I have updated the documentation for the Zabbix integration to give the
correct instructions for the latest version of Zabbix (5.2). The old
instructions are now obsolete.
I have also updated the message that is PMd to a user if the webhook
doesn't receive a complete payload to also align with the new
instructions.
Using get_user_profile_by_email is invalid, as it omits the realm, and
also fetches via .delivery_email - our convention is that .email is
supposed to be used for user-facing purposes like this.
It looks like this ritual was born when a type comment wasn’t working
because it was mistyped without the colon.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>'
This change updates the GitHub Integration webhook
get_opened_or_update_pull_request_body method so that
the description is only printed if it actually changes.
If the update event is a result of some other
attribute update, such as an asignee change, then the
description is not included in the message sent to
the zulip stream.
Fixes#16345
I reformatted the tests and view to include information about who
acknowledged and closed the alert. Only includes the information about
the owner if there was an owner.
Made a few small changes to the refactored bit as requested in review.
Moved time formatting check and conversion to
zerver/lib/webhooks/common.py. Updated tests slightly to match new
output. Removed duration from the calculation because the difference
is less than the precision of output and it complicated the error
handling.
By default all Stripe API amounts are in the currency's smallest unit.
It's upto us to convert it to a bigger unit and show it to the end user.
And refund event used to show the currency in the smallest unit which makes
the output wrong when it comes to most currencies like USD, Europ, INR etc
which uses a bigger unit(eg Dollar instead of Cents) as the standard.
Update the New Relic webhook and tests to match the format specified
in the New Relic documentation. The new format sends a json body
instead of using url parameters. The old format is no longer supported
by New Relic according to their support staff; as a result, the fixtures for
the old test cases were removed. Added fixtures for new test cases.
Fixes: #16393.
Sentry allows adding simple webhooks without going through the process
of creating an Internal Integration in Sentry's Integration
Platform[1] (which our docs recommend).
The payload from sent from such a (simple) webhook integration is
slightly different from the payload sent by an Internal Integration
webhook. This commit tries to wrangle this payload into a form that is
usable by our webhook handler to send a notification message.
[1]: https://sentry.io/integration-platform/
Even before GDPR changes, it was strange that we displayed
users differently for fork events vs. all other events.
After GDPR, we don't even get the `username` field any
more.
So now we simply use `display_name` if available, and then
we try `nickname`.
See https://developer.atlassian.com/cloud/bitbucket/bitbucket-api-changes-gdpr/
for more context.
We were trying to share the same format string between
the two different versions of bitbucket, but this only
creates confusion, as the two versions are only close
enough to be confusing.
The format string might be the same, but the semantics
are different, as well as the eventual outputs.
For example, the {username} piece here is simple in version
2, but in version 3 we append a url to the user's name.
Previously, the GitLab webhook code, namely the `get_objects_assignee`
method first tried to get a single assignee and if that failed then it
looks for multiple assignees and then it would return the first
assignee that it found (there's actually a code smell here - a loop
which would always return on the first iteration).
Instead, this commit will change that behavior to first check for
multiple assignees first then for a single assignee if we can't find
multiple assignees. Ultimately it will return a list of all of the
assignees (however many that might be [0, n]). This method has then
aptly been renamed to `get_assignees`.
Finally, we tweked the code using this method to always use it's
output as an "assignees" parameter to templates (there's also an
assignee parameter which we want to avoid here for consistency).
Signed-off-by: Hemanth V. Alluri <hdrive1999@gmail.com>
For some reasons, some of the fixtures had the +x bit set, while
some didn't. What this commit does is make sure that no fixture
is marked as "executable" (for anyone).
Signed-off-by: Hemanth V. Alluri <hdrive1999@gmail.com>
This clears it out of the data sent to Sentry, where it is duplicative
with the indexed metadata -- and potentially exposes PHI if Sentry's
"make this issue public" feature is used.
Any exception is an "unexpected event", which means talking about
having an "unexpected event logger" or "unexpected event exception" is
confusing. As the error message in `exceptions.py` already explains,
this is about an _unsupported_ event type.
This also switches the path that these exceptions are written to,
accordingly.
8e10ab282a moved UnexpectedWebhookEventType into
`zerver.lib.exceptions`, but left the import into
`zserver.lib.webhooks.common` so that webhooks could continue to
import the exception from there.
This clutters things and adds complexity; there is no compelling
reason that the exception's source of truth should not move alongside
all other exceptions.
If there are unsupported keys, we still log an error,
but we now also send a message to the stream. (This
is a good tradeoff for the github webhook, since users
can just turn off notifications if they find it spammy.
Also, we intend to support "repository" soon.)
This is a bit of an experiment to see how this plays
in the field:
* will customers notice the change?
* will Sentry reports look any different?