Decorators like `require_server_admin_api` turns user_profile into a
positional-only parameter, requiring the callers to stop passing it as a
keyword argument.
Functions like `get_chart_data` that gets decorated by both
`require_non_guest_user` and `has_request_variables` now have accurate
type annotation during type checking, with the first two parameters
turned into positional-only, and thus the change in
`analytics.views.stats`.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
This makes `has_request_variables` more generic, in the sense of the return
value, and also makes it more accurate, in the sense of requiring the
first parameter of the decorated function to be `HttpRequest`, and
preserving the function signature without using `cast`.
This affects some callers of `has_request_variables` or the callers of its
decoratedfunctions in the following manners:
- Decorated non-view functions called directly in other functions cannot
use `request` as a keyword argument. Becasue `Concatenate` turns the
concatenated parameters (`request: HttpRequest` in this case) into
positional-only parameters. Callers of `get_chart_data` are thus
refactored.
- Functions to be decorated that accept variadic keyword arguments must
define `request: HttpRequest` as positional-only. Mypy in strict mode
rejects such functions otherwise because it is possible for the caller to
pass a keyword argument that has the same name as `request` for `**kwargs`.
No defining `request: HttpRequest` as positional-only breaks type safety
because function with positional-or-keyword parameters cannot be considered
a subtype of a function with the same parameters in which some of them are
positional-only.
Consider `f(x: int, /, **kwargs: object) -> int` and `g(x: int,
**kwargs: object) -> int`. `f(12, x="asd")` is valid but `g(12, x="asd")`
is not.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
The "clicked" phrasing is not accurate, because e.g. if a user did click
their invitation link but didn't submit the registration form, the
support page will still claim about the link "has never been clicked".
"Used" is a better general phrase. If we want to track whether links
have been specifically *clicked*, we'll need to implement that
separately.
Users and confirmation objects with the type
`Confirmation.USER_REGISTRATION` or `Confirmation.INVITATION` may have
plan data associated with them but not displayed previously due to a
bug.
This fixes this issue and adds test cases to verify that the realm
details correctly displays the plan data.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
This avoids monkey-patching `CustomerPlan` and other related information
onto the `Realm` object by having a separate dictionary with the realm
id as the key, each corresponds to a `PlandData` dataclass.
This is a part of the django-stubs refactorings.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
Two of the callers of `get_confirmations` uses a `QuerySet` of confirmation
objects instead of their ids to filter the confirmations. This refactors
`get_confirmations` so that it is typed to accept `Iterable[int]` that
is a list of ids.
It's worth noting that this might be less performant than the previous
approach since it requires more queries when we force the ids into lists
without having django creating a nested query. But the performance
is not a concern here compared to clarity.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
Luckily `QuerySet` supports type variables. This allows us
to type table_filtered_to_id more accurately.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
Note that the `list` conversion before assignment to `all_records`
is not necessary for its usage in `realm_user_summary_table` from
a typing perspective.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
To explain the rationale of this change, for example, there is
`get_user_activity_summary` which accepts either a `Collection[UserActivity]`,
where `QuerySet[T]` is not strictly `Sequence[T]` because its slicing behavior
is different from the `Protocol`, making `Collection` necessary.
Similarily, we should have `Iterable[T]` instead of `List[T]` so that
`QuerySet[T]` will also be an acceptable subtype, or `Sequence[T]` when we
also expect it to be indexed.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
The database value for expiry_date is None for the invite
that will never expire and the clients send -1 as value
in the API similar to the message retention setting.
Also, when passing invite_expire_in_days as an argument
in various functions, invite_expire_in_days is passed as
-1 for "Never expires" option since invite_expire_in_days
is an optional argument in some functions and thus we cannot
pass "None" value.
Adds request as a parameter to json_success as a refactor towards
making `ignored_parameters_unsupported` functionality available
for all API endpoints.
Also, removes any data parameters that are an empty dict or
a dict with the generic success response values.
Fixes “DeprecationWarning: 'jinja2.Markup' is deprecated and will be
removed in Jinja 3.1. Import 'markupsafe.Markup' instead.”
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
It is confusing to have the plan type constants not be namespaced
by the thing they represent. We already have a namespacing
convention in place for constants, so we should use it for
Realm.plan_type as well.
Using user IDs instead of emails is more reliable since users can
have arbitrarily complex emails that are hard to encode in a URL.
This has led to NoReverseMatch exceptions in the past.
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.
Since mypy doesn't accept redefinition of the same variable within the
same scope, we need to use type annotations with Union to correctly
type aggregate_table. Note that the type cast is necessary for mypy to
narrow the type of aggregate_table.
For types like `Union[Realm, UserProfile, Stream]` and
`Union[AnonymousUser, AbstractBaseUser]`, we need assertions to
tell mypy which type we would be expecting.
When calling some functions or assigning values to certain attributes,
the arguments/right operand do not match the exact type that the
functions/attributes expect, and thus we fix that by converting types
beforehand.
Moving forward we are hoping to collect data on org types from our
users, so it makes sense to display the org type on the "Counts"
tab of our /activity page.
JsonableError has two major benefits over json_error:
* It can be raised from anywhere in the codebase, rather than
being a return value, which is much more convenient for refactoring,
as one doesn't potentially need to change error handling style when
extracting a bit of view code to a function.
* It is guaranteed to contain the `code` property, which is helpful
for API consistency.
Various stragglers are not updated because JsonableError requires
subclassing in order to specify custom data or HTTP status codes.