Generated by autopep8, with the setup.cfg configuration from #14532.
I’m not sure why pycodestyle didn’t already flag these.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
To be able to get a screenshot of the personal message using the
`generate-integration-docs-screenshot` tool, this commit changes the
personal build to be triggered by iago, instead of cordelia.
The webhook view used a default value for the email, which gave
non-informative errors when the webhook is incorrectly configured without
the email parameter.
The event name seems to have been incorrectly called `todo_due_date_changed`
instead of `todo_due_on_changed`. The API docs for webhooks don't mention
the correct event name, but the TODO json payload[1] seems to contain the
`due_on` field, aside from the fixture actually referring to
`todo_due_on_changed` event type.
[1]: https://github.com/basecamp/bc3-api/blob/master/sections/todos.md
Generated by `pyupgrade --py3-plus --keep-percent-format` on all our
Python code except `zthumbor` and `zulip-ec2-configure-interfaces`,
followed by manual indentation fixes.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
Semaphore has currently has two different versions of their product -
Classic and 2.0. This commit adds support for Semaphore 2.0, along side
Semaphore Classic, using the same webhook. This would let the integration
work seamlessly for users who have already configured a Zulip integration in
their Semaphore 2.0 projects.
Semaphore 2.0 currently only supports GitHub and their payloads do not
contain URLs for common entities like commits, pull requests and tags. We
construct URLs for them using templates, but also try to support other
services by providing notifications without URLs.
Closes#14171
Co-authored-by: Puneeth Chaganti <punchagan@muse-amuse.in>
For event types that we don't yet support, like worklog_created (and
likely many more in the future), it doesn't make sense to call a
function that only parses issue events correctly.
I'm not sure what causes some Jira webhook events to not include the
metadata that other events do, but it's definitely a format sent by
real installations of Jira (likely a very old version, since this has
fields missing from what modern Jira does) and we've seen it in
production.
The best we can do is encourage users to upgrade Jira for better data.
We try to use the correct variation of `email`
or `delivery_email`, even though in some
databases they are the same.
(To find the differences, I temporarily hacked
populate_db to use different values for email
and delivery_email, and reduced email visibility
in the zulip realm to admins only.)
In places where we want the "normal" realm
behavior of showing emails (and having `email`
be the same as `delivery_email`), we use
the new `reset_emails_in_zulip_realm` helper.
A couple random things:
- I fixed any error messages that were leaking
the wrong email
- a test that claimed to rely on the order
of emails no longer does (we sort user_ids
instead)
- we now use user_ids in some place where we used
to use emails
- for IRC mirrors I just punted and used
`reset_emails_in_zulip_realm` in most places
- for MIT-related tests, I didn't fix email
vs. delivery_email unless it was obvious
I also explicitly reset the realm to a "normal"
realm for a couple tests that I frankly just didn't
have the energy to debug. (Also, we do want some
coverage on the normal case, even though it is
"easier" for tests to pass if you mix up `email`
and `delivery_email`.)
In particular, I just reset data for the analytics
and corporate tests.
This reduces query counts in some cases, since
we no longer need to look up the user again. In
particular, it reduces some noise when we
count queries for O(N)-related tests.
The query count is usually reduced by 2 per
API call. We no longer need to look up Realm
and UserProfile. In most cases we are saving
these lookups for the whole tests, since we
usually already have the `user` objects for
other reasons. In a few places we are simply
moving where that query happens within the
test.
In some places I shorten names like `test_user`
or `user_profile` to just be `user`.
We want a clean codepath for the vast majority
of cases of using api_get/api_post, which now
uses email and which we'll soon convert to
accepting `user` as a parameter.
These apis that take two different types of
values for the same parameter make sweeps
like this kinda painful, and they're pretty
easy to avoid by extracting helpers to do
the actual common tasks. So, for example,
here I still keep a common method to
actually encode the credentials (since
the whole encode/decode business is an
annoying detail that you don't want to fix
in two places):
def encode_credentials(self, identifier: str, api_key: str) -> str:
"""
identifier: Can be an email or a remote server uuid.
"""
credentials = "%s:%s" % (identifier, api_key)
return 'Basic ' + base64.b64encode(credentials.encode('utf-8')).decode('utf-8')
But then the rest of the code has two separate
codepaths.
And for the uuid functions, we no longer have
crufty references to realm. (In fairness, realm
will also go away when we introduce users.)
For the `is_remote_server` helper, I just inlined
it, since it's now only needed in one place, and the
name didn't make total sense anyway, plus it wasn't
a super robust check. In context, it's easier
just to use a comment now to say what we're doing:
# If `role` doesn't look like an email, it might be a uuid.
if settings.ZILENCER_ENABLED and role is not None and '@' not in role:
# do stuff
Hellosign now posts their callback as form/multipart, which Django only
permits to be read once. Attempts to access request.body after the
initial read throw "django.http.request.RawPostDataException: You
cannot access body after reading from request's data stream".
Fixes#13847.
Add a simple compatibility function for AWX 9.x.x. Before AWX 9.x.x
a "friendly_name" key was sent by default. Afterwards it was removed
from being a default key but we can still more or less determine if
the triggering event was a job from the REST-style URL.
Note: It is also technically possible to add the key back by defining
a custom notification template in AWX/Tower.
Resolves#13295.
This removes zerver/webhooks/trello/view/exceptions.py, which
contained legacy Trello webhook exception related classes. We replace
them with UnexpectedWebhookEventType, which results in our standard
exception handling for unknown event types running (avoiding too-high
priority error logging).
Fixes#13467.
Then, find and fix a predictable number of previous misuses.
With a small change by tabbott to preserve backwards compatibility for
sending `yes` for the `forged` field.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
MigrationsTestCase is intentionally omitted from this, since migrations
tests are different in their nature and so whatever setUp()
ZulipTestCase may do in the future, MigrationsTestCase may not
necessarily want to replicate.
Papertrail sends requests with the content type
`application/x-www-form-urlencoded`, with the payload parameter holding the
JSON body. This commit fixes the papertrail integration to use the payload
parameter in the request's POST data instead of trying to parse the
request's entire body as JSON.
Papertrail documentation here:
https://help.papertrailapp.com/kb/how-it-works/web-hooks#encoding
Atlassian announced that it will no longer provide information about
comments along with their "issue" type event payloads for Jira. So
we must now update the Jira integration to appropriately respond to
"comment" type events (the reason why we didn't do this before was
that initially, the "comment" type event payloads didn't contain
sufficient information about their issues, but this payload has
since been improved).
Note: This commit does *not* remove support for the older "issue"
type event payloads where information about comments was included.
This way we can maintain compatibility with old self-hosted versions
of self hosted Jira (2016 and before).
Source:
https://developer.atlassian.com/cloud/jira/platform/change-notice-
removal-of-comments-from-issue-webhooks/
Fixes#13012
Delete trailing newlines from all files, except
tools/ci/success-http-headers.txt and tools/setup/dev-motd, where they
are significant, and static/third, where we want to stay close to
upstream.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
Previous cleanups (mostly the removals of Python __future__ imports)
were done in a way that introduced leading newlines. Delete leading
newlines from all files, except static/assets/zulip-emoji/NOTICE,
which is a verbatim copy of the Apache 2.0 license.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
In the rare case that Zulip receives an email with only an HTML
format, we originally (code dating to 2013) shelled out to
html2markdown/python-html2text in order to convert the HTML into
markdown.
We long since added html2text as a reasonably managed Python
dependency of Zulip; we should just use it here.
This reverts commit f476ec7fac (#10312)
and replaces it with a proper fix using Jinja2 raw blocks.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
For storing HTTP headers as a function of fixture name, previously
we required that the fixture_to_headers method should reside in a
separate module called headers.py.
However, as in many cases, this method will only take a few lines,
we decided to move this function into the view.py file of the
integration instead of requiring a whole new file called headers.py
This commit introduces the small change in the system architecture,
migrates the GitHub integration, and updates the docs accordingly.
In the GitHub integration we established that for many integrations,
we can directly map the fixture filename to the set of required
headers and by following a simple naming convention we can greatly
ease the logic involved in fixture_to_headers method required .
So to prevent the need for duplicating the logic used by the GitHub
integration, we created a method called `get_http_headers_from_filename`
which will take the name of the HTTP header (key) and then return a
corresponding method (in a decorator-like fashion) which could then be
equated to fixture_to_headers in headers.py.
The GitHub integration was modified to use this method and the docs
were updated to suggest using this when possible.
If the event key is None, the handler content_func never gets
defined, which leads to an UnboundLocalError. This can be easily
avoided by having a dedicated function that handles the case for
when the event key is None.
If the invoice was paid then the message should simply be
"Invoice is now paid." with a link to the invoice.
Also, suppress the "status_transitions" and "payment_intent"events.
The payload for when a build is cancelled was causing an error
because the build result code mapping was missing one of the
codes. This commit also fixes a minor typo in the result codes.
This commit modifies the regex used when parsing JIRA's full links of
the form `[text|link]` so that if you have two in a message, Zulip
markup conversion doesn't think that the first link extends to the
closing `]` of the second link.
This commit also removes the conditional for when a build status
does not have a corresponding emoji. In such a case, it is better
to have no emoji than displaying some boilerplate text about no
appropriate emoji being available.
comment_created payloads may not contain the required issue data
to format a useful notification, therefore, it is better to handle
issue comments through issue_updated events (which we already do).
Fixes: #11995.
The github-services model for how GitHub would send requests to this
legacy integration is no longer available since earlier in 2019.
Removing this integration also allows us to finally remove
authenticated_api_view, the legacy authentication model from 2013 that
had been used for this integration (and other features long since
upgraded).
A few functions that were used by the Beanstalk webhook are moved into
that webhook's implementation directly.
The initial goal was to improve message formatting and punctuation
but after a closer look, I realized that a larger refactor was
worth it for clarity and redability.
Certain payloads for account updates do not include the
previous_attributes that allow us to figure out what was actually
updated. So, we just ignore just payloads.
According to GitHub's webhook docs, the scope of a membership
event can only be limited to 'teams', which holds true when a
new member is added to a team. However, we just found a payload
in our logs that indicates that when a user is removed from a
team, the scope of the membership is erroneously set to
'organization', not 'team'. This is most likely a bug on
GitHub's end because such behaviour is a direct violation of
their webhook API event specifications. We account for this
by restricting membership events to teams explicitly, at least
till GitHub's docs suggest otherwise.
This change was prompted by a possible bug on Clubhouse's end. In
general, if a branch is added, it also prompts a workflow state
transition in its primary story.
However, our webhook error logs show an erroneous payload where
the same branch is added to another story, but there is no
workflow state transition. Also, both the stories are grouped in
the same payload, which confused/broke our code. Ideally, this
shouldn't happen and is most likely a bug on Clubhouse's end.
In most cases, changes included in Clubhouse payloads never
pertain to more than one parent entity (stories) simultaneously,
and we usually operate under the assumption that the changes
included therein are related to each other in terms of their
parent object (story or epic) and not a child object (the GitHub
branch).
A check suite is a collection of check runs. We care a lot more
about the outcomes of check runs in this case because check_run
payloads are a lot more informative than check_suite payloads.
(And in any case, the check_suite events are primarily for notifying
tools like CI to run checks).
We only support notifications for events where a check run has
completed. Notifications for when a check run has been queued or
is in progress are not very informative and may be too noisy.
The payloads for this event are missing some important details
about the Project's changes, such as the name of the project,
the card's column name, etc. Without such details, the resultant
notifications would not be useful at all!
The bot's details (such as ID and name) are used to format a
connection label in Zapier's UI. This allows users to distinguish
between different Zapier-to-Zulip connections set up with different
bots.
The original commit made a number of well-meaning but suboptimal product
changes to the invoice events, such as threading them under the invoice id
rather than the customer id. It also seems to be causing 500s for
invoiceitem events, though I'm not sure why.
This reverts commit 65489b0391.
Apparently, Clubhouse has two different payloads for story label
changes, one where the label name lives inside the "references"
object, and the other where it lives inside the "actions" object.
Their webhook API is still in beta, so this could just be a bug.
Anyhow, we should support both.
For unsupported or invalid payloads, we should just raise the
UnexpectedWebhookEventType exception and let our logging system
take care of recording the payload that caused the error.
This commit improves a couple of things:
* All of the message templates are now at the top, a convention
we follow in a lot of our webhooks.
* Messages are not prefixed with any emojis. We don't do this in
any of our other webhooks. Plus, the emojis were outdated.
* Remove some superfluous code.
* Use ```quote <quote goes here> ``` style formatting for
quoted text instead of the `>` character.
This commit only adds support for the four events that have sample
payloads provided for them on the Pagerduty developer website.
Support for the remaining events will be added in subsequent
commits, as we get access to more sample payloads.
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>
This section is largely unnecessary, doesn't convey any useful
information, and is probably a remnant from an older version of
this doc that we forgot to remove.
A key part of this is the new helper, get_user_by_delivery_email. Its
verbose name is important for clarity; it should help avoid blind
copy-pasting of get_user (which we'll also want to rename).
Unfortunately, it requires detailed understanding of the context to
figure out which one to use; each is used in about half of call sites.
Another important note is that this PR doesn't migrate get_user calls
in the tests except where not doing so would cause the tests to fail.
This probably deserves a follow-up refactor to avoid bugs here.
There are (at least) two types of objects that could be sent with a
charge.succeeded event, a Charge (e.g. for credit cards) or a Payment (if
they pay by ACH). We were handling the first but not the second.
This commit also updates the fixture for the existing charge.succeeded event
to the latest API version.
Recent changes merged in #10877 didn't handle these events
correctly. The linkified_id function breaks for the `discount`
object in the JSON payload. A cursory glance at Stripe's docs
tells me that since a discount is associated with a customer
or a coupon, it makes sense for a `discount` object to not have
an ID that can necessarily be linked to. So, we can just link
to the associated coupon instead.
There are only a handful of non-JSON webhooks that wouldn't
benefit from the notify_bot_owner_on_invalid_json feature.
Specifically, these are the webhooks where the third-party product
uses another format, whether it be HTML form-encoded, XML, or
something else.
Tweaked by tabbott to correc the list of excluded webhooks.
Previously, the Stripe webhook code was riddled with implicit
assertions that there were exactly N event types within a given
category, and we handled the last one in a final `else` clause in the
block. This was likely to cause confusing problems in the event that
we're missing an event type (or Stripe adds a new one).
We fix this by just adding a few more conditionals and raising the
standard "unexpected event type" exception for the others.
A recent change to check_send_webhook_message allows webhooks to
unescape stream names before sending a message. This commit adds
a test for the edge case where the webhook URL is escaped twice by
a third-party.
Recently, one of our users reported that a JIRA webhook was not
able to send messages to a stream with a space character in its
name. Turns out that JIRA does something weird with webhook URLs,
such that escaped space characters (%20) are escaped again, so
that when the request gets to Zulip, the double escaped %20 is
evaluated as the literal characters `%20`, and not as a space.
We fix this by unescaping the stream name on our end before
sending the message forward!
This fixes the fact that these emoji were sometimes not displaying
properly (because of changes in the emoji names used in the codebase),
while also making this integration more standard (since it was the
only one with such an aggressive use of emoji).
We recently received a bug report that implied that for certain
payloads, the `requested_reviewers` key was empty whereas a
singular `requested_reviewer` key containing one reviewer's
information was present in its stead. Naturally, this raised
some not so pretty IndexError exceptions.
After some investigation and generating a few similar payloads,
I discovered that in every case both the `requested_reviewers`
and the `requested_reviewer` keys were correctly populated, so I
had to manually edit the payload to reproduce the error on my end.
My guess is that this anomaly goes back to when GitHub's reviewer
request feature was new and didn't support requesting multiple
reviewers, and that the singular `requested_reviewer` key could
possibly just be there for backwards compatibility or might just
be mere oversight. Either way, the solution here is to look for the
plural `requested_reviewers` key, and if that is empty, fall back
to the singular `requested_reviewer` key.
This commit adds a test for the payload that is generated when
a Task is moved from one user story to another on Taiga's Sprint
Taskboard UI.
This commit also gets up this webhook's test coverage up to 100%.
I generated multiple payloads and verified that there are no
`change` event payloads that will not contain the values in
question, so it is useless to catch these KeyErrors. If there are
any anomalies still, it is better to be notified about them than
to silently ignore them.
IFTTT allows custom templating for their payloads, so the onus is
on the user to ensure that their custom templates conform to the
expectations outlined in our IFTTT webhook docs. For that reason,
these payloads weren't generated, but were manually edited.
After discovering a couple of bugs, I decided to thoroughly test
and rewrite this integration from scratch. The older code wasn't
generating coherent messages.
This also commit gets this integration up to 100% test coverage.
Test coverage was improved by removing an unused function and
removing some code (written by me) that was actually handling
Test Hook event types incorrectly.
It was a painful amount of work to generate the actual payload.
Since the only difference was a small build URL, I manually
edited the payload and used that for testing.
This commit gets our GitHub webhook up to 100% test coverage.
Some of the page build message code had insufficient test coverage.
I looked at generating the payloads that would allow me to test
the lines of code in question, but it was too much work to
generate the payloads and this seemed like a vague event anyway.
So I just rewrote the logic so that the lines missing
coverage are implicitly covered.
This is a part of our efforts to get this webhook's coverage
up to 100%.
Note that apart from just testing an uncovered line of code, this
commit also fixes a minor bug in the code for messages about issue
comment deletion and editing.
Note that Freshdesk allows custom templating for outgoing payloads
in their webhook UI. Therefore, the payloads added in this commit
did not have to be official payloads from Freshdesk.
Instead of just referring to the commit with the raw URL, we
should use the commit ID as the text of the hyperlink.
Note that in commit_status_changed type messages, the name of the
commit isn't available.
The function that generates the body of the commit_status_changed
event messages generated an invalid commit URL.
Most likely, we missed this because this event type is fairly
vague and it is possible it was never tested by users much,
if at all.
The lack of coverage was due to:
* An unused function that was never used anywhere.
* get_commit_status_changed_body was using a regex where it didn't
really need to use one. And there was an if statement that
assumed that the payload might NOT contain the URL to the commit.
However, I checked the payload and there shouldn't be any instances
where a commit event is generated but there is no URL to the commit.
* get_push_tag_body had an `else` condition that really can't happen
in any payload. I verified this by checking the BitBucket webhook
docs.
We shouldn't just ignore exceptions when encoding the incoming
auth credentials. Even if the incoming credentials are properly
encoded, it is better to know when that is the case or if
something else fails.
The TeamCity webhook plugin supports multiple payload formats that
are customized to be used by different services such as Slack,
Flowdock, etc. We don't support such payloads, so we should ignore
them and stick to parsing only the generic ones. We should also
notify that bot owner about the error.
Now reading API keys from a user is done with the get_api_key wrapper
method, rather than directly fetching it from the user object.
Also, every place where an action should be done for each API key is now
using get_all_api_keys. This method returns for the moment a single-item
list, containing the specified user's API key.
This commit is the first step towards allowing users have multiple API
keys.
This is a follow-up in response to Tim's comments on #9951.
In instances where all messages from a BitBucket integration are
grouped under one user specified topic (specified in the URL), we
should include the title of the PR in the message body, since
the availability of a user-specified topic precludes us from
including it in the topic itself (which was the default behaviour).
This is a follow-up in response to Tim's comments on #9951.
In instances where all messages from a Gogs integration are
grouped under one user specified topic (specified in the URL), we
should include the title of the PR in the message body, since
the availability of a user-specified topic precludes us from
including it in the topic itself (which was the default behaviour).
This is a follow-up in response to Tim's comments on #9951.
In instances where all messages from a GitHub integration are
grouped under one user specified topic (specified in the URL), we
should include the title of the issue/PR in the message body, since
the availability of a user-specified topic precludes us from
including it in the topic itself (which was the default behaviour).
This is a follow-up in response to Tim's comments on #9951.
In instances where all messages from a Gitlab integration are
grouped under one user specified topic (specified in the URL), we
should include the title of the issue/MR in the message body, since
the availability of a user-specified topic precludes us from
including it in the topic itself (which was the default behaviour).
We already include the issue title in the topic. But if one chooses
to group all gitlab notifications under one topic, the message body
is misleading in the sense that only the Issue ID and the description
are displayed, not the title, which isn't super helpful if the topic
doesn't tell you the title either.
I think we should err on the side of always including the title in
the main message body, which is what this commit does.
Fixes#9913.
The only changes visible at the AST level, checked using
https://github.com/asottile/astpretty, are
zerver/lib/test_fixtures.py:
'\x1b\\[(1|0)m' ↦ '\\x1b\\[(1|0)m'
'\\[[X| ]\\] (\\d+_.+)\n' ↦ '\\[[X| ]\\] (\\d+_.+)\\n'
which is fine because re treats '\\x1b' and '\\n' the same way as
'\x1b' and '\n'.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>