I think it makes more sense to first tell the user that
the character you are entering is invalid than telling
minimum length requirement is not satisfied.
Fixes#3058.
As we migrate to allow reuse of the same email with multiple realms,
we need to replace the old "no email reuse" validators. Because
stealing the email for a system bot would be problematic, we still ban
doing so.
This commit only affects the realm creation logic, not registering an
account in an existing realm.
In two factor authentication every step adds a unique prefix to the fields,
due to this the name of the form fields differs from the HTML fields. If
we do not do this we will have to change the name in the HTML, which
will cause the change in tests.
This is checked for in the caller of OurAuthenticationForm, which
meant this code was never run. But it is worth having an assertion
here to catch any possible regressions.
Structurally, the main change here is replacing the `clean_username`
function, which would get called when one accessed
self.cleaned_data['username'] with code in the main `clean` function.
This is important because only in `clean` do we have access to the
`realm` object.
Since I recently added full test coverage on this form, we know each
of the major cases have a test; the error messages are unchanged.
The installation admin is not the right person to get support requests from
deactivated users, regardless of the situation.
Also updates the wording to be a bit more concise.
This was basically rewritten by tabbott, because the code is a lot
cleaner after just rewriting the ZulipPasswordResetForm code to no
longer copy the model of the original Django version.
Fixes#4733.
Now that every call site of check_subdomain produces its second
argument in exactly the same way, push that shared bit of logic
into a new wrapper for check_subdomain.
Also give that new function a name that says more specifically what
it's checking -- which I think is easier to articulate for this
interface than for that of check_subdomain.
This should be a pure refactor: the only asymmetry in the behavior
of `check_subdomain` between its two arguments is if one of them
is None, and in this case we have a non-nullable model field on
one side and the return value from `get_subdomain` on the other.
With these swapped, this call site now matches all other
`check_subdomain` call sites in having the second argument come as
the subdomain of some user's realm.
The type of get_subdomain's parameter is non-Optional, and
in fact if passed an argument of None it would promptly
blow up. So this `getattr` can't be serving any purpose.
We're going to end up deleting most of this in the next few commits;
the main goal here is to make it easy to code-review whether we're
breaking anything in replacing the built-in Django form's logic.
Historically, we'd just use the default Django version of this
function. However, since we did the big subdomains migration, it's
now the case that we have to pass in the subdomain to authenticate
(i.e. there's no longer a fallback to just looking up the user by
email).
This fixes a problem with user creation in an LDAP realm, because
previously, the user creation flow would just pass in the username and
password (after validating the subdomain).
This modifies the realm creation form to (1) support a
realm_in_root_domain flag and (2) clearly check whether the root
domain is available inside check_subdomain_available before trying to
create a realm with it; this should avoid IntegrityErrors.
We were doing an unnecessary database query on every user registration
checking the availability of the user's subdomain, when in fact this
is only required for realm creation.
The whole thing is an error, so "message" is a more apt word for the
error message specifically. We abbreviate that as `msg` in the actual
HTTP responses and in the signatures of `json_error` and friends, so
do the same here.
Both the queue processor and ScheduledJob emails need to sometimes pass a
to_user_id and sometimes pass a to_email, and it's more convenient to just
have one function that they can call that can handle either.
Also removes the now redundant send_email_to_user.
Make it less likely that further development will break compatibility with
ZULIP_ADMINISTRATORs of the form "name <email>".
Note that the suggested value for this setting has been
'zulip-admin@example.com' for a while, so hopefully this commit causes no
change for most installations.
Once we implement org_type-specific features, it'll be easy to change a
corporate realm to a community realm, but hard to go the other way. The main
difference (the main thing that makes migrating from a community realm to a
corporate realm hard) is that you'd have to make everyone sign another terms
of service.
Previously, the only required field in RegistrationForm was the full
name (and possibly ToS, depending on settings). This meant that if
LDAP was configured, realm creation would break, because the form
would be valid the first time one landed on it, before the user even
filled it out!
The correct fix is to make the extra fields required in
RegistrationForm in the event that we're doing realm creation.
It's possible that a cleaner fix would be to use a subclass.
With a test from Umair Waheed Khan.
Fixes#5387.
If we add the field like this, we can control its existence in tests.
In other case, since classes are compiled once, even if we set
TERMS_OF_SERVICE to False in tests, terms field would still continue
to exist in the form class.
This fixes a confusing issue where a user might try resetting the
password for an email account that in part of a different Zulip
organization.
Is a useful early step towards making Zulip support reusing an email
in multiple realms.
Fixes: #4557.
I believe this completes the project of ensuring that our recent work
on limiting what characters can appears in users' full names covers
the entire codebase.
Finishes the refactoring started in c1bbd8d. The goal of the refactoring is
to change the argument to get_realm from a Realm.domain to a
Realm.string_id. The steps were
* Add a new function, get_realm_by_string_id.
* Change all calls to get_realm to use get_realm_by_string_id instead.
* Remove get_realm.
* (This commit) Rename get_realm_by_string_id to get_realm.
Part of a larger migration to remove the Realm.domain field entirely.
Does change/fix behavior in various corner cases when the domain passed in
to HomepageForm and subdomain passed in to HomepageForm correspond to
different realms.
If the user comes in to HomepageForm with a set subdomain, use that to
determine the signup realm instead of the email address.
In the non-REALMS_HAVE_SUBDOMAINS case, still allow using the email address
if no subdomain is passed.
No change to behavior. non_mit_mailing_list never returned False, so it was
never possible to reach the line "Otherwise, the user is an MIT mailing
list, and .."
Disallow Realm.string_id's like "streams", "about", and several hundred
others. Also restrict string_id's to be at least 3 characters long, and only
use characters in [a-z0-9-].
Does not restrict realms created by the create_realm.py management command.