For storing HTTP headers as a function of fixture name, previously
we required that the fixture_to_headers method should reside in a
separate module called headers.py.
However, as in many cases, this method will only take a few lines,
we decided to move this function into the view.py file of the
integration instead of requiring a whole new file called headers.py
This commit introduces the small change in the system architecture,
migrates the GitHub integration, and updates the docs accordingly.
In the GitHub integration we established that for many integrations,
we can directly map the fixture filename to the set of required
headers and by following a simple naming convention we can greatly
ease the logic involved in fixture_to_headers method required .
So to prevent the need for duplicating the logic used by the GitHub
integration, we created a method called `get_http_headers_from_filename`
which will take the name of the HTTP header (key) and then return a
corresponding method (in a decorator-like fashion) which could then be
equated to fixture_to_headers in headers.py.
The GitHub integration was modified to use this method and the docs
were updated to suggest using this when possible.
When parsing custom HTTP headers in the integrations dev panel, http
headers from fixtures system and the send_webhook_fixture_message
we now use a singular source of logic: standardize_headers which
will take care of converting a dictionary of input headers into a
standard form that Django expects.
Using this system, we can now associate any fixture of any integration
with a particular set of HTTP headers. A helper method called
determine_http_headers was introduced, and the test suite was upgraded
to use determine_http_headers.
Comments and documentation significantly edited by tabbott.
This function is an alternative to get_admin_users that we use in all
places where we explicitly want only human administrative users (not
administrative bots). The following commits will rename
get_admin_users for better clarity.
Our recently-added code for rewriting user IDs on data import didn't
correctly handle wildcard mentions and mentions generated by very old
versions of Zulip (pre data-user-id).
The previous query ended up doing an awkward join that did not
guarantee use of the Recipient index on zerver_message, turning a very
fast query into something that could take much longer for a single
stream than the rest of the import combined.
We also document support for user IDs in the pm-with narrow operator.
Edited by tabbott to document on /api rather than in the /help page.
Fixes part of #9474.
Namely, here we add the "plan_includes_wide_organization_logo" and
"upgrade_text_for_wide_organization_logo" to the page_params (which
is set in zerver/lib/events.py).
"plan_includes_wide_organization_logo" is True if the plan is not of
the Realm.LIMITED type. We need to add this extra boolean parameter
instead of just using "realm_plan_type" to make things a lot easier
to work with on the frontend side, especially considering that
handlebars won't allow checking for equality in its {{#if}} blocks.
When a realm's plan type is updated using "do_change_plan_type" we
notify active users of the realm. This way certain plan features
could be enabled instantaneously for active users.
A function was written in `test_fixtures.py` to drop a test database
template if the corresponding database id doesn't belong to a file.
Alongside this fact, every file that is written is removed after 60
minutes. Meaning any potential database template can never exist
longer than one hour.
This follow-up work was added to deal with the potential race
conditions when running `test-backend`. Ensuring that all templates
are properly dealt with.
Essentially rewritten by tabbott for cleanliness.
Fixes the remainder of #12426.
The ids that will be used for each particular run of the test suite are
written to a unique file. Each file will then be used as a time
reference of when the suite was ran.
This change sets up the ability for a complete clean up of potentially
leaked database templates.
Tweaked by tabbott to remove these files after successful database
cleanup.
When running the test-backend suite in serial mode, `destroy_test_db`
double appends the database id number to the template if passed an
argument for `number`. The comment here explains this behavior.
This fixes an issue that caused LDAP synchronization to fail for
avatars. The problem occurred due to the lack of a 'name' attribute
on the BytesIO object that we pass to the upload backend (which is
only used in the S3 backend for computing Content-Type).
Fixes#12411.
Rather than relying on the CASCADING property of the ForeignKey to the
Message table to clean up these objects, we delete them in the same
query as we archive them - since it's guaranteed that any of these
objects that we archive will be deleted due to their Message being
deleted later.
We don't have this guarantee for Attachment objects, which is why we
can't apply this scheme to them.
To ensure the database retains a consistent state if archiving gets
interrupted, we process each Messages chunk together with related
objects in a single atomic transaction.
We had two duplicate functions for archiving zerver_attachment_messages
rows, doing the same thing - archiving by message_id. One of them had a
redundant INNER JOIN, so we get rid of that too.
Since we loop over realms in the functions for archiving stream messages
and then personal+huddle messages, and also want to split cleaning up
attachments by realm - it makes sense to do it all in one single loop.
Rename notification property `enable_stream_sounds` to
`enable_stream_audible_notifications` to match with other
notification property patterns.
Fixes part of #12304
We batch queries that archive Messages, to limit the maximum amount of
Message objects archived in a single query. This leads to the archiving
of other related objects being batched as well, because we loop over
chunks of archived messages and archive their related objects per-chunk.
N = self.parallel templates are created, and these templates were
previously named 'zulip_test_template_<1, N>'. However, to support
running multiple instances of `test-backend`, a unique
`random_id_range_start` was created for each template database.
There was no problem prior because the templates would simply be
used again and thus did not require any clean up. Now that there are
unique database names being created, every time `test-backend` is run
these templates can accumulate on disk. Instead, we clean up our
templates at the end of every complete run of the test suite, or upon a
SIGINT.
Fixes: #12426
This validation is incomplete, in large part because of the long list
of TODOs in this code. But this test should provide a ton of support
for us in avoiding regressions as we work towards having complete API
documentation.
See https://github.com/zulip/zulip/issues/12521 for a bunch of
follow-up improvements.
We add the following behavior:
If stream has message_retention_days set to -1, archiving for it is
disabled.
If stream has message_retention_days set to null, use the realm's
policy. If the realm has no policy, we don't archive for this stream.
UserMessages no longer need special handling, they can be archived by
move_models_with_message_key_to_archive and automatically cleaned up
like the other models with a message key with CASCADING=True.
We change the archiving scheme to allow having stream based retention
policies. In the first step of the archiving process, we loop over
streams and archive their expired messages and related objects.
Then we separately archive all expired personal and huddle messages and
related objects. As the last step, we scan for redundant attachments
which can now be deleted.
To achieve this, we have to rewrite a significant portion of the
retention code and rework some of the database queries.
For the sake of simplicity, we neither archive nor delete cross-realm
messages, except cross-realm stream messages – in their case they can
be processed in the same manner as ordinary stream messages.
In the query for archiving personal and huddle messages we simply
exclude those sent by cross-realm bots.
We change the tests to adapt to these modifications.
Since we archive attachments and attachment_messages tied to a list of
ids of Messages that we just archived (so from the current realm), it's
unnecessary to check their realm in the queries. This could potentially
cause archiving of an attachment with realm_id of another realm, but
this isn't an issue, as long as we make sure we don't end up deleting
the original Attachment object incorrectly - but realm_id check is
included in delete_expired_attachments() to ensure that.
Previously, we didn't have validation to prevent editing certain flags
that don't make sense for a client to edit, like whether a user was
mentioned in a given message.
This isn't a security issue -- the user could only mess up their own
personal search results (etc.), but it does seem worth fixing to avoid
confusion for folks developing Zulip clients.
While we're at it, clearly document the situation in comments.
This adds a setting to control Zulip's default behavior of sorting to
bottom and graying out inactive streams. The previous logic is still
the default "automatic", but this gives users more control. See the
models.py comment for details.
Fixes#11524.
We were apparently reusing the path for both the development and test
databases, which meant that we would not always correctly run
`generate_fixtures` when changes were required.
This was a recent regression introduced when we added this cache a few
days ago.
We add RETURNING to fetch relevant message and usermessage ids in
archiving queries and use them to make other queries faster and slower.
A side-effect of this implementation is that with cross-realm messages,
the UserMessage of the recipient and the Message will not be deleted -
but cross-realm messages are rare, will still get correctly put in the
archive tables and so failing to delete should not be a problem for now.
They will be fully handled later.
zerver_archivedmessage is already INNER JOIN-ed earlier in the query, so
we check the pub_date in it, instead of joining zerver_message, which
would just redundantly join the analogical rows.
lxml parser appends html and body tags to the soup object which
are not reqired. There are no other major parsing diffrences between
the two parsers as long the HTML input is perfectly formated.
lxml parser is much faster than html.parser but it hardly matters
in our case.
https://www.crummy.com/software/BeautifulSoup/bs4/doc/#differences-
between-parsers