It's always been the case that in production, Tornado dumps all the
event queues when shut down so that they can be reloaded by the
replacement Tornado process. This never worked in development because
the codepath for auto-reload didn't go through either a signal or
sys.exit (it re-execs the process instead).
This meant that we didn't have a mechanism for testing the event queue
dump/load functionality in the development environment. We fix this
by adding such dumping/loading. However, this breaks the automatic
reloading of open browser windows on a server restart, so we add that
back in by adjusting the special `restart` events to pass a special
`immediate` flag when used in development.
This also has the benefit of removing the "Bad event queue" errors one
would get on every file save induced restart on the Python console.
Apparently it isn't always the case that removal of jquery and the DOM
prevents cleanup_event_queue from being called via the postunload
hook, so add a check to avoid it being double-called.
Previously, the browser might restart a get_events operation even
while it was in the middle of executing a `DELETE /events` query to
cause its event queue to be de-allocated. This was a rare race
condition when we weren't notifying clients when event queues were
de-allocated, but this will become a common case in the next commit.
The original logic for incremental presence list updating from
668d0d9dfa incorrectly attempted to
insert the user 1 spot later than its proper index in the listing.
Now that we're doing presence updates in a performant fashion, we
don't need to throttle processing these events, and in fact the
throttling of these events created a correctness problem, since we're
now doing incremental updates rather than just rerendering everything
after each event.
The code in 668d0d9dfa for removing an
existing user from the user list to update the status didn't correctly
quote the email address of the user in its jquery selector.
First user-fasing problem is that when user click to "Collapse" button
of message from narrowed list, buttons "Uncollapse" and "[More...]" does
not work. Second, is that when user collapse/uncollapse some message
from narrowed list, the collapsing/uncollapsing of the same message in
home list does not work in appropriate way.
In "popovers.js" there is the function that is called on click to the
buttons "Collapse" or "Un-collapse". It should show and hide body of a
message. If a message list is narrowed, it should show/hide message in
home list too. So, the first problem is that "toggle_row()" in this
function call methods "collapse(row)" or "uncollapse(row)" from
"condense.js" twice (for row and home_row) using condition
"if (message.collapsed)". When it happen the first time, the variable
"message.collapsed" is changed. That is why next call of "toggle_row()"
work incorrectly.
The second problem is that the function in "condense.js" that is
called on click to the button "[More...]" contains no code for
collapsing/uncollapsing message from home list. It just calls
"collapse(row)" or "uncollapse(row)" for row from narrowed list.
Now, functions "collapse(row)" and "uncollapse(row)" get row from
current list and change both messages (from current list and home
list). On-click functions call them just once for making all of needed
message changes. So, when user collapse or uncollapse message from
home or narrowed list it works correctly.
Fixes: #516
Saving the organization settings form in the administration did not
work due to a trivial form name mismatch caused by following
revisions: 472898c and 58aba59.
Whenever a user became active, this triggers an immediate presence
update event (to show that user as active). The implementation for
that event (running on the browsers of all other users in the realm)
would fully rerender the presence list, which can be an expensive
operation in a large realm, just to update the status for that one
user. This fixes that case to just remove the user from the list and
then re-insert it at the appropriate index.
[Commit message expanded with more details by Tim Abbott]
This link was broken when we hardened the access model for user file
uploads to not work cross-realm. The right solution is just to
include the image in the codebase so it's guaranteed to exist.
Fixes#205.
860cf68716 introduced calls to
notifications.redraw_title() on narrow activation. This introduced a
bug when the Zulip desktop app reloads while narrowed --
new_message_count would still be set to undefined when
narrow.activate() is called as the page (re)loads, and thus we'd call
window.bridge.updateCount(undefined), resulting in a traceback.
We fix this by just initializing it to 0, rather than using the old
default value of undefined.
This allows full-screen mode when launching from a saved app link
(mobile browser -> save link to home screen). This works on Android,
too, despite the "apple-" prefix.
Like the Stream Subject lists, Private messages are now shown
when the user clicks on the "Private message" link. User can drill in
to get more than 5 conversations. Selecting PMs from the user or group
PM lists on the right sidebar also opens the list & highlights the
selected conversation.
[Edited by tabbott@mit.edu to fix some small bugs.]
These routes previously didn't follow our standard convention of
sending arguments in JSON format, and so broke when we started
checking the argument format in
123d51e3aa.
Fixes#333.
The previous code was using the same codepath as for real users, which
was unfortunate in two ways:
* It hit the wrong endpoint on the server and thus failed
* It popped up the "remove a user prompt" which described a bunch of
things not relevant to bots.
Because the `owner` field had the class email, we were sending the
concatination of the user and owner email addresses as the email
address in the reactivate requests.
Fixes#243.
Ideally some of these templates should really point to the
local installation's support email address, but this is a
good start.
Exceptions:
* Where to report security incidents
* MIT Zephyr-related pages
* zulip.com terms and conditions