During the new user creation code path, there can be no existing
active clients for the user being created, so we can skip the code to
send events to that user's clients.
The tests here reflect that we need to send fewer events, and do fewer
queries that would have been spent computing data for these..
Fixes#16503, combined with the long series of recent changes by Steve
Howell to fix super-linear behavior in this code path.
We no bulk up peer_add/peer_remove events by user if the
same user has subscribed to multiple streams (and just
that single user).
This mostly optimizes the new-user codepath, but the
algorithm is a bit more general in nature.
This test was flaky due to some date-related
non-determinism. I make all the Message objects
current to make add_new_user_history reliably
try to bulk-update UserMessage rows to read.
We replace knight command with change_user_role command which
allows us to change role of a user to owner, admins, member and
guest. We can also give/revoke api_super_user permission using
this command.
Tweaked by tabbott to improve the logging output and update documentation.
Fixes#16586.
Because of the very large `oneOf` clause of the formats of events
possible in Zulip's `GET /events` system, we had issues with
`test-backend` failures for missing documentation for a new event
format being like 1000 lines of output, which was very much unhelpful.
Fix this by limiting the output use only the oneOf variants that are
broadly similar to the actual payload received.
Fixes#16023.
See commit 8b002040e0 and #86. The
development environment bug that necessitated this handler has long
been irrelevant.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
The comment still pointed to 'vacate' event flow, but
we have removed the vacate event in a9356508ca.
This commit fixes the comment to depict the correct
purpose of below lines, i.e. to test the remove
event flow.
We were including 'realm_user' in event_types along with 'subscription',
but we don't send event of type 'realm_user' when subscribing to a new
stream. This was added in 1c332f5d6a.
This commit removes 'realm_user' from event_types.
The name used to be included in the id_token, but this seems to have
been changed by Apple and now it's sent in the `user` request param.
https://github.com/python-social-auth/social-core/pull/483 is the
upstream PR for this - but upstream is currently unmaintained, so we
have to monkey patch.
We also alter the tests to reflect this situation. Tests no longer put
the name in the id_token, but rather in the `user` request param in the
browser flow, just like it happens in reality.
An adaptation has to be made in the native flow - since the name won't
be included by Apple in the id_token anymore, the app, when POSTing
to the /complete/apple/ endpoint,
can (and should for better user experience)
add the `user` param formatted as json of
{"email": "hamlet@zulip.com", "name": {"firstName": "Full", "lastName": "Name"}}
dict. This is also reflected by the change in the
native flow tests.
We now can send an implied matrix of user/stream tuples
for peer_add and peer_remove events.
The client code basically does this:
for stream_id in event['stream_ids']:
for user_id in event['user_ids']:
update_sub(stream_id, user_id)
We used to send individual events, which gets real
expensive when you are creating new streams. For
the case of copy-to-stream case, we should see
events go from U to 1, where U is the number of users
added.
Note that we don't yet fully optimize the potential
of this schema. For adding a new user with lots
of default streams, we still send S peer_add events.
And if you subscribe a bunch of users to a bunch of
private streams, we only go from U * S to S; we can't
optimize it down to one event easily.
Right now the list of languages in Display settings → Default language
is sorted in an unintuitive order due to the varying case conventions:
British English
Chinese (Taiwan)
Deutsch
English
Hindi
Indonesian (Indonesia)
Lietuviškai
Magyar
Malayalam
Nederlands
Português
Română
Tiếng Việt
Türkçe
català
español
français
galego
italiano
polski
suomi
svenska
česky
Русский
Українська
български
српски
فارسی
தமிழ்
日本語
简体中文
繁體中文
한국어
Fix the sort to use the locale-independent Unicode Collation
Algorithm:
British English
català
česky
Chinese (Taiwan)
Deutsch
English
español
français
galego
Hindi
Indonesian (Indonesia)
italiano
Lietuviškai
Magyar
Malayalam
Nederlands
polski
Português
Română
suomi
svenska
Tiếng Việt
Türkçe
български
Русский
српски
Українська
فارسی
தமிழ்
한국어
日本語
简体中文
繁體中文
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
All the fields of a stream's recipient object can
be inferred from the Stream, so we just make a local
object. Django will create a Message object without
checking that the child Recipient object has been
saved. If that behavior changes in some upgrade,
we should see some pretty obvious symptom, including
query counts changing.
Tweaked by tabbott to add a longer explanatory comment, and delete a
useless old comment.
This saves us a query for edge cases like when
you try to unsubscribe from a public stream
that you have already unsubscribed from.
But this is mostly to prep for upcoming
optimizations.
This doesn't change anything yet, but the goal is
to eventually optimize events for the case where
one user (typically a new user) gets subscribed
to multiple public streams.
Initially markdown titles were overridden by Youtube and Vimeo preview titles.
But now it will check if any markdown title is present to replace Youtube or
Vimeo preview titles, if preview of linked websites is enabled.
Fixes#16100
Upstream has slightly changed the whitespace around stashes. Take
this opportunity to clean up the extra blank lines we were outputting.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
There was no need to put "stream_id" on the sub
dictionary here. It's kinda annoying to introduce
the little helper here, but I feel
that's better than crufting up the sub data
structure.
The is_web_public flag is already in Stream.API_FIELDS,
so there is no reason for all this complicated logic.
There's no reason to hack it on to the subscription
object.
We replace all_streams_id with a map.
We also use it to populate never_subscribed_streams.
And all_streams_map is a superset of stream_hash,
which we will soon kill off as well.
Apparently I put these parens in the code as
part of 73c30774cb
during 2017.
It looks like I extracted is_public during
the middle of my change and forgot to remove
the unnecessary parens. (The code was correct,
but it makes it look like a tuple if you're
skimming it too quickly.)
That class is an artifact of when Stream
didn't have recipient_id. Now it's simpler
to deal with stream subscriptions.
We also save a query during page load (and
other places where we get subscriber
info).
Let the callers access stream.recipient as needed.
It costs the same, and some of the callers can
actually stop caring about the actual Recipient
object.
We already trust ids that are put on our queue
for deferred work. For example, see the code for
"mark_stream_messages_as_read_for_everyone"
We now pass stream_recipient_id when we queue
up work for do_mark_stream_messages_as_read.
This generally saves about 3 queries per
user when we unsubscribe them from a stream.
We get two speedups:
* The query to get existing subscribers only
gets the two fields we need. We no longer
need all the overhead of user_profile
and recipient data being returned in the
query.
* We avoid Django making extra hops to the
database to get user info.
Previously, the transaction.atomic() was not properly scoped to ensure
that RealmAuditLog entries were created in the same transaction,
making it possible for state changes to not be properly recorded in
RealmAuditLog.
When apps like mobile register for "streams", we
will now just use active streams as our baseline,
rather than "occupied" streams.
This means we will send a stream that is active,
even if it happens to have zero occupants. It's
actually pretty rare that a stream has zero occupants,
and it's not exactly clear that we want to exclude
a non-occupied but otherwise active stream from
our list of streams.
It also happens to be fairly expensive to compute
whether a stream is occupied.
This change only affects API clients (including
possibly our mobile app). The main webapp never
used the data from this codepath.
We replace get_peer_user_ids_for_stream_change
with two bulk functions to get peers and/or
subscribers.
Note that we have three codepaths that care about
peers:
subscribing existing users:
we need to tell peers about new subscribers
we need to tell subscribed user about old subscribers
unsubscribing existing users:
we only need to tell peers who unsubscribed
subscribing new user:
we only need to tell peers about the new user
(right now we generate send_event
calls to tell the new user about existing
subscribers, but this is a waste
of effort that we will fix soon)
The two bulk functions are this:
bulk_get_subscriber_peer_info
bulk_get_peers
They have some overlap in the implementation,
but there are some nuanced differences that are
described in the comments.
Looking up peers/subscribers in bulk leads to some
nice optimizations.
We will save some memchached traffic if you are
subscribing to multiple public streams.
We will save a query in the remove-subscriber
case if you are only dealing with private streams.
This will ensure that we always fully execute the database part of
modifying subscription objects. In particular, this should prevent
invariant failures like #16347 where Subscription objects were created
without corresponding RealmAuditLog entries.
Fixes#16347.
We don't need the select_related('user_profile')
optimization any more, because we just keep
track of user info in our own data structures.
In this codepath we are never actually modifying
users; we just occasionally need their ids or
emails.
This can be a pretty substantive improvement if
you are adding a bunch of users to a stream
who each have a bunch of their own subscriptions.
We could also limit the number of full rows in this
query by adding an extra hop to the DB just to
get colors (using values_list), and then only get
full sub info for the streams that we're adding, rather
than getting every single subscription, in full, for each user.
Apart from finding what colors the user has already
used, the only other reason we need all the columns
in Subscription here is to handle streams that
need to be reactivated. Otherwise we could do
only("id", "active", "recipient_id", "user_profile_id")
or similar. Fortunately, Subscription isn't
an overly wide table; it's mostly bool fields.
But by far the biggest thing to avoid is bringing
in all the extra user_profile data.
We have pretty good coverage on query counts here,
so I think this fix is pretty low risk.
This class removes a lot of the annoying tuples
we were passing around.
Also, by including the user everywhere, which
is easily available to us when we make instances
of SubInfo, it sets the stage to remove
select_related('user_profile').
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.
The query to get "occupied" streams has been expensive
in the past. I'm not sure how much any recent attempts
to optimize that query have mitigated the issue, but
since we clearly aren't sending this data, there is no
reason to compute it.
Using web_public_guest for anonymous users is confusing since
'guest' is actually a logged-in user compared to
web_public_guest which is not logged-in and has only
read access to messages. So, we rename it to
web_public_visitor.
This is a more thorough test of adding multiple
streams for multiple users, including streams
that users have already subscribed to.
The extra queries here are due to the fact
that we call `principal_to_user_profile` in
a loop in the view. So that's an example
of O(N) overhead. We may be able to bulk-fetch
these users eventually.
This is a pure extraction, except that I remove a
redundant check that `len(principals) > 0`. Whenever
that value is false, then `new_subscriptions` will
only have one possible entry, which is the current
user, and we skip that in the loop.
We no longer do O(N) queries to get existing streams.
This is a somewhat contrived use case--generally, we
are not trying to re-subscribe a user to several
streams. Still, we want to avoid this.
This commit also makes `test_bulk_subscribe_many`
do more work, and the change to the test helped
me discover this bug.
If a user asks to be subscribed to a stream
that they are already subscribed to, then
that stream won't be in new_stream_user_ids,
and we won't need to send an event for it.
This change makes that happen more automatically.
Let
U = number of users to subscribe
S = number of streams to subscribe
We were technically doing N^3 amount of work
when we sent certain events, or to be more
precise, U * S * S amount of work. For each
stream, we were looping through a list of tuples
of size U * S to find the users for the stream.
In practice either U or S is usually 1, so the
performance gains here are probably negligible,
especially since the constant factors here
were just slinging around Python data.
But the code is actually more readable now, so
it's a double win.
We rename needs_new_sub (which sounds like
a boolean!) to new_recipient_ids, and we
calculate it explicitly within the loop, so
that we don't need to worry as much about
subsequent passes through the loop mutating it.
This allows us to also remove recipient_ids,
which in turn lets us remove recipients_map,
albeit with a small tweak for stream_map.
I also introduce the my_subs local, which
I use to more directly populate used_colors,
as well as using it as the loop var.
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.
This function now does all the work that we used
to do with notify_subscriptions_added happening
inside a loop.
There's a small fine-tuning here, where we only
get recent traffic on streams that we're actually
sending events for.
We now just pass in all_subscribers_by_stream, rather
than a callback.
We also move sub_tuples_by_user closer to the
loop where we call notify_subscriptions_added.
This preserves the alpha layer on GIF images that need to be resized
before being uploaded. Two important changes occur here:
1. The new frame is a *copy* of the original image, which preserves the
GIF info.
2. The disposal method of the original GIF is preserved. This
essentially determines what state each frame of the GIF starts from
when it is drawn; see PIL's docs:
https://pillow.readthedocs.io/en/stable/handbook/image-file-formats.html#saving
for more info.
This resolves some but not all of the test cases in #16370.
ssh always runs its command through a shell (after naïvely joining
multiple arguments with spaces), so it needs an extra level of shell
quoting. This should have no effect because we already validated user
with a regex, but it’s better for escaping to be locally correct in
case the context changes.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
do_send_messages has side effects outside the database and may not
work reliably if its database effects are reordered by being inside a
transaction.
This also fixes a bug where we were doing the update incorrectly on
the Message table.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Since this was using repead individual get() calls previously, it
could not be monitored for having a consumer. Add it in, by marking
it of queue type "consumer" (the default), and adding Nagios lines for
it.
Also adjust missedmessage_emails to be monitored; it stopped using
LoopQueueProcessingWorker in 5cec566cb9, but was never added back
into the set of monitored consumers.
This low-level interface allows consuming from a queue with timeouts.
This can be used to either consume in batches (with an upper timeout),
or one-at-a-time. This is notably more performant than calling
`.get()` repeatedly (what json_drain_queue does under the hood), which
is "*highly discouraged* as it is *very inefficient*"[1].
Before this change:
```
$ ./manage.py queue_rate --count 10000 --batch
Purging queue...
Enqueue rate: 11158 / sec
Dequeue rate: 3075 / sec
```
After:
```
$ ./manage.py queue_rate --count 10000 --batch
Purging queue...
Enqueue rate: 11511 / sec
Dequeue rate: 19938 / sec
```
[1] https://www.rabbitmq.com/consumers.html#fetching
`loopworker_sleep_mock` is a file-level variable used to mock out the
sleep() call in LoopQueueProcessingWorker; don't reuse the variable
name for something else.
Despite its name, the `queue_size` method does not return the number
of items in the queue; it returns the number of items that the local
consumer has delivered but unprocessed. These are often, but not
always, the same.
RabbitMQ's queues maintain the queue of unacknowledged messages; when
a consumer connects, it sends to the consumer some number of messages
to handle, known as the "prefetch." This is a performance
optimization, to ensure the consumer code does not need to wait for a
network round-trip before having new data to consume.
The default prefetch is 0, which means that RabbitMQ immediately dumps
all outstanding messages to the consumer, which slowly processes and
acknowledges them. If a second consumer were to connect to the same
queue, they would receive no messages to process, as the first
consumer has already been allocated them. If the first consumer
disconnects or crashes, all prior events sent to it are then made
available for other consumers on the queue.
The consumer does not know the total size of the queue -- merely how
many messages it has been handed.
No change is made to the prefetch here; however, future changes may
wish to limit the prefetch, either for memory-saving, or to allow
multiple consumers to work the same queue.
Rename the method to make clear that it only contains information
about the local queue in the consumer, not the full RabbitMQ queue.
Also include the waiting message count, which is used by the
`consume()` iterator for similar purpose to the pending events list.
We modify access_stream_for_delete_or_update function to return
Subscription object also along with stream. This change will be
helpful in avoiding an extra query to get subscription object in
code for updating subscription role.
For streams in which only full members are allowed to post,
we block guest users from posting there.
Guests users were blocked from posting to admin only streams
already. So now, guest users can only post to
STREAM_POST_POLICY_EVERYONE streams.
This is not a new feature but a bugfix which should have
happened when implementing full member stream policy / guest users.
Otherwise, if consume_func raised an exception for any reason *other*
than the alarm being fired, the still-pending alarm would have fired
later at some arbitrary point in the calling code.
We need two try…finally blocks in case the signal arrives just before
signal.alarm(0).
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Replaced ImageOps.fit by ImageOps.pad, in zerver/lib/upload.py, which
returns a sized and padded version of the image, expanded to fill the
requested aspect ratio and size.
Fixes part of #16370.
SIGALRM is the simplest way to set a specific maximum duration that
queue workers can take to handle a specific message. This only works
in non-threaded environments, however, as signal handlers are
per-process, not per-thread.
The MAX_CONSUME_SECONDS is set quite high, at 10s -- the longest
average worker consume time is embed_links, which hovers near 1s.
Since just knowing the recent mean does not give much information[1],
it is difficult to know how much variance is expected. As such, we
set the threshold to be such that only events which are significant
outliers will be timed out. This can be tuned downwards as more
statistics are gathered on the runtime of the workers.
The exception to this is DeferredWorker, which deals with quite-long
requests, and thus has no enforceable SLO.
[1] https://www.autodesk.com/research/publications/same-stats-different-graphs
Currently, drain_queue and json_drain_queue ack every message as it is
pulled off of the queue, until the queue is empty. This means that if
the consumer crashes between pulling a batch of messages off the
queue, and actually processing them, those messages will be
permanently lost. Sending an ACK on every message also results in a
significant amount lot of traffic to rabbitmq, with notable
performance implications.
Send a singular ACK after the processing has completed, by making
`drain_queue` into a contextmanager. Additionally, use the `multiple`
flag to ACK all of the messages at once -- or explicitly NACK the
messages if processing failed. Sending a NACK will re-queue them at
the front of the queue.
Performance of a no-op dequeue before this change:
```
$ ./manage.py queue_rate --count 50000 --batch
Purging queue...
Enqueue rate: 10847 / sec
Dequeue rate: 2479 / sec
```
Performance of a no-op dequeue after this change (a 25% increase):
```
$ ./manage.py queue_rate --count 50000 --batch
Purging queue...
Enqueue rate: 10752 / sec
Dequeue rate: 3079 / sec
```
Part of #16094.
Moved the language selection preference logic from home.py to a new
function in i18n.py to avoid repetition in analytics views and home
views.
For users who are not authenticated, we don't need to 2fa them,
we only need it once they are trying to login.
Tweaked by tabbott to be much more readable; the new style might
require new test coverage.
We add a new wildcard_mention_policy setting to handle wildcard
mentions in large streams, with a wide range of policies available to
organizations.
We set the default to the safe option for preventing accidental spam:
only stream administrators being able to use wildcard mentions in
large streams.
This prevents the memcached connection from being shared across
multiple processes, and hopefully addresses unexpected behavior from
cached functions like get_user_profile_by_id invoked inside the worker
processes.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
We call build_message_send_dict from check_message instead of
do_send_messages.
This is a prep commit for adding a new setting for handling
wildcard mentions in large streams.
We extract the loop for building message dict in
do_send_messages in a separate function named
build_message_send_dict.
This is a prep commit for moving the code for building
of message dict in check_message.
There is a bug where we send event for even
those messages which do not have embedded links
as we are using single set 'links_for_embed' to
check whether we have to send event for
embedded links or not.
This commit fixes the bug by adding 'links_for_embed'
in message dict itself and send the event only
if that message has embedded links.
As explained in the previous commit, yamole preprocessed allOf with an
algorithm that is not standards compliant. We replicate that
algorithm, but importantly, we only use it for our own code and not
for building the openapi_core RequestValidator.
This improves the time taken by OpenAPISpec().check_reload() from
1.69s to 0.53s, nearly all of which is inside
openapi_core.create_spec.
Closes#10484. Significantly improves #16068.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
yamole preprocesses our schema by naïvely merging all the objects in
an allOf array together, but this fails to capture the meaning of
allOf according to the OpenAPI specification. allOf is supposed to be
a strict logical intersection of each subschema interpreted
independently. It does not combine their properties maps before
interpreting additionalProperties. So according to the old definition
of JsonSuccess, every response is invalid:
allOf:
- additionalProperties: false
properties:
result:
type: string
- required:
- result
- msg
properties:
msg:
type: string
because the first subschema disallowed msg and the second subschema
required msg.
To fix this, whenever we use allOf for schema “inheritence”, the base
schema must not specify additionalProperties, and the child schema
must explicitly list all properties recursively inherited from the
base schema in any subschema that uses additionalProperties.
Fixes#16109.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This commit removes the unnecessary comment which was added in
9454683108, when we were using message.get() for keys which
were also passed as args in do_send_messages, but there are no
such keys in the current code.
This commit removes the unnecessary line of code to get
rendered_content from message dict sent by check_message
when it actually does not inlcude 'rendered_content' key.
This line was added in 9454683108, but now we do not send
rendered_content in the message dict as we render the message
in do_send_messages itself.
A later commit alters `authenticate` of EmailAuthBackend to
add a store `needs_to_change_password` variable to session
which is useful to insist users on changing their weak password.
The tests start failing with that change because client.login()
runs `authenticate` without a `request` object. So, this commit
sends a request object with `request.session=self.client.session`
to self.client.login() in tests wherever needed.
We previously used to to redirect to config error page with
a different URL. This commit renders config error in the same
URL where configuration error is encountered. This way when
conifguration error is fixed the user can refresh to continue
normally or go back to login page from the link provided to
choose any other backend auth.
Also moved those URLs to dev_urls.py so that they can be easily
accessed to work on styling etc.
In tests, removed some of the asserts checking status code to be 200
as the function `assert_in_success_response` does that check.
We now no longer define any schemas in test_events--all
of them are in event_schema, which helps our tooling
cross-check schemas for openapi and node tests.
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 use value_type for value instead of
bool, since properties can be non-bool things
like color, which we just don't test now. We
should test them.
We more than compensate for this by checking
the actual value of the value in
check_subscription_update.
There is a legacy format where we send
singular "message_id" instead of plural
"message_ids".
Then there are different fields for "private"
and "stream" message types.
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.
Even before GDPR changes, it was strange that we displayed
users differently for fork events vs. all other events.
After GDPR, we don't even get the `username` field any
more.
So now we simply use `display_name` if available, and then
we try `nickname`.
See https://developer.atlassian.com/cloud/bitbucket/bitbucket-api-changes-gdpr/
for more context.
We were trying to share the same format string between
the two different versions of bitbucket, but this only
creates confusion, as the two versions are only close
enough to be confusing.
The format string might be the same, but the semantics
are different, as well as the eventual outputs.
For example, the {username} piece here is simple in version
2, but in version 3 we append a url to the user's name.
This commit renames 'test_message_to_self' and
'test_api_message_to_self' tests to
'test_message_to_stream_by_name' and
'test_api_message_to_stream_by_name' to depict
the actual purpose of these tests.
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.
These represent known errors in what the user submitted. This is
slightly complicated by UnsupportedWebhookEventType being an instance
of JsonableError.
allow_webhook_access may be true if the request allows webhook
requests, regardless of if it only used for a webhook integration.
Only actually log to the verbose webhook logger if it is explicitly a
webhook endpoint, as judged by `webhook_client_name`. This prevents
requests for `POST /api/v1/messages` from being logged to the webhook
logger if they mistakenly contain a `payload` argument.
This argument does not define if an endpoint "is a webhook"; it is set
for "/api/v1/messages", which is not really a webhook, but allows
access from webhooks.
If multiple filters match the same string, we run into an infinite
loop of converting string into urls. To fix it, we mark the matched
string as atomic after first conversion.
We raise MissingAuthenticationError now, which adds
`www_authenticate=session` header to the error response. This
stops modern web-browsers from displaying a login form everytime
a 401 response it sent to the client.
Having both of these is confusing; TORNADO_SERVER is used only when
there is one TORNADO_PORT. Its primary use is actually to be _unset_,
and signal that in-process handling is to be done.
Rename to USING_TORNADO, to parallel the existing USING_RABBITMQ, and
switch the places that used it for its contents to using
TORNADO_PORTS.
This system can't update stats while the queue is idle, without using
threads for this, but at least we ensure to update the file after
consuming an event if more than MAX_SECONDS_BEFORE_UPDATE_STATS passed
since the last update, regardless of the number of iterations done so
far.
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.
This mimics the backend logic for adding the data-attribute -
to know what Pygments language was used to highlight the code
block - in locally echoed messages.
New test added checks our logic for canonicalizing pygments alias
(for both frontend and backend).
Other fixtures and tests amended.
In ae58ed5a7 we decided to echo back the text, when no Pygments lexer
matching that language was found. When we do so, we must take care to
HTML escape the lang before wrapping it in a data-code-language attribute.
Tweaked by tabbott to make clear the escaping is defensive.
In development and test, we keep the Tornado port at 9993 and 9983,
respectively; this allows tests to run while a dev instance is
running.
In production, moving to port 9800 consistently removes an odd edge
case, when just one worker is on an entirely different port than if
two workers are used.
tornado.web.Application does not share any inheritance with Django at
all; it has a similar router interface, but tornado.web.Application is
not an instance of Django anything.
Refold the long lines that follow it.