Factor out the repeated pattern of taking a lock, or immediately
aborting with a message if it cannot be acquired. The exit code in
that situation is changed to be exit code 1, rather than the successful
0; we are likely missing new work since that process started.
We move the lockfiles to a common directory under `/srv/zulip-locks`
rather than muddy up `/home/zulip/deployments`.
This middleware was highly-specific to a set of URLs, and pulled in a
beautifulsoup dependency for Tornado. Move it closer to where it is
used, minimizing action at a distance, as well as trimming out a
dependency.
SHA1PasswordHasher will be removed in Django 5.1. MD5PasswordHasher
will remain for exactly this purpose of speeding up tests.
Use MD5PasswordHasher by default, but leave SHA1PasswordHasher in the
list for compatibility with test databases that have already been
generated. Once some other change forces test databases to be
rebuilt, we can remove SHA1PasswordHasher.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Replace a separate call to subprocess, starting `node` from scratch,
with an optional standalone node Express service which performs the
rendering. In benchmarking, this reduces the overhead of a KaTeX call
from 120ms to 2.8ms. This is notable because enough calls to KaTeX in
a single message would previously time out the whole message
rendering.
The service is optional because he majority of deployments do not use
enough LaTeX to merit the additional memory usage (60Mb).
Fixes: #17425.
Adds a re-usable lockfile_nonblocking helper to context_managers.
Relying on naive `os.mkdir` is not enough especially now that the
successful operation of this command is necessary for push notifications
to work for many servers.
We can't use `lockfile` context manager from
`zerver.lib.context_managers`, because we want the custom behavior of
failing if the lock can't be acquired, instead of waiting.
That's because if an instance of this gets stuck, we don't want to start
queueing up more processes waiting forever whenever the cronjob runs
again and fail->exit is preferrable instead.
Restore the default django.utils.log.AdminEmailHandler when
ERROR_REPORTING is enabled. Those with more sophisticated needs can
turn it off and use Sentry or a Sentry-compatible system.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Pass the HttpRequest explicitly through the two webhooks that log to
the webhook loggers.
get_current_request is now unused, so remove it (in the same commit
for test coverage reasons).
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Combine nginx and Django middlware to stop putting misleading warnings
about `CSRF_TRUSTED_ORIGINS` when the issue is untrusted proxies.
This attempts to, in the error logs, diagnose and suggest next steps
to fix common proxy misconfigurations.
See also #24599 and zulip/docker-zulip#403.
Having exactly 17 or 18 middlewares, on Python 3.11.0 and above,
causes python to segfault when running tests with coverage; see
https://github.com/python/cpython/issues/106092
Work around this by adding one or two no-op middlewares if we would
hit those unlucky numbers. We only add them in testing, since
coverage is a requirement to trigger it, and there is no reason to
burden production with additional wrapping.
The `django-sendfile2` module unfortunately only supports a single
`SENDFILE` root path -- an invariant which subsequent commits need to
break. Especially as Zulip only runs with a single webserver, and
thus sendfile backend, the functionality is simple to inline.
It is worth noting that the following headers from the initial Django
response are _preserved_, if present, and sent unmodified to the
client; all other headers are overridden by those supplied by the
internal redirect[^1]:
- Content-Type
- Content-Disposition
- Accept-Ranges
- Set-Cookie
- Cache-Control
- Expires
As such, we explicitly unset the Content-type header to allow nginx to
set it from the static file, but set Content-Disposition and
Cache-Control as we want them to be.
[^1]: https://www.nginx.com/resources/wiki/start/topics/examples/xsendfile/
This breaks an import cycle that prevented django-stubs from inferring
types for django.conf.settings.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This breaks an import cycle that prevented django-stubs from inferring
types for django.conf.settings.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This breaks an import cycle that prevented django-stubs from inferring
types for django.conf.settings.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This commit brings AzureAD config in line with other backends:
- SOCIAL_AUTH_AZUREAD_OAUTH2_SECRET gets fetched in computed_settings.py
instead of default_settings, consistent with github/gitlab/etc.
- SOCIAL_AUTH_AZUREAD_OAUTH2_KEY gets fetched in default_settings via
get_secret(..., development_only=True) like other social backends, to
allow easier set up in dev environment, in the dev-secrets.conf file.
- The secret gets renamed from azure_oauth2_secret to
social_auth_azuread_oauth2_secret to have a consistent naming scheme with
other social backends and with the SOCIAL_AUTH_AZUREAD_OAUTH2_KEY
name. This is backwards-incompatible.
The instructions for setting it up are updated to fit how this is
currently done in AzureAD.
Django has always expected this, but Django 4.0 added a system check
that spews warnings in production.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Technically Django already makes SECRET_KEY mandatory by raising an
ImproperlyConfigured exception when it is not set. We use the
get_mandatory_secret helper here so that we have a narrower type.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
This also allows us to remove some assertions as we now know that
AVATAR_SALT will never be None.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
This implements get_mandatory_secret that ensures SHARED_SECRET is
set when we hit zerver.decorator.authenticate_notify. To avoid getting
ZulipSettingsError when setting up the secrets, we set an environment
variable DISABLE_MANDATORY_SECRET_CHECK to skip the check and default
its value to an empty string.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
This ensures that CAMO_KEY is always defined, so that mypy_django_plugin
will be able to identify its type.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
Type inference does not work when the default value of `REQ` is
non-optional while `ResultT` is optional. Mypy tries to unify
`json_validator` with `Validator[int]` in `invite_users_backend` instead
of the desired `Validator[Optional[int]]` because of the presence of the
default value `settings.INVITATION_LINK_VALIDITY_MINUTES`, which is
inferred to be an `int`. Mypy does not resort to a less specific type but
instead gives up early.
This issue applies to invite_users_backend and generate_multiuse_invite_backend
in zerver.views.invite.
There might be a way that we can add an overload to get around this, but
it's probably not worth the complexity until it comes up again more frequently.
We do in fact allow `invite_expires_in_minutes` to be `None` in places
like `do_invite_users`, `invite_users_backend`, etc, and we have
`settings.INVITATION_LINK_VALIDITY_MINUTES` as the default for them. So
it makes sense to allow having an optional value for this setting. And
since there isn't a way to independently set the value of this constant,
we move it to a different place.
TODO:
This is a temporary fix that should be refactored when the bug is fixed.
The encountered mypy issue: https://github.com/python/mypy/issues/13234
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
django-stubs dynamically collects the type annotation for us from the
settings, acknowledging mypy that `HOME_NOT_LOGGED_IN` is an
`Optional[str]`. Type narrowing with assertions does not play well with
the default value of the decorator, so we define the same setting
variable with a different name as `CUSTOM_HOME_NOT_LOGGED_IN` to bypass
this restriction.
Filed python/mypy#13087 to track this issue.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
Similar to the previous commit, we should access request.user only
after it has been initialized, rather than having awkward hasattr
checks.
With updates to the settings comments about LogRequests by tabbott.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>
`request.user` gets set in Django's `AuthenticationMiddleware`, which
runs after our `HostDomainMiddleware`.
This makes `hasattr` checks necessary in any code path that uses the
`request.user` attribute. In this case, there are functions in
`context_processors` that get called in the middleware.
Since neither `CsrfMiddleware` nor `HostDomainMiddleware` are required
to run before `AuthenticationMiddleware`, moving it two slots up in
`computed_settings` is sufficient to avoid the `hasattr` checks.
Signed-off-by: Zixuan James Li <p359101898@gmail.com>