This commit modifies the user objects returned by 'GET /users',
'GET /users/me', 'GET /users/{user_id}' and 'GET /users/{email}'
endpoints to include role field.
We also include role field in the page_params['realm_users'] dict
and in the person object sent in (type="realm_user", op="add")
event.
This help mobile and terminal clients understand whether a server
restart changed API feature levels or not, which in turn determines
whether they will need to resynchronize their data.
Also add tests and documentation for this previously undocumented
event type.
Fixes: #18205.
This extends the /json/typing endpoint to also accept
stream_id and topic. With this change, the requests
sent to /json/typing should have these:
* `to`: a list set to
- recipients for a PM
- stream_id for a stream message
* `topic`, in case of stream message
along with `op`(start or stop).
On receiving a request with stream_id and topic, we send
typing events to clients with stream_typing_notifications set
to True for all users subscribed to that stream.
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).
* This introduces a new event type `realm_linkifiers` and
a new key for the initial data fetch of the same name.
Newer clients will be expected to use these.
* Backwards compatibility is ensured by changing neither
the current event nor the /register key. The data which
these hold is the same as before, but internally, it is
generated by processing the `realm_linkifiers` data.
We send both the old and the new event types to clients
whenever the linkifiers are changed.
Older clients will simply ignore the new event type, and
vice versa.
* The `realm/filters:GET` endpoint (which returns tuples)
is currently used by none of the official Zulip clients.
This commit replaces it with `realm/linkifiers:GET` which
returns data in the new dictionary format.
TODO: Update the `get_realm_filters` method in the API
bindings, to hit this new URL instead of the old one.
* This also updates the webapp frontend to use the newer
events and keys.
There was a bug where invite users link is shown in the Invitations
section of settings overlay, irrespective if the user is allowed to
invite or not based on the realm settings. So here we just use the
'can_invite_others_to_realm' field of page_params, that was added in
previous commit itself to hide the link accordingly.
Also added the code in server_events_dispatch.js for this field.
Though it doesn't do live update when the overlay is opened similar
to other policies like create_stream_policy, but it ensures that the
visibility of link is correct if the overlay is opened after the
settings has changed.
We should probably do the complete live update in future of the
elements related to such realm settings.
Muted users are stored in a map with key as user ID and
the value as the timestamp of muting.
Names can be easily fetched from existing functions
in `people.js` and hence not stored.
Before this we did not have remove event in server_events_dispatch.js
for the user group delete event even though server had. This was
leading to blueslip errors. Extracted the logic which was used in
success() of channel.del for user_groups into the remove case in
server_events_dispatch. Also removed the redundant reload call as
we already do that in server events.
* `op` (operation) field, added in f6fb88549f, was never intended for
`custom_profile_fields` event. This commit removes the `op` as it doesn't
have any use in the code.
* As a part of cleanup, this also eliminates the schema check warnings
for `custom_profile_fields` event, mentioned in #17568.
This add the schema checker, openapi schema, and also a test for
realm/deactivated event.
With several block comments by tabbott explaining the logic behind our
behavior here.
Part of #17568.
TextField is used to allow users to set long stream + topic narrow
names in the urls.
We currently restrict users to only set "all_messages" and
"recent_topics" as narrows.
This commit achieves 3 things:
* Removes recent topics as the default view which loads when
hash is empty.
* Loads default_view when hash is empty.
* Loads default_view on pressing escape key when it is unhandled by
other present UI elements.
NOTE: After this commit loading zulip with an empty hash will
automatically set hash to default_view. Ideally, we'd just display
the default view without a hash, but that involves extra complexity.
One exception is when user is trying to load an overlay directly,
i.e. zulip is loaded with an overlay hash. In this case,
we render recent topics is background irrespective of default_view.
We consider this last detail to be a bug not important enough to block
adding this setting.
While working on shifting toward native browser time zone APIs
(#16451), it was found that all but very recent Chrome and Node
versions reject certain legacy timezone aliases like US/Pacific
(https://crbug.com/364374).
For now, we only canonicalize the timezone property returned in user
objects and not the timezone setting itself.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
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.
`update_message_flags` events used `operation` instead of `op`, the
latter being the standard field used in other events. So add `op`
field to `update_message_flags` and mark `operation` as deprecated,
so that it can be removed later.
The dispatch test here really only cares that values
get passed on.
Note that the dispatch code ignores the email field, because
we only send subscription/update events to the user
whose subscription has changed.
This commit adds "role" field to the Subscription objects passed to
clients. This is important preparation for being able to work on the
frontend for this feature.
The dispatch for presence is a trivial one-liner,
so the test just makes sure three important parameters
get passed along.
We will eventually want to use the fixtures data in
other presence-related tests, but for now the only
goal is to make it pass the schema checks.
We also just make the test express what's actually
happening in the code; we just pass the entire
"exports" section of the event to the settings code
and let it do its thing.
We follow the naming convention.
I also arbitrarily assign the "op" of
"add" to the attachment event, even
though we don't meaningfully test it.
The situation with attachment from the
dispatch test point of view is that
we just want to test that the one line
of code that calls into attachments_ui
(for all three ops) does get dispatched
correctly. We eventually want to get
deeper coverage there, but attachments_ui
wasn't written in the most test-friendly
way. I think it might actually be easy
to fix up attachments_ui to make it a
bit easier to test, but it's out of the
scope of my current PR.
The benefit here is check-node-fixtures
now gives a more concrete plan for
moving schemas to event_schema.py.
We extract test_realm_emojis, and we make
the name of the event more explicit (adding
the __update suffix).
We also add the "op" of "update" here, which
is sort of a quirk of the api, since we don't
actually have alternatives like add/remove,
and therefore the current frontend code doesn't
look at the "op", and thus the original tests
never had to provide a correct value for it.
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>
With update_emojis, it is pretty easy
to set up the tests with reasonable
data without reaching into internal
data structures.
Also, we can begin the process of
sharing the same data with our
dispatch tests (upcoming).