0f4b1076ad removed Ubuntu 16.04 "xenial" and Debian 9 "stretch" from
the printed list of supported operating systems, but left them in the
verification check that controls if that message is printed,
effectively continuing to support them.
Conversely, 439f0d3004 added Ubuntu 20.04 "focal" to the check, but
not to the printed list.
Synchronize to check and print the right supported distributions:
Ubuntu 18.04 "bionic", Ubuntu 20.04 "focal", and Debian 10 "buster".
The previous commit removed the only behavior difference between the
two flags; both of them skip user/database creation, and the tables
therein.
Of the two options `--no-init-db` is more explicit as to what it does,
as opposed to just one facet of when it might be used; remove
`--remote-postgres`.
The previous architecture did not work properly with the automatically
detected night theme, resulting in a weird mix of the night and day
themes on code blocks.
I'm not thrilled with the requirement this imposes that all of our
night theme CSS needs to be in one file, but we do need to get a quick
fix out here.
Fixes#15554.
This commit removes invited_as_values map in settings_invites.js.
This object has been removed to avoid duplication as we already
have role values in settings_config.js.
A similar map is created from settings_config.user_role_values
in settings_config.js and is used to populate invited_as_text
for invites.
This commit changes the PreregistrationUser.invite_as dict to have
same set of values as we have for UserProfile.role.
This also adds a data migration to update the already exisiting
PreregistrationUser and MultiuseInvite objects.
We leverage the composebox typeaheads to show flatpickr to pick dates
and times for the !time syntax.
We use moment.js to try and parse the time from current token. If we
are successful, we initialize flatpickr with the parsed time, else we
default to using the current time.
Streams can have lots of subscribers, meaning that the archiving process
will be moving tons of UserMessages per message. For that reason, using
a smaller batch size for stream messages is justified.
Some personal messages need to be added in test_scrub_realm to have
coverage of do_delete_messages_by_sender after these changes.
Currently we display -1 in input box of id_realm_message_retention_days
when realm_message_retention_days is -1, which isn't user friendly.
Displaying the input box as empty is more intuitive.
And if the user tries to submit an empty input box we throw invalid JSON
error that isn't user friendly either, so fixed that too. In the ideal
case, we shouldn't send the request at first place to the backend when we
don't have any input.
Currently, we use -1 as the Realm.message_retention_days value to retain
message forever unless specified at stream level for a particular stream,
that is, no policy set at the realm level. But this is incoherent with what
we use for Stream.message_retention_days where -1 means
> disable retention policy for this stream unconditionally
that can be confusing from an API standpoint.
So instead of trying some hack to reset the value to NULL or using some
other value like -2 for RETAIN_MESSAGE_FOREVER and use that for API. It is
much more intuitive to use a string like 'forever' that can be mapped to
RETAIN_MESSAGE_FOREVER at the backend. And this is similar to what we use
for streams settings as well.
`get_input_element_value()` function is more reliable to detect the input
element type and extract it's value. But the current way of setting the
value of input elements relies on first checking the `property_value` type.
Which is fine, but for the cases when the property value is null, and we
want to set element value as empty, this method will throw an error as it's
unable to detect the appropriate element type. This new function
`set_input_element_value` first rely on property value and then use
`setting-widget-type` as a fallback.
This fixes the change detection of org settings input elements. Luckily,
this regression didn't break our populate_data_for_request and that's also
why this didn't come to notice.
To be more consistent with the meaning in the Stream model, and to make
it easier to have a reasonable settings API, we get rid of the None
value for Realm.message_retention_days in favor of the value -1 to
represent the "don't delete messages" default policy.
In 5200598a31, we introduced a new
client capability that can be used to avoid unreasonable network
bandwidth consumed sending avatar URLs of long term idle users in
organizations with 10,000s members.
This commit enables this feature and adds support for it to the web
client.
In particular the Services ID and Bundle ID each have one of Apple's
random-looking 10-character identifiers, in addition to the Java-style
names the admin chooses. Best to be clear about what names are
supposed to be the chosen names and which are supposed to be the
random-looking assigned names.
(I don't know of any docs elsewhere making this clear -- but I guessed
it'd be this way, and empirically it works.)
Also mention you need to enable the backend. :-)
I believe the Bundle ID (aka App ID) and Services ID have meaning only
relative to a specific Team ID. In particular, in some places in the
developer.apple.com UI, they're displayed in a fully-qualified form
like "ABCDE12345.com.example.app", where "com.example.app" is the
App ID or Services ID and ABCDE12345 is the Team ID.
subdomain=None didn't make much sense as a value, and wasn't actually in
use anywhere, except one test where it was accidental. All tests specify
the subdomain explicitly, so we should change the type to str, and make
it an obligatory kwarg.
Adds the ability to set a SAML attribute which contains a
list of subdomains the user is allowed to access. This allows a Zulip
server with multiple organizations to filter using SAML attributes
which organization each user can access.
Cleaned up and adapted by Mateusz Mandera to fit our conventions and
needs more.
Co-authored-by: Mateusz Mandera <mateusz.mandera@zulip.com>
Only some branches define the `ZULIP_BOT_KEY`; others, including PRs,
thus currently fail to POST:
{"result":"error","msg":"Malformed API key","code":"INVALID_API_KEY"}
Simply abort early, without attempting to report the result, if the
key is not present.
If the `load_messages_for_narrow` function tried to fetch messages with
a floating point anchor (locally echoed message id) we get a 400 error.
The logic to remove the rounding of the anchor parameter was done in
commit bf2f36e6b4, as it would always be
an integer in all incoming code paths.
However, since then we have updated the GET /messages API, to also allow
strings as the anchor parameter and this value's parsing is done in the
backend.
Fixes#15497.
We update the logic for displaying the "message is outside current
narrow" notice, by comparing whether the message the client sent can
be appended to the current narrow's filter or not (this results in us
correctly falling through to reporting the user needs to scroll down).
This migrations use of url() to path() or re_path(). In this commit,
we only migration regular expressions to path where the translation is trivial:
* URLs with no parameters in them
* URLs with only integer parameters in them
* Strings where there regular expression just checked for `/`s
path; strings, which can have variable validation in the URLs that
need by-hand auditing, we leave for future commits that are easier to
review and think about the individual changes.
Modified by tabbott to convert back to `re_path` various URLs with
strings that had been converted to use `path()` with string
validation to simplify review.
Fixes#14770.