Tweaked by tabbott to move changes from the next commit that are
required for this to pass tests into this commit.
Note that this exports a few items that were not previously exported.
This is part of our efforts to change our integrations/webhooks
docs to follow the same sort of numbered-list format as our /help
docs. In order to indicate that paragraphs separated by newlines
are part of the same numbered-list point, every paragraph must be
indented 4 spaces.
This both improves the comment to be more readable, and also uses the
new and improved exclude feature to limit the exclusion to just the
webhook fixtures (where it's needed).
Also fixes a mypy error.
The previous exclude rules only allowed excluding a directory (and
things in subdirectories would silently still be linted). Anyone
using this would expect it to exclude a directory tree, so we make it
do that.
The readthedocs theme overrides a few settings in their layout template.
We might want to change some settings back to their default values.
This commit copies the original readthedocs layout file from
https://github.com/rtfd/sphinx_rtd_theme/blob/master/sphinx_rtd_theme/layout.html
to _templates/layout.html, and excludes it from lint and template checks.
Addresses #7417.
This fixes a bug where, when a user is unsubscribed from a stream,
they might have unread messages on that stream leak. While it might
seem to be a minor problem, it can cause significant problems for
computing the `unread_msgs` data structures, since it means we need to
add an extra filter for whether the user is still subscribed, either
in the backend or in the UI.
Fixes#7095.
This commit modifies `test-locked-requirements` to use some caching
so that we don't need to use the `update-locked-requirements` tool
everytime for checking the validity of locked requirements as it is
slow.
Fixes: #6969.
This commit renames various source requirements files like `dev.txt`,
`mypy.txt` etc to `dev.in`, `mypy.in` etc and various locked requirements
files like `dev_lock.txt`, `mypy_lock.txt` etc to `dev.txt`, `mypy.txt`
etc. This will help in emphasizing to the user that *.in are actually
input to `update-locked-requirements` tool which should be run after
updating any of these.
This often can cause minor caching problems.
Obviously, it'd be better if we had access to the AST and thus could
do this rule for UserProfile objects in general.
This prevents the caches in /srv from growing to fill up the disk --
e.g., on my laptop after 6 months of regular development the venv cache
was 12G and the NPM cache 5G, making them by far the largest disk hogs
on the machine.
It costs about 0.4s, apart from any time spent actually removing
things. This is a little annoyingly slow to be adding to every
provision, and seems like it could be optimized, but I think already
worth it as is.
We already do this by default in tools/build-docs, but since we
migrated test-documentation to not run that directly (to disable
collapsing), we need to add the recent parallelism fix here too.
It saves about 5-10s when running this test suite for me, which is
good, but definitely leaves me feeling like there could be more
improvement.
In this commit we add new dependencies needed for running thumbor.
Also we add the script for creating the virtual environment ready
for thumbor.
Note: Thumbor will use python2 and thus have different virtualenv
dedicated to it.
Credits to @TigorC and @joshland as well for there work on this.
In this commit we add a new option which could be used to specify
python version. When 'py2' is specified, future/futures are not
removed from the requirements lock file generated.
Even where this is actually used for a temporary checkout, it obscures
the relationship between this and $TMPDIR -- and some of our logic
depends on that. In other places, it isn't actually even a checkout.
In all cases, the expanded version is clearer.
This script, and tools/update-prod-static which it relies on,
have kept getting more complex since this conditional was added
in 2013, and the places we rely on GNU features have probably
multiplied beyond `mktemp -d`. It's unlikely this works on
macOS with BSD tools now, and it'd be hard to maintain that way
if it did; drop the pretense.
There's no need to remove this file here -- the whole tree will be
removed a few commands later, and the `tar` command we do first, to
supplement our tarball with various generated files, is quite
selective and wouldn't look at this file anyway.
With the new portico work we've done, the help documentation does
sorta depend on the database if you're logged in. So it's best to
just require it for these tests.
This commit helps reduce clutter on the navigation sidebar.
Creates new directories and moves relevant files into them.
Modifies index.rst, symlinks, and image paths accordingly.
This commit also enables expandable/collapsible navigation items,
renames files in docs/development and docs/production,
modifies /tools/test-documentation so that it overrides a theme setting,
Also updates links to other docs, file paths in the codebase that point
to developer documents, and files that should be excluded from lint tests.
Note that this commit does not update direct links to
zulip.readthedocs.io in the codebase; those will be resolved in an
upcoming follow-up commit (it'll be easier to verify all the links
once this is merged and ReadTheDocs is updated).
Fixes#5265.
The CSS linter was pretty hard to reason about. It was
pretty flexible about certain things, but then it would
prevent seemingly innocuous code from getting checked in.
This commit overhauls the pretty-printer to be more composable,
where every object in the AST knows how to render itself. It
also cleans up a little bit of the pre_fluff/post_fluff logic
in the parser itself, so comments are more likely to be "attached"
to the AST node that make sense.
The linter is actually a bit more finicky about newlines, but
this is mostly a good thing, as most of the variations before
this commit were pretty arbitrary.
This adds the "--disallow-any=generics" option to run-mypy, which no
longer permits:
- inheriting from "list"; use "List[sometype]" (or a TypeVar)
- generic types with no following square brackets specifying the type
(even if initially 'Any')
Any (and '...' for Callable) is a lot easier to search for than an
absence of square brackets, and should improve overall typing quality.
In addition to decreasing the excessive number of bundles we had, this
will set us up to fix rendering of code blocks when clicking the
sidebar links in the /api-new site.
This commit allows for the /api-new/ page to rendered similarly to our
/help pages. It's based on the old content for /api, but we're not
replacing the old content yet, to give a bit of time to restructure
things reasonably.
Tweaked by eeshangarg and tabbott.
The "subdomain" label is redundant, to the extent it's even
accurate -- this is really just the URL we want to display,
which may or may not involve a subdomain. Similarly "external".
The former `external_api_path_subdomain` was never a path -- it's a
host, followed by a path, which together form a scheme-relative URL.
I'm not quite convinced that value is actually the right thing in
2 of the 3 places we use it, but fixing that can start by giving an
accurate name to the thing we have.
I'd much rather see something like
if (thing_is_permissible(user, thing)
or (user_possesses_hammer(user)
and glass_break_requested(thing))):
than
if (thing_is_permissible(user, thing) or
(user_possesses_hammer(user) and
glass_break_requested(thing))):
because the former makes the overall logic much easier to scan.
Similarly for a formula full of arithmetic rather than Boolean
operators. And the actual PEP 8 agrees (though until 2016 it
unfortunately had the opposite advice.)
The upstream linter still applies the backward rule, so disable that.
This creates a dropdown in place of the normal register/login links
you get when logged out, with an option to go to the app or log out if
that appears you click on the avatar.
A bit more work is needed to make this look really good, but it's a
great start.
Sparkle was the auto-update system used by the legacy desktop app. We
haven't been capable of using it for auto-update in years, so there's
no reason to keep around the configuration.
The new Electron app uses a different system anyway.
Except in:
- docs/writing-bots-guide.md, because bots are supposed to be Python 2
compatible
- puppet/zulip_ops/files/zulip-ec2-configure-interfaces, because this
script is still on python2.7
- tools/lint
- tools/linter_lib
- tools/lister.py
For the latter two, because they might be yanked away to a separate repo
for general use with other FLOSS projects.
This should mean that maintaining two Zulip development environments
using the same Git checkout no longer has caching problems keeping
track of the migration status.
This didn't work at all when one did a `vagrant destroy` and then
`vagrant up`, because the cache state would be preserved even though
the machine is gone.
Fixes#5981.
This commit adds a test to check if the user forgot to run
`tools/update-locked-requirements` after updating dependencies.
Modified by tabbott to disable it by default, since it takes over a
minute to run.
Fixes: #6324.
Unfortunately, GitHub's web UI for generating release tarballs uses
`.gitattributes` to control what files to download, and thus if you
downloaded a source tarball for older Zulip versions using the GitHub
web UI, you'd be missing important files.
We fix this for future releases by moving the blacklist out of
.gitattributes.
Fixes#129.
It appears the mongodb repo is not accessible by Travis CI right now.
This is sadly our problem, because Travis puts a bunch of crap in
their apt `sources.list` file, so `apt-get update` starts failing.
This function was extracted from build_user_sidebar(). We
also slightly streamlined it to not unnecessarily call
filter() when the filter text was blank. This extraction
also eliminated the need for us to have the two-line
filter_and_sort() function.
Also, we get to 100% coverage in this commit.
This lint rule has bitten me a couple of times in working on logging.
These regex rules will inevitably be heuristic, but we can make it a bit more
specific so that the heuristic mainly means it could occasionally miss
something, rather than get in the way with an obviously wrong complaint.
This has a ton of exclude rules, for two reasons:
(1) We haven't been particularly systematic about avoiding unnecessary
inline style in the past, so there's a lot of code we need to fix.
(2) There are cases where one wants to dynamically compute style
rules. For the latter category, ideally we'd figure out a way to
exclude these automatically (e.g. checking for mustache tags in the
style tag).
We just learned we should be using the "onlytranslated" mode of
Transifex. Since the command is getting a bit complex (and you need
to remember to run `makemessages` first), it makes sense to have a
tool for it.
Emojis which are represented by a sequence of codepoints or emojis
with ZWJ are not included until we implement a mechanism for dealing
with their unicode versions.
Fixes: #6279.
While running the mypy script we were not passing the `--force`
argument correctly to the run-mypy which was causing it complain
about provision status.
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 hack was used to fix the broken number emojis in the emoji picker.
It was broken because of the partial migration to the iamcal dataset.
See issue #4775 for more details.
This hack was used to fix the broken flag emojis in emoji-picker.
It was broken due to the incomplete migration to iamcal dataset.
See issue #4775 for more details.
This commit switches to use sprite sheets for rendering emojis
in all the remaining places, i.e., message bodies and composebox
typeahead. This commit also includes some changes to notifications.py
file so that the spans used for rendering emojis can be converted
to corresponding image tags so that we don't break the emoji rendering
in missed message emails since we can't use sprite sheets there.
As part of switching the bugdown system to use sprite sheets, we need
to switch the name_to_codepoint mappings to match the new sprite
sheets. This has the side effect of fixing a bunch of emoji like
numbers and flag emoji in the emoji pickers.
Fixes: #3895.
Fixes: #3972.
These are long enough to still be self-explanatory (the only one I'm
at all in doubt about there is DEBG; I avoided "DBUG" because it reads
"BUG" which suggests a high-priority message, and those are the
opposite of that), while saving a good bit of horizontal space
vs. padding everything to the 8 characters of "CRITICAL".
Also add a linter exception to allow easy-to-read alignment here,
similar to several existing exceptions for other alignment cases.
This doesn't yet do much, but it gives us a suitable place to
add code to customize how log messages are displayed, beyond what
a format string passed to the default formatter can do.
Printing the version in Travis builds will help in debugging when we
get different results there from locally. The new `--version` path
also gives us a handy place to put the "what mypy command are we running"
diagnostic, getting it out of the way of normal interactive use.
Most CLI tools (including GNU tools and Mercurial) use lowercase
sentence fragments, with no period, for option glosses, so we
follow that style. Also make the voice and wording consistent,
and the quote type in the Python source.
This exclusion was getting snuck in at the end bypassing --all (and so
giving the lie to the --help documentation). There is no "stubs"
directory in the tree in any case.
argparse has reasonable default behavior for the `dest` argument,
and for `default` at least in these two obvious cases.
So cut those out where we're just doing the default thing.
Also rewrap a couple of calls to fit at least in 100 columns.
The pattern test method `test_rule_patterns` tests each rule by
fetching two strings from it: `test_good` and `test_bad`. Each
string is then presented as an input file to `custom_check_file`,
which should return True or False.
All lines in a string need to end with `\n`. Since the linter
expects an additional newline at the end of a file, the test case
adds `\n` to each string on top of that.
Fixes#6320.
This function was used get a black and white glyph for an emoji if there
was no corresponding image file present in the `NotoColorEmoji.ttf` but
due to the new emoji farm setup code, we no longer need this.
This function was used to color transparent number emojis. We no
longer need to do this since now we have remapped number emojis
to the corresponding colored emojis in the new emoji farm.
We have symlinked the old emoji farm to the old emoji farm and hence
we don't use the images from the `NotoColorEmoji.ttf` file. This
function was used to generate a map from codepoint to filename by
parsing the ttx file passed to it. We no longer need this map.
This commit extracts out the `generate_map_files()` function from
the `dump_emojis()` function. This function generates various data
files like `emoji_codes.js`, `name_to_codepoint.json` etc which are
used by webapp, bugdown etc.
This commit removes the old emoji farm generation code in favor of
`setup_old_emoji_farm()`. Instead of having individual images in old
emoji farm we now symlink them to the images in the new emoji farm.
This commit adds `setup_old_emoji_farm()` function to the build_emoji
script. This will change the way of setting up the old emoji farm.
Earlier we used to extract the glyphs corresponding to each emoji from
the `NotoColorEmoji.ttf` file. But since now we already have individual
images in the new emoji farm(from iamcal's 'emoji-datasource-google' npm
package) we can just symlink old emoji files to the new image files. This
apart from helping us in cleaning up the `build_emoji` script will also
help in reducing the increased size of the release tarball due to the
addition of new emoji farm.
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 enforces our use of a consistent style in how we access Python
modules; "from os.path import dirname" is a particularly popular
abbreviation inconsistent with our style, and so it deserves a lint
rule.
Commit message and error text tweaked by tabbott.
Fixes#6543.
We want to convert stream names to stream ids as close
to the "edges" of our system as possible, so we let our
caller do the work of finding the stream id for a stream
narrow.
Previously these tests required you to run them with the root of the
Zulip repository as the current working directory, just due to
sloppiness.
We clean this up, while also making the path handling more consistent
and involving less fragile code.
Fixes#4169.
Previously, this was its own separate test script; now it's a normal
part of the test suite.
Tweaked by tabbott to use a proper test method.
Fixes#6327.
My first version of this just replaced the repeated list of two output
files with an array variable, but I decided `"${outputs[@]}"` was too
much to ask people to understand, and the alternative of `$outputs`,
unquoted, encourages bad habits of shell programming. So just handle
one file at a time; the only at all expensive part here is `pip-compile`.
I am tempted to move this to Python, but holding back.
This makes the code a little more concise and also more uniform,
treating `future` the same in prod and in dev. The non-uniformity
looks like an oversight in 2be8a793e, one of the commits that updated
this code for the Python 3-only world.
A couple of remarks still reflected the Python 2 world; and the
"Remove the editable flag" comment was confusingly above a line
that it looks like it could be talking about, but isn't.