Update perfect-scrollbar to fix stutter space-scrolling in #8544. Also
reworked deprecated `element.perfectScrollbar` to `new
PerfectScrollbar(element)`. Lastly, updated provision version and
changed node module path to new path.
This also refactors perfect-scrollbar in help.js to work with updated
version of perfect-scrollbar. Because the update also changed
perfect-scrollbar's css selectors for all scrollbars in zulip, we
update those too.
Fixes#8544.
Tweaked by tabbott to not remove it from lister.py, linter_lib, and
friends, since those are intended to support both Python 2 and 3
(we're planning to extract them from the repository).
This commit implements support for copying over static files
for all bots in the zulip_bots package to
static/generated/bots/ during provisioning. This directory
isn't tracked by Git. This allows us to have access to files
stored in an arbitrary zulip_bots package directory somewhere
on the system. For now, logo.* and doc.md files are copied over.
This commit should act as a starting point for extending our
macro-based Markdown framework to our bots/API packages'
documentation and eventually rendering these static files
alongside our webhooks' documentation.
This causes `upgrade-zulip-from-git`, as well as a no-option run of
`tools/build-release-tarball`, to produce a Zulip install running
Python 3, rather than Python 2. In particular this means that the
virtualenv we create, in which all application code runs, is Python 3.
One shebang line, on `zulip-ec2-configure-interfaces`, explicitly
keeps Python 2, and at least one external ops script, `wal-e`, also
still runs on Python 2. See discussion on the respective previous
commits that made those explicit. There may also be some other
third-party scripts we use, outside of this source tree and running
outside our virtualenv, that still run on Python 2.
This adds the authors to the Zulip repository on GitHub from
/authors/ along with re-styling the page to fit the same
aesthetic as /for/open-source/ and other product-pages.
This was causing `language_options.json` and the `django.mo` files
never to get updated by `upgrade-zulip-from-git` after first deploy.
The stale `django.mo` files meant that any message string which wasn't
in the original from-tarball installation of the server would never
get translated.
The same bug exists in several other spots in this file. Some of
our repetitive-yet-subtly-different uses of `cp` should probably
turn into just a list of arguments to one `rsync -R` command.
Also this should probably really use `rsync --delete` -- for example,
in prod on zulipchat.com we still have lying around a `locale/zh_CN`
directory, even though in a freshly-built static tree there's only
`locale/zh_Hans` instead.
This tool was used for downloading sprite sheets from iamcal's
repository. Since now we have moved to using `emoji-datasource`
npm package, this tool is no longer required.
Modified composebox_typeahead.js to recognize the triple backtick
and tilde for code blocks, and added appropriate typeahead functions
in that file and in typeahead_helper.js.
Additionally, a new file pygments_data.js contains a dictionary of
the supported languages, mapping to relative popularity
rankings. These rankings determine the order of sort of the
languages in the typeahead.
This JavaScript file is actually in static/generated/pygments_data.js, as it
is generated by a Python script, tools/build_pymgents_data.py. This is
so that if Pygments adds support for new languages, the JavaScript file
will be updated appropriately. This python script uses a set of popularity
rankings defined in lang.json.
Corresponding unit tests were also added.
Fixes#4111.
This helps make the Zulip development environment somewhat more robust
to new contributors, since it will give them a nice warning if they
try running any of our development tools outside the Zulip virtualenv.
Fixes#3468.
This saves more than 50MB of unnecessary duplicate content in release
tarballs (the static assets that will actually be served have already
been built at this point by tools/minify-js).
Zulip's previous model for managing static asset files via Django
pipeline had some broken behavior around upgrades. In particular, it
was for some reason storing the information as to which static files
should be used in a memcached cache that was shared between different
deployments of Zulip. This means that during the upgrade process,
some clients might be served a version of the static assets that does
not correspond to the server they were connected to.
We've replaced that model with using ManifestStaticFilesStorage, which
instead allows each Zulip deployment directory to have its own
complete copy of the mapping of files to static assets, as it should
be.
We have to do a little bit of hackery with the staticfiles.json path
to make this work, basically because Django expects staticfiles.json
to be under STATIC_ROOT (aka the path nginx is serving to users), but
doing that doesn't really make sense for Zulip, since that directory
is shared between different deployments.
Since build_emoji will soon be generated
static/generated/emoji_data.js (containing the emoji data), we need to
generate those JavaScript files before minifying them.
Contributor visualization showing the avatar, user name and number
of commits for each contributors. The JSON data would be updated
upon deployment, triggered by the `update-prod-static` script.
Apparently `manage.py collectstatic` by default strips files starting
with "." from what it collects. This is a reasonably precaution,
though mostly irrelevant to us, since Zulip primarily runs that as
part of build-release tarball, which runs in a clean directory.
It also breaks our current approach for transferring node_modules to
prod machines via release tarballs; this change fixes that bug.
- Replace download-zxcvbn with downloading it from npm.
- Change zxcvbn.js path to node_modules (because npm put it to
`node_modules` directory.
- Bump `PROVISION_VERSION` in `version.py` to 2.4.
Fixes#2423.
This renames the old `emoji_dump.py` to `build_emoji`, removing the
old shell essentially empty shell script. `emoji_dump.py` was always
a weird name, and this makes it a bit easier to read the code for this
system.
We need to update provision.py to compile the messages files, since
they are needed for the new i18n tests. And of course we need to
include the .mo files in release tarballs; there's a bit of complexity
there around how the tarball archives are created.
The node packages 'jQuery' and 'jquery' are different--'jQuery' is the
legacy support package that is needed for Zulip so the require statements
in the tests were updated.
Travis uses node 4.0 by default and we are using 0.10, so the command to
install the correct version had to be added to the .travis.yml file.