The previous logic incorrectly used the server-level number of users
even when a (presumably smaller) realm-level count was available.
Fixes a bug introduced in 2e1ed4431a.
This default setup will be more realistic, matching the ordinary
conditions for a modern server.
Especially needed as we add bouncer code that will expect to have
RemoteRealm entries for realm_uuid values for which it receives
requests.
This commit moves constants for system group names to a new
"SystemGroups" class so that we can use these group names
in multiple classes in models.py without worrying about the
order of defining them.
_default_manager is the same as objects on most of our models. But
when a model class is stored in a variable, the type system doesn’t
know which model the variable is referring to, so it can’t know that
objects even exists (Django doesn’t add it if the user added a custom
manager of a different name). django-stubs used to incorrectly assume
it exists unconditionally, but it no longer does.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
dc1eeef30a made the column nullable, with the meaning for null of
"use the current `settings.INVITES_DEFAULT_REALM_DAILY_MAX`."
However, 8a95526ced switched to calling `do_change_plan_type` during
realm creation, which sets `realm.max_invites` based on the plan type,
thus ensuring that no new realms have their `_max_invites` set to
null.
Check `max_invites` instead of `_max_invites`. This requires test
adjustments for the fact that `apply_invite_realm_heuristics` is now
run.
This commit adds the OPTIONAL .realm attribute to Message
(and ArchivedMessage), with the server changes for making new Messages
have this set. Old Messages still have to be migrated to backfill this,
before it can be non-nullable.
Appropriate test changes to correctly set .realm for Messages the tests
manually create are included here as well.
This commit sets can_remove_subscribers_group to admins system
group while creating streams as it will be the default value
of this setting. In further we would provide an option to set
value of this setting to any user group while creating streams
using API or UI.
This commit changes the invite API to accept invitation
expiration time in minutes since we are going to add a
custom option in further commits which would allow a user
to set expiration time in minutes, hours and weeks as well.
This extends the invite api endpoints to handle an extra
argument, expiration duration, which states the number of
days before the invitation link expires.
For prereg users, expiration info is attached to event
object to pass it to invite queue processor in order to
create and send confirmation link.
In case of multiuse invites, confirmation links are
created directly inside do_create_multiuse_invite_link(),
For filtering valid user invites, expiration info stored in
Confirmation object is used, which is accessed by a prereg
user using reverse generic relations.
Fixes#16359.
This fixes a batch of mypy errors of the following format:
'Item "None" of "Optional[Something]" has no attribute "abc"
Since we have already been recklessly using these attritbutes
in the tests, adding assertions beforehand is justified presuming
that they oughtn't to be None.
This function had a confusing name, which could result in someone
using it unintentionally when they meant do_reactivate_user.
We also add docstrings for both functions.
This is a prep commit. Currenty we only pass CountStat.property
to last_successful_fill function. But it needs access to
CountStat.time_increment as well. We can pass the entire CountStat
object to the function as a workaround. But making last_successful_fill
a property of CountStat seems to be much more cleaner.