commit, where we want
to capture return values from rendering.
In a recent commit we allowed for `scroll_amount`
to be zero (as an indirect consequence of letting
`scroll_limit` be zero without early exiting).
See 0f75be3e8e
We want to short circuit the call to
`system_initiated_animate_scroll`, partly to save
unnecessary computation, but in particular to avoid
invoking the suppress-pointer-update logic.
It's convenient to have visible_bottom as well
as top/height, and the extra computation is
trivial (it's just arithmetic, no extra jQuery
involved).
There's some minor cleanup here too.
Previously, this wasn't an explicit feature of the export tool.
Note that the current version still includes metadata on private
streams and private message recipients, just not their messages.
This adds a proper template for the /digest page, making it a
reasonable way to view the digest email content for development and
debugging.
Fixes: #11016.