Previously, the output would make it look like we sent an actual email
to the first user in the dry_run output, which is very confusing.
The `dry_run` code path already prints all the accounts that would
have been emailed at the end, so there's no reason to have this line
before the dry_run check.
Additionally, we move after the `get_connection` check because
failures at that stage shouldn't result in logging an attempt to send
an email.
This way we can stop reading as soon as we get to the body. Also,
send an Accept header, check that the request was actually successful,
use lxml.etree.iterparse instead of a broken hand-rolled state
machine, and support XHTML, all for negative 28 lines of code.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This reverts commit 1965584eec.
This syntax has a bad interaction with table syntax and needs to be
rethought.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This is more efficient than get_lexer_by_name, since we don’t need to
instantiate the class just to get its name.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
The BlockingChannel annotations in TornadoQueueClient were flat-out
wrong. BlockingChannel and Channel have no common base classes.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This fixes a regression in de04f0ad67.
We'll do a proper test in a follow-up commit; this is a quick fix to
make sure master works.
The emails will bounce, but it'll create all sorts of infrastructure
headaches.
We added "user_settings" object containing all the user settings in
previous commit. This commit modifies the code to send the existing
setting fields in the top-level object only if user_settings_object
client_capabilities field is False.
This commit adds "user_settings_object" field to
client_capabilities which will be used to determine
if the client needs 'update_display_settings' and
'update_global_notifications' event.
We send a event with type 'user_settings' on updating user's display
and notification settings.
The old event types - 'update_global_notifications' and
'update_display_settings', are still supported for backwards
compatibility.
Return zulip_merge_base alongside zulip_version
in `/register`, `/event` and `/server_settings`
endpoint so that the value can be used by other
clients.
The main reason why this is needed is because this seems to be
convention and because we can't easily test event creation without
doing this.
Signed-off-by: Hemanth V. Alluri <hdrive1999@gmail.com>
Previously, we checked for the `enable_offline_email_notifications` and
`enable_offline_push_notifications` settings (which determine whether the
user will receive notifications for PMs and mentions) just before sending
notifications. This has a few problem:
1. We do not have access to all the user settings in the notification
handlers (`handle_missedmessage_emails` and `handle_push_notifications`),
and therefore, we cannot correctly determine whether the notification should
be sent. Checks like the following which existed previously, will, for
example, incorrectly not send notifications even when stream email
notifications are enabled-
```
if not receives_offline_email_notifications(user_profile):
return
```
With this commit, we simply do not enqueue notifications if the "offline"
settings are disabled, which fixes that bug.
Additionally, this also fixes a bug with the "online push notifications"
feature, which was, if someone were to:
* turn off notifications for PMs and mentions (`enable_offline_push_notifications`)
* turn on stream push notifications (`enable_stream_push_notifications`)
* turn on "online push" (`enable_online_push_notifications`)
then, they would still receive notifications for PMs when online.
This isn't how the "online push enabled" feature is supposed to work;
it should only act as a wrapper around the other notification settings.
The buggy code was this in `handle_push_notifications`:
```
if not (
receives_offline_push_notifications(user_profile)
or receives_online_push_notifications(user_profile)
):
return
// send notifications
```
This commit removes that code, and extends our `notification_data.py` logic
to cover this case, along with tests.
2. The name for these settings is slightly misleading. They essentially
talk about "what to send notifications for" (PMs and mentions), and not
"when to send notifications" (offline). This commit improves this condition
by restricting the use of this term only to the database field, and using
clearer names everywhere else. This distinction will be important to have
non-confusing code when we implement multiple options for notifications
in the future as dropdown (never/when offline/when offline or online, etc).
3. We should ideally re-check all notification settings just before the
notifications are sent. This is especially important for email notifications,
which may be sent after a long time after the message was sent. We will
in the future add code to thoroughly re-check settings before sending
notifications in a clean manner, but temporarily not re-checking isn't
a terrible scenario either.
In this commit:
* We update the `UserStatus` model to accept
`AbstractReaction` as a base class so, we can get all the
fields related to store status emoji.
* We update the user status endpoint
(`users/me/status`) to accept status emoji fields.
* We update the user status event to add status emoji
fields.
Co-authored-by: Yash Rathore <33805964+YashRE42@users.noreply.github.com>
This commit replaces boolean field add_emoji_by_admins_only with an
integer field add_custom_emoji_policy as we would also add full members
and moderators option for this setting in further commits.
This removes a bunch of non-functional duplicate JavaScript, HTML, and
CSS that was interfering with maintenance on the functional originals,
because it was never clear how to update the duplicates or how to
check that you’d updated the duplicates correctly.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This commit moves "enter_sends" setting to property_types dict.
With this change, changing enter_sends setting also sends an
event of type "update_display_settings" and thus enables us
to live-update the UI.
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.
Cross realm bots will soon stop being a thing. This param is responsible
for displaying "System Bot" in the user info popover - so this rename is the
right way to handle the situation.
We will likely want to rename the `cross_realm_bots` section as well,
but that is a more involved API migration.
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 prevents a memory leak caused by the `SimpleLazyObject` instance of
`UserProfile` that create a reference loop with the request object
via `ZulipRequestNotes`.
This prevents a memory leak arising from Python’s inability to collect
a reference cycle from a WeakKeyDictionary value to its key
(https://bugs.python.org/issue44680).
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Sometime in the deep past, Zulip the GET /users/me/subscriptions
endpoint started returning subscribers. We noticed this and made it
optional via the include_subscribers parameter in
1af72a2745, however, we didn't notice
that they were being returned as emails rather than user IDs.
We migrated the core /register code paths to use subscriber IDs years
ago; this change completes that for the endpoints we forgot about.
The documentation allowed this error because we apparently had no
tests for this code path that used the actual API.
We add "ignored_parameters_unsupported" field to the response object
of 'PATCH /settings' endpoint. This will contain the parameters
passed to the endpoint which are not changed by the endpoint and are
ignored.
This will help in removing the other fields like "full_name" from
response which was essentially present to specify that only these
fields were updated by the endpoint and rest were ignored.
We will also change other endpoints to follow this in future.
Previously, non-admin emoji authors were allowed to
delete the emoji only if add_emoji_by_admins_only
was false. But, as add_emoji_by_admins_only setting
is for who can add emoji and not delete emojis, it
should not affect the behavior of deleting emojis
and users should always be allowed to delete the
emojis which. they added themselves
This commit adds moderators and full members options for
user_group_edit_policy by using COMMON_POLICY_TYPES.
Moderators do not require to be a member of user group in
order to edit or remove the user group if they are allowed
to do so according to user_group_edit_policy.
But full members need to be a member of user group to edit
or remove the user group.
There is no need to have a error message which specifies the
roles having permission to edit user-groups, we can simply
have error message as "Insufficient permission" as we already
show the roles having permission clearly in UI.
This concludes the HttpRequest migration to eliminate arbitrary
attributes (except private ones that are belong to django) attached
to the request object during runtime and migrated them to a
separate data structure dedicated for the purpose of adding
information (so called notes) to a HttpRequest.
This migrates some mocked Request class and mocked request achieved
with namedtuple in test_decorators and test_mirror_users to use the
refactored HostMockRequest.
Since weakref cannot be used with namedtuple, this old way of mocking a
request object should be migrated to using HostRequestMock. Only after
this change we can extract client from the request object and store it
via ZulipRequestNotes.
This includes the migration of fields that require trivial changes
to be migrated to be stored with ZulipRequestNotes.
Specifically _requestor_for_logs, _set_language, _query, error_format,
placeholder_open_graph_description, saveed_response, which were all
previously set on the HttpRequest object at some point. This migration
allows them to be typed.
We will no longer use the HttpRequest to store the rate limit data.
Using ZulipRequestNotes, we can access rate_limit and ratelimits_applied
with type hints support. We also save the process of initializing
ratelimits_applied by giving it a default value.
We create a class called ZulipRequestNotes as a new home to all the
additional attributes that we add to the Django HttpRequest object.
This allows mypy to do the typecheck and also enforces type safety.
Most of the attributes are added in the middleware, and thus it is
generally safe to assert that they are not None in a code path that
goes through the middleware. The caller is obligated to do manual
the type check otherwise.
This also resolves some cyclic dependencies that zerver.lib.request
have with zerver.lib.rate_limiter and zerver.tornado.handlers.
This will be used to store the missedmessage events received
during the waiting time for email notifications (which is currently
2 minutes, hardcoded).
The change in `test_retention` is because we've set `on_delete=CASCADE`
for the message field this table.
The new query is like so:
```
DELETE FROM "zerver_missedmessageemailentry"
WHERE "zerver_missedmessageemailentry"."message_id" IN (
1545, 1546, 1547, 1548, 1549, 1550, 1551, 1552, 1553
)
```
This reduces loose strings in the codebase, and allows us to not worry
about the exact naming (`stream_email_enabled` or `stream_emails_enabled`?)
and tense (`mentioned` or `mention`?).
Ideally this new class should have been in `lib/notification_data.py`,
which is our file for things like this. But, the next commit requires
using this data in `models.py`, and importing from `notification_data.py`
to `models.py` causes recursive imports.
Work around Fatal1ty/aioapns#15, by silencing error-level logging from
the aioapns logger. We deal with the results of failed
send_notification calls by examining the `result.description` and
handling them; the extra logging message merely clutters the Sentry
logs.
We use subs as a common variable name for a collection of stream
data structure used in settings, in lot of modules. So this
rename clears a bunch of related shadowed variables.
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.
If the user is logged in, we'll stick to rate limiting by the
UserProfile. In case of requests without authentication, we'll apply the
same limits but to the IP address.
We remove timezone setting from UserProfile.property_types
so that we can directly use UserProfile.property_types for
implementation of realm-default values of various user
settings.
This commits removes the redundant `compute_show_invites` function
which computes the `show_invites` page parameter in `lib/users.py`.
It is so because, commit 13399833b0 removed
the `show_invites` context variable passed in index.html.
Hence, the `show_invites` page_param key is no
longer required to compute in backend as it can be switched with
`settings_data.user_can_invite_others_to_realm()` in the frontend.
This commits also removes the `test_compute*` tests in
`test_home` that concerned with the `show_invites` page parameter
as they are no longer required.
* `stream_name`: This field is actually redundant. The email/push
notifications handlers don't use that field from the dict, and they
anyways query for the message, so we're safe in deleting this field,
even if in the future we end up needing the stream name.
* `timestamp`: This is totally unused by the email/push notification
handlers, and aren't sent to push clients either.
* `type` is used only for the push notifications handler, since only
push notifications can be revoked, so we move them to only run there.
The code to also notify for wildcard mentions was added in
0ed0bb6828.
But that showed the same text for both the cases. This commit fixes
that.
This is more of change for correctness. The mobile app currently does
not rely on this text for notifications, but constructs the text by
itself from the data in the payload.
This also fixes the "stream_push_notify" case to consistently show
a `#` before the stream name.
Running notify_server_error directly from the logging handler can lead
to database queries running in a random context. Among the many
potential problems that could cause, one actual problem is a
SynchronousOnlyOperation exception when running in an asyncio event
loop.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
The previous logic was incorrect and was not flushing the stream from
cache after deletion.
```
stream = get_realm_stream("Verona", realm.id)
stream.delete()
get_realm_stream("Verona", realm.id)
```
In the above example, the last line of code would have returned
the stream from cache instead of throwing a Stream.DoesNotExist
error. This is fixed in the commit.
I have verified that this commit indeed fix the issue by verifying
that calling get_realm_stream again after deleting the stream
results in Stream.DoesNotExist error.
The reason for this bug is because of different striping
processes in the backend and frontend, i.e The frontend
checks if the message's `raw_content` has changed to
decide if the `content` of the message should be sent in
the request to the backend, or not. So, it removes the
leading new line ('\n') from the message `raw_content`
when checking it, which is causing the "Error saving edit:
You don't have permission to edit this message" error.
This commit fixes it by removing the leading new line
when cleaning message content.
The bug was explained by @punchagan and its solution
by @timabbott.
This change allow check_webhook to raise an error when a message is
sent and vice versa. This is useful when one payload is not expecting
any output messages.
In addition to event filtering, we add support for registering supported
events for a webhook integration using the webhook_view decorator.
The event types are stored in the view function directly as a function
attribute, and can be later accessed via the module path and the view
function name are given (which is already specified the integrations.py)
Note that the WebhookTestCase doesn't know the name of the view function
and the module of the webhook. WEBHOOK_DIR_NAME needs to be overridden
if we want exceptions to raised when one of our test functions triggered
a unspecified event, but this practice is not enforced.
all_event_type does not need to be given even if event filters are used
in the webhook. But if a list of event types is given, it will be possible
for us to include it in the documentation while ensuring that all the
tested events are included (but not vice versa at the current stage, as
we yet not required all the events included in the list to be tested)
This guarantees that we can always access the list of all the tested
events of a webhook. This feature will be later plumbed to marcos to
display all event types dynamically in doc.md.
This commit migrates the `left_sidebar.html` Django template
to handlebars by creating a new file as `left_sidebar.hbs`
which is then rendered using `ui_init` module.
These are the minor changes introduced by virtue of template
migration -
- The `compute_show_invites_and_add_streams` function now
only concerns with the invite_to_realm_policy.
- Renamed the `compute_show_invites_and_add_streams` function
to `compute_show_invites` due to the above change.
- Fixes relevant `test_home.py` tests due to the above
changes.
Fixes part of #18792.
We will later use this data to include text like:
`<sender> mentioned @<user_group>` instead of the current
`<sender> mentioned you` when someone mentions a user group
the current user is a part of in email/push notification.
Part of #13080.