With this flag turned on, all streams will have a "more topics"
link, and clicking that link will always fetch topics from the
server to show a complete list of topics that you have had messages
for on that stream.
Note that if you only recently joined a public stream, your list
of topics won't go back to before you joined the stream, even though
that content is searchable. We may change that in the future, but
we will need to be careful about spamming folks who frequently
unsubscribe from streams.
This commit removes all references to feature_flags.local_echo.
It's been a core feature for about four years, so I think we
can safely say the experiment was successful.:)
We had never-enabled code to allow users to set default
streams for their bots (for event registration, default sending, etc.).
This commit removes the code.
Zulip's logic for garbage-collecting data structures before reloading
was a fix for a Chrome memory leak that lasted across reloads a few
years ago. That memory leak is probably now fixed, and thus logic is
causing lots of JavaScript tracebacks that are probably not useful.
So, let's try removing this cleanup logic (everything but the
still-useful deletion of the event queue).
This can be useful in scenarios where the network doesn't support
websockets. We don't include it in prod_settings_template.py since
it's a very rare setting to need.
Fixes#1528.
This is controlled through the admin tab and a new field in the Realms
table. This mirrors the behavior of the old hardcoded setting
feature_flags.disable_message_editing. Partially resolves#903.
CUSTOMER16 wants their employee realm to:
* only use JWT logins
* have name changes be disabled (they want users' full names to be the
their CUSTOMER16 user name).
* not show the suggestion that users download the desktop app
(imported from commit cb5f72c993ddc26132ce50165bb68c3000276de0)
This fixes#730, which includes any customers we want to notify
about the feature being pushed.
(imported from commit c60959ddd7c61ea8e014e984047e9f7bc0d59296)
This experiment has been disabled for everyone for a while: if we
bring something like this back, it is not likely to be exactly the same,
and will be different enough to require a different implementation.
As it is, the summarization code was making a few code paths (rendering
especially) more complex, and is worth removing for simplicity's sake.
(imported from commit 6ac8cdc9f7077a5a1da01ab4268aba3db0bc43f8)
Behind a feature flag you can now do searches like this:
-pm-with:othello@example.com is:private
The "-" in front of "pm-with" tells us to exclude messages
with Othello from our search. We support "-" in front of
all operators, although the behavior for "-search:" and
and "-near:" doesn't really change in this commit.
Note that the filtering out of "negated" predicates only
happens on the client side in this commit. On the server
side we ignore negated predicates and send back a superset
of the results.
(imported from commit 6cdeaf32f2d493fbbb838630f0da3da880b1ca18)
The filter_term() function was supporting the transition
from using tuples for search terms to using dictionaries,
but now all of the JS code should be dictionary-compatible.
(We had already abandoned the tuples safety net on staging,
and a couple days of use have given me confidence we can
pull the shim code.)
The one side effect this change has is that search terms will be
initialized to {} instead of []. This distinction matters
when it comes to calling JSON.stringify on the search terms.
(imported from commit 1fbe11011d8953dbea28c0657cbf88384d343e00)
We have shim code that makes our internal narrow operators
support both a tuple interface and an object interface. We
are removing the shim on staging to help expose any dark
corners of the code that still rely on operators being
represented as tuples.
(imported from commit f9d101dbb7f49a4abec14806734b9c86bd93c4e1)