This is a fairly risky, invasive change that speeds up
stream deactivation by no longer sending subscription/remove
events for individual subscribers to all of the clients who
care about a stream. Instead, we let the client handle the
stream deactivation on a coarser level.
The back end changes here are pretty straightforward.
On the front end we handle stream deactivations by removing the
stream (as needed) from the streams sidebar and/or the stream
settings page. We also remove the stream from the internal data
structures.
There may be some edge cases where live updates don't handle
everything, such as if you are about to compose a message to a
stream that has been deactivated. These should be rare, as admins
generally deactivate streams that have been dormant, and they
should be recoverable either by getting proper error handling when
you try to send to the stream or via reload.
This fix prevents stream deactivation from being basically
un-usable for medium to large sites. Instead of calling
bulk_remove_subscriptions one at a time for every individual
member of the realm, we call it once for all the users that
care about the stream. This change makes a huge difference, but
the feature is still a bit clunky, and we should only temporarily
revert to this fix if future, more-invasive fixes have flaws.
Fixes#3631.
In some cases here we simplify things by calling avatar_url()
instead of get_avatar_url(), when we have a user_profile record
handy. For other cases we pass in an extra avatar_version
parameter to get_avatar_url(), including from avatar_url().
We have a field called user_profile.avatar_version that will
track avatar versions and be used tactically in avatar urls
to get browsers to refresh their caches (in future commits).
This commit bumps the avatar version when we update avatars.
We do this in do_change_avatar_fields(), which was
do_change_avatar_source() before this change.
Adarsh did the initial work here, and Steve Howell (showell) also
made changes.
Something in c14e981e00 broken test
failures being reported properly; this isn't the right fix but works
and will let us avoid reverting the original change until it can be
fixed properly.
I dug into why we never did this before, and it turns out we did, but
using `$.trim()` (which removes leading whitespace as well!). When
removing the `$.trim()` usage.
Fixes#3294.
This commit adds html versions of the invite and signup mails and renames
the existing .txt files to the preferred file extensions '.subject', '.html'
and '.txt'. The html versions of the mails are being sent along with the
text-only versions by the 'send_confirmation' function.
This fixes#3134.
The original test was written in shell script which launches a new
django instance for every tests. By doing it in Python, we avoid
the overhead and reduce the test time to <1 second.
Fixes#3620.
This moves do_events_register, fetch_initial_state_data and friends to
a new file.
Modified significantly by tabbott for correctness and to remove unused
imports.
Fixes#3635.
In Django, TestSuite can contain objects of type TestSuite as well
along with TestCases. This is why the run method of TestSuite is
responsible for iterating over items of TestSuite.
This also gives us access to result object which is used by unittest
to gather information about testcases.
Use append_instrumentation_data to append data to the INSTRUMENTED_DATA.
This gives us a layer of abstraction when we need to add instrumentation
data from other modules e.g. while running tests in parallel mode.
This function can be used to perform processing on instrumentation data.
For example, this can be used to send the instrumentation data gathered
in the test suite running in the child process to the parent process for
aggregation.
Having `restricted_to_domain` set to True if there are no more aliases
left means the user is either confused or forgot to set it to False. It
should be set to False automatically when the last alias is deleted.
I believe this completes the project of ensuring that our recent work
on limiting what characters can appears in users' full names covers
the entire codebase.
Adds a new webhook integration for WordPress blogs. Both WordPress.com
and self-installed blogs are supported, with minor differences that
are described in the documentation. It creates a new message for each
action, the stream and topic may be specified or use default values.
WordPress actions supported:
publish_post: a new blog post was published
publish_page: a new page was published
user_register: a new user account was created
wp_login: a user logged in
Notes: comment_post only provides the id of the parent post, not title
or link, so was not included. On further testing, I found edit_post is
not very practical, it also fires while a new post is being written, and
when posts are deleted. (I think it tracks drafts too.) I've removed it,
as it seems more confusing than useful.
Fixes#3245
boto's stubs have been updated in mypy 0.4.7, which has given us
more information about what type of strings are expected as
parameters in various functions.
Wrap `list.append` in a lambda before assigning it to
event_queue.process_notification to prevent errors when
event_queue.process_notification is used with keyword arguments.
This also removes an error message by mypy 0.4.7.
We do not use `get_link_embed_data` for messsages sent by
bots, as bots often repeat the same URL over and over again
and are generally either text-focused or have their own
mechanisms to provide preview content.
Fixes#2968.
(The commit q7ef4e40258280e202325c9295579c93fb948b replaced
data-user-email with data-user-id, but we still need to
support data-user-email for old clients like non-updated
androids and we still want to start the migration forward
to data-user-id.)
The goal of this library is to make it a lot easier to prevent bugs
like CVE-2017-0881 by having all of our views logic for fetching a
stream go through a couple carefully tested code paths.
This fixes a regression introduced by our migration to track
subscribers for all public streams, where now users who are added to
an invite-only stream were receiving a mark_subscribed event
for a stream their browser didn't know existed, causing an exception.
To fix this, we now send a stream create event to the browser just
before the user receives the notification that it was added to the
invite-only stream.
It turns out we were using malformed URLs in the image tags
(containing just a hostname, but no http(s)!) in what we were passing
to the Django templates for our digest/, which resulted in the Django
templates treating these URLs as http. Gmail recently cracked down on
loading images in HTTP, causing the emoji links to appear broken in
emails Zulip sends.
Fixes#3258.
This old helper has for years been used only by populate_db, and got
buggy (as of a recent refactoring). So we just call do_send_messages
directly instead.
Fixes the provisioning error we currently get in Travis CI.
This is a pretty minor change, but it makes it clear that we
have user_id in all the relevant states/events, so we might as
well use that for the check, since email is mutable and
slightly more difficult to reason about.