In the email integration, previously, EMAIL_GATEWAY_EXAMPLE wasn't
rendered at all, which was recently fixed. So, now, we should make
sure that it gets rendered!
In order to get test coverage on topic name checks, we
do them in Addressee, so that we don't hit an assertion
first. The assertion in question is in Addressee.topic(),
and it was added partly to appease mypy.
Gmail is a bad example for outbound email; use a generic example.
Also leave the `= None` default out of the config file, as it's
redundant with DEFAULT_SETTINGS in our internal settings.py ; and
explain in the latter why we don't mention the other SMTP settings.
This quiets the last of the warnings that Sphinx was giving us about
documents not being in any toctree, now that we've explicitly told it
with `:orphan:` about the documents we intentionally don't link there.
Now that we have `eval_rst` and can explicitly exclude pages from the
toctree completely, we no longer need to set `includehidden`, and we
can return to using upstream's template.
(Meanwhile, our feature request upstream was successful! See
rtfd/sphinx_rtd_theme#485, which upstream implemented just a week
after we requested it. So that would have been another option.)
This reverts commit 11b8b8f48 "docs: Add rtd layout template."
This is what the Sphinx docs recommend when you actually don't want
the page to be included in navigation:
http://www.sphinx-doc.org/en/stable/markup/toctree.html
And now that we have `eval_rst`, we're able to take advantage of it!
One difference between doing this and the old way of making "hidden"
toctree entries is that with the latter, the "previous" and "next"
links at the bottom of each page would thread through the hidden
entries; which gets kind of confusing when they don't appear in the nav.
The careful testing with dozens of realms was a discrete thing
that happened, not a general state that the tool was in;
certainly not the last state it was known to be in, as the rest
of the sentence explains how it hasn't been so carefully tested
since then. So "as of" doesn't fit.
This causes us to give an error if you pass the installer any
positional arguments, e.g. with `--`. There's no reason you'd want
to do this, but I accidentally did it by passing an extra `--` to
the `test-install/install` wrapper and spent a few minutes on
confused debugging.
This doesn't yet pass all Nagios checks correctly, and still has a few
flaws:
* The ideal setup code for the `nagios` user in the database isn't included.
* Some of the other details are a bit off; we need to split some host roles.
But it's better than nothing, and we can iterate from here.
Thanks to the magic of `set -x`, I noticed this:
```
+ cat
++ ssl-cert
/tmp/src/zulip-server/scripts/setup/generate-self-signed-cert: line 49: ssl-cert: command not found
+ apt-get install -y openssl
[...]
```
In other words, we were trying to run `ssl-cert` -- the name of a
Debian package I meant to refer to in a comment inside the templated
temporary config file for `openssl req` -- as if it were a command.
It wasn't, hence the error.
Because `set -e` has loopholes like a sieve, this didn't cause the
script to exit, just produced this funny output and presumably caused
the config file's comment to be missing a word. In principle, it
could do something surprising if for some reason there were a command
named `ssl-cert` on PATH.
Fix it.
This is easy now, so make it known to admins who are looking for a
fast path for a test install.
Also totally cut the painfully complicated steps for generating a
self-signed cert by hand. Anyone who actually wants that can find a
hundred explanations on the Web, or can look at our script if they
want to specifically mirror how we do it (which is mercifully much
simpler than this.)
This gives us just one way of adopting a self-signed cert, rather than
one script which would generate a new one and an option to another
which would symlink to the system's snakeoil cert. Now those two
codepaths converge, and do the same thing.
The small advantage of generating our own over the alternative is that
it lets us set the name in the cert to EXTERNAL_HOST, rather than the
system's hostname as embedded in the system snakeoil certs. Not a big
deal, but might make things go slightly smoother if some browsers are
lenient (in a way that they probably shouldn't be.)
Take the core of the logic from how Debian generates the system's
/etc/ssl/certs/ssl-cert-snakeoil.pem ; that gives me more confidence
in the various config choices, and it also demonstrates a much cleaner
way to use the `openssl` tool. Also replace the outer shell logic for
CLI and logging with a cleaner version.
It runs in kind of a peculiar environment -- in particular with the
`tags` identifier injected into the namespace -- and it contains
very little code more complex than `foo = "bar"`, so there's not
much to check anyway.
Since we need KaTeX to be available for zerver/lib/tex.py and
static/third/katex/cli.js to be able to shell out to it. However, for
some reason, the KaTeX we bundle using Webpack doesn't seem to be
importable by Node (and it's also kinda a pain to find its filename
from `cli.js`).
So, we work around this by just using the legacy system for KaTeX.
Something similar is needed for zxcvbn.js, in order to support the
settings_account.js use case (basically deferred loading of this
file); that requires JS code to have access to the correct path for
zxcvbn.
This implementation never worked, for two reasons:
(1) The logic for getting the path to the katex package had invalid
syntax in the version of Node we use.
(2) The KaTeX package bundled by webpack doesn't seem to be importable
from Node at all.