Long ago, there was work on an experimental integration model where
every user in a realm would have administrative control over all bots,
with the goal of simplifying the process of setting up communally
administered bots for smaller teams. While that new model was never
fully implemented (and thus never setup as an option), an error in
that original implementation meant that the data on all bots in a
realm, including their API keys, was sent to the browsers of users via
the `realm_bots` variable in `page_params`. The data wasn't displayed
in the UI for non-admin users, but was available via e.g. the
javascript console.
This commit updates this behavior to only send sensitive bot data like
API keys to the owner of the bot (and realm admins).
We may in the future implement a model simplifying communally
administered integrations, but if we do that, those bots should be
limited in their capabilities (e.g. only able to send webhook
messages).
This bug has been present since Zulip was released as open source.
The old code for this lookup was unnecessarily complicated because we
were working around Guardian, where the `is_realm_admin` check was
extremely expensive.
This commit adds the capability to keep track and remove uploaded
files. Unclaimed attachments are files that have been uploaded to the
server but are not referred in any messages. A management command to
remove old unclaimed files after a week is also included.
Tests for getting the file referred in messages are also included.
Previously we needed to use a specified password when activating a
formerly mirror dummy user, in order for that user to be able to
(re)set their password and login. Now that we have our own password
reset form, this is no longer required.
As documented in https://github.com/zulip/zulip/issues/441, Guardian
has quite poor performance, and in fact almost 50% of the time spent
running the Zulip backend test suite on my laptop was inside Guardian.
As part of this migration, we also clean up the old API_SUPER_USERS
variable used to mark EMAIL_GATEWAY_BOT as an API super user; now that
permission is managed entirely via the database.
When rebasing past this commit, developers will need to do a
`manage.py migrate` in order to apply the migration changes before the
server will run again.
We can't yet remove Guardian from INSTALLED_APPS, requirements.txt,
etc. in this release, because otherwise the reverse migration won't
work.
Fixes#441.
Replaced calls to ifilterfalse by list comprehensions because
ifilterfalse is not part of python 3. Also changed some lists to sets
for faster lookup.
Refer to #256.
Add a function email_allowed_for_realm that checks whether a user with
given email is allowed to join a given realm (either because the email
has the right domain, or because the realm is open), and use it
whenever deciding whether to allow adding a user to a realm.
This commit is not intended to change any behavior, except in one case
where the Zulip realm's domain was not being converted to lowercase.
While I believe this actually produced correct output since users are
always subscribed to streams within their realm, this code was
definitely wrong.
Discovered using the mypy type-checking tool.
Previously:
* It wouldn't raise an exception if the stream didn't exist
* It didn't correctly handle being passed a stream name
that differed in case from the stream name in the database.
Just doing the database query is more readable, and has about the same
performance as before in the case where active user dicts for the
realm are in cache (and is substantially better in the rare case that
this isn't in the cache).
Thanks to @dbiollo for the perf investigation and suggestion!
get_realm is better in two key ways:
* It uses memcached to fetch the data from the cache and thus is faster.
* It does a case-insensitive query and thus is more safe.
Previously we only did this when new human users were created via the
login process, which meant the management command to create a user did
not add the user to default streams (for example) and any future code
that might want to register a new Zulip user (such as the LDAP
integration) would need to import views/__init__.py in order to
properly set this up.
The do_send_missedmessage_events_reply_in_zulip function in the email
mirror didn't support EMAIL_GATEWAY_PATTERN that wasn't of the form
%s@example.com (which resulted in replies to missed message emails failing
to be parsed).