This is experimental, for staging only. There might be a better
way to model this than dueling force_expand/force_collapse flags,
but it works for now. The code in collapse_recipient_group()
could also be DRYed up relative to expand_summary_row().
(imported from commit 107151d1ecd640970fb7700d41278a003bd1abaa)
I believe the test data to be incorrect, but we'll find out when
we've captured some real data.
(imported from commit ae32af0436b6273d0b2a60b2c55047aace6adcad)
I was saying bar.d in places where I wasn't really specifically
testing the .d feature, and it was distracting and just an
unintentional consequence of copy/paste.
(imported from commit 7b137b28cb33c72b83f02fe1d2961c5c6accc263)
This change will allow us to test the muting feature on
staging. Any topic named "muted" will automatically be
muted. You can also mute any other topic on the console:
muting.mute_topic('devel', 'ios');
current_msg_list.rerender();
More UI around this experiment will be coming soon, as well
as support for muting entire streams.
The muting module keeps track of which topics are muted, but a
user can expand muted messages, and once that happens, the
messages are marked with the "force_expand" flag that gets
persisted to the back end.
Muted messages are rendered in similar fashion to the summarized
rows, and as part of unifying some of that code, we have
made it so that expanding a summarized section doesn't remove
individual flags related to summaries; instead, the messages
get the force_expand flag set.
(imported from commit acee4190e63813d46850415c41ff8ebfae4a6953)
I regressed this recently, thinking that all our operators are
strings, but I forgot about the "near:" operator used in the
"Narrow messages around this time" feature. The user facing
symptom was that the search bar showed up empty instead
of saying near:50, which might actually be the better
behavior, but it certainly was not intentional. :)
(imported from commit fcb93cecbe9a052bb9bc1af7fcac5aecaba5aafb)
I'm trying to move well-isolated methods out of narrow.js, so that
narrow.js is more strongly focused on UI/ajax interactions and
big, heavy lifting stuff. The logical home for parse/unparse
seemed to be Filter, and they brought along two private methods
with them. The big code moves involved trivial follow ups
like s/exports/Filter/.
(imported from commit ace0fe5aa1c7abce0334d079ba9eb8d9a57bd10f)
This is hard to break up into separate commits; sorry about that.
Before this commit we had 3 tests:
1. Claims to check that an unread count was 3, but actually doesn't.
2. Checks that scrolling down causes the left-sidebar stream unread
count to decrease.
3. Claims to check that unread counts are correct, but actually doesn't.
From talking to Leo, it seems that he originally tried to actually do
what tests 1 and 3 claim to do, but found it too fragile to check an
exact unread count because of font sizes, layout, etc.
We now have 4 tests. For each of the stream sidebar and user sidebar, we
test that:
1. Scrolling down causes the unread count to decrease
2. Logging out and back in again leaves the unread count unchanged
I've removed the two bogus tests and some other code that didn't seem to
serve a purpose.
(imported from commit 9f8e4b521e2765099510426d0b7e2960885e6f19)
You used to have to call casper.test.done(N) where N was the number of
tests run. This is no longer required and is deprecated in CasperJS 1.1.
(imported from commit 0de9ecb1930cbce416fa02c24a882e926cdc8e87)
Have ui.set_presence_list() only touch the presence list.
Before this change, it was calling update_unread_counts(), which
has a bunch of side effects unrelated to the presence list.
(imported from commit 690f754d78874a03fa36f8ff8765d5a63e431d28)
Previously it only provided the list of all public streams; now it
allows one to specify any union of some of the following:
* all public streams
* all streams the user subscribed to
(the most relevant being the union of those two, which is what we want
for the "streams" page).
Or:
* all streams in realm (superuser only)
The manual task required is that when this is pushed to prod, we need
to also deploy the new sync-public-streams version to zmirror.
(imported from commit 27848b8bd136e2777f399b7d05b2fdcec35e4e21)
Github's documentation is a little unclear on what data is actually
sent and in some cases conflicts with the examples in the
github-services repo. The hope here is to capture a good sample of
different events to develop against and then use it in testing.
(imported from commit 356935894b87ca21591f5682c15f9ed27289a5b6)
The functions add_dependencies() and set_global() are convenience
methods that allow you to modify the global namespace while
the current file is running but then have it be cleaned up
by index.js when you're done.
(imported from commit f75b8a10c19f773a8d2d3a8fa4bc39b1679566fe)
This is like Python's dict.setdefault. I don't love the name, but
the consistency is nice.
We have lots of places where we do things like:
if (! dict.has('foo')) {
dict.set('foo', []);
}
var arr = dict.get('foo');
arr.push(3);
We can now write:
var arr = dict.setdefault('foo', []);
arr.push(3);
(imported from commit b8933809c69ba47ec346ed51d53966793403e56c)
This helps make our statuses more meaningful and should resolve trac #1534.
As part of this, we lower OFFLINE_THRESHOLD_SECS to 1.1̅6 minutes and
mark the user as idle after 5 minutes.
(imported from commit ee6b1ad203554a84b11e16c4c6195be9df5bcf4f)
For syncing streams between Zephyr and Zulip, we need to be able to
have the API client send the server a long list of streams, some of
which might be invite-only, and add the ones that it can add and not
the ones it cannot without a bunch of annoying round trips dropping
individual streams one is not authorized to one by one. This argument
makes that possible.
We might find other applications as well.
(imported from commit 9236d185897c42218ab6cac3d8f3ddcb1bbc94e9)
This changes the mit.edu access rules from:
* Susbcriber list and inviting users to streams are unavailable
to
* Susbcriber lists and inviting users to streams are only available
for invite-only streams
streams must still be made invite-only manually.
This both cuts down on the amount of code that is different between
the mit.edu user experience and the standard one, as well as paving
the way for us to invite-only streams for zcrypt.
(imported from commit 24e0e85428608c05c89eeea349338dd392e5489a)
It's likely we'll eventually want to split this into 2 API queries,
but most of the code in get_public_streams_backend is specialized for
the performance requirements of the mit.edu mirroring anyway.
(imported from commit 47ac6586b59467fd64992c573b6e36885167dcc5)
The function narrow.unparse() is used in a bunch of places in
the search suggestion code, and now it no longer lower cases
operands. This change contributes to fixing trac #1659.
(imported from commit 6b44b8a818482b5c8b4f9a45bc7d3a9d21e04eba)
Streams are converted to their "official" names now.
Topics are not canonicalized at all.
All other operands continue to be lowercased.
Since we don't lowercase stream/topic at the parsing stage,
we have to modify the predicate function to do the lowercasing
of stream/topic to enable case-insensitive comparisons. This
is slightly more expensive. The server-side predicate
functions are already case-insensitive.
(imported from commit 286f118c6c3ff9d23b37c7f958cab4c0eacd5feb)
If we have a stream named "Denmark" and we're narrowed to it,
then use "Denmark" as the default stream name in the compose box
even if the narrow operators are lowercase.
(imported from commit e9f06b7307c73231aa887dc95849e0307984e6f0)
This function returns the stream's actual name, if we can get it;
otherwise, it's the identity function.
(imported from commit 7a981adba9632d6c6eba54cb6514a9226d1e83e8)
There are no functional changes; you can still use the shell script
tools/test-js-with-node. It just delegates now to the new index.js to
iterate through all the other .js files in the test directory and run
them. This sets the stage for Istanbul to correctly compute test
coverage.
(imported from commit 6f521c78b7a314d010fa113f9c2c971ab999b637)
Trac #1716
Fix the tests to use real message IDs for the pointer. One helper didn't
use the pointer ID it was passed at all, so the test didn't actually test
what it was supposed to before.
(imported from commit 457bcdb04a6c3873e224b68cd9d79c9a26612010)
This change would allow anyone in the realm to set a topic for a "no topic"
message. As soon as the message topic is set, only the sender can change it again.
(imported from commit 0a91a93b8fd14549965cedc79f45ffd869d82307)
This solves the problem of restoring a tab taking you to the previous
load's initial pointer position.
(imported from commit e5e988af65966b15a9d091064b65f87be3f0d75a)
For now, just do this, and we'll reach out to realms having trouble
manually. We may eventually need to automatically reply to the e-mail,
reach out to a realm admin, etc.
(imported from commit 5c5ac354066f9e9be3fb928e1f8801613c22c1ac)
We do this because the upcoming Bitbucket webhook does not send
enough information for us to send a useful message for deleted
branches or force-pushes.
(imported from commit dcac675f47e10672125caabd6fefa8dc0dc9c86c)
This otherwise causes Unicode bugs. See for example:
>>> import urllib
>>> urllib.quote_plus("hello&world+whats@up?")
'hello%26world%2Bwhats%40up%3F'
>>> urllib.quote_plus(u"faraoné")
/usr/lib/python2.7/urllib.py:1268: UnicodeWarning: Unicode equal
comparison failed to convert both arguments to Unicode - interpreting
them as being unequal
return ''.join(map(quoter, s))
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "/usr/lib/python2.7/urllib.py", line 1275, in quote_plus
return quote(s, safe)
File "/usr/lib/python2.7/urllib.py", line 1268, in quote
return ''.join(map(quoter, s))
KeyError: u'\xe9'
>>> urllib.quote_plus(u"faraoné".encode("utf-8"))
'faraon%C3%A9'
(imported from commit 7c13b749bdc7f89e7b767ddd630be0ebce30802c)
Dict.each() allows to iterate through values and keys of a Dict.
The callback function is passed value as the first parameter to
be similar to _.each()'s calling sequence.
(imported from commit e745e8b5d2f167b8b8acf7542b767494e354b037)
This commit CANNOT be deployed until the previous schema change
([schema] models: add an email_token field to Streams) is on prod.
Before applying this schema change, run the populate-stream-tokens
management command to generate tokens for streams that need them.
(imported from commit 7adc81c8c317ec5d59dd59ba42a4dc1a46174007)
This has the amusing side effect of showing all the Zulip bots in the
administration view because none of them have the is_bot set.
(imported from commit cdec19d2109c092018c1f331aa32f345d1587683)
We now show a list of users and allow you to deactivate a user using the
same process as `python manage.py deactivate_user`.
We add a new menu item accessible from the gear icon which will eventually
have much more than just this, but we have a good start here.
Here we also add a property to UserProfile which determines whether you're
eligible to access the administration panel, and then have code which shows
the menu option if so.
This introduces a new JS file, admin.js.
(imported from commit 52296fdedb46b4f32d541df43022ffccfb277297)
Previously, we'd determine unread counts client-side as messages got
loaded, which meant:
a) how many unread messages you were known to have kept changing
b) you could bankrupt yourself and then get the bankruptcy message
again as more messages arrived from the server
(imported from commit 90f1af27b493c720f77d37487d8746749faf157e)
ALLOW_REGISTER was no longer being used in determining whether you could
register for the app, so I've removed it to avoid additional local-dev /
production issues.
This closes#1613.
(imported from commit c928c6d350602d35f745ae1e60d734e4567885fc)
We add a new validator that ensures that people who sign up with @mit.edu
addresses are in fact MIT users.
This closes#1612.
(imported from commit 1e30794b1615dd57cb0e367d1fa186a877253357)
On Debian systems, this is found in the `python-dns` package.
On OS X and others, install "pydns" using your Python package manager.
(imported from commit 17827d0a1d3d72b12945df5563295a1573bfa1ed)
This was previously causing us to generate a traceback every time we
hit a duplicated zephyr due to CC'ing.
(imported from commit 240e1559655d0166dcd864e84649ab97b87a29ad)
1) The class Filter now lives in its own module.
2) The function canonicalized_operators() is now a class method on Filter.
3) The function message_in_home moved to filter.js and became private.
4) Various calling code had to change, of course.
5) Splitting out Filter helped simplify a few tests.
(imported from commit e41d792b46d3d6a30d3bd03db0419f129d0a2a7b)
This is an experiment to try to ease the customer3 onboarding process
given that there will be a website with a public feed of recent Zulip
messages, to ensure that those messages appear for new users.
(imported from commit 31fb59c1800728b5e4d8a5ce7282c7dcedb02b21)
This if statement stopped working when we made the pointer managed via
the events system.
(imported from commit 382ca5bd055ab85048b211068ff3d43a47607f28)
There are also one or two places we don't need to use it for security
purposes, but we do so for consistencey.
(imported from commit aa111f5a22a0e8597ec3cf8504adae66d5fb6768)
util.enforce_arity takes a function and returns a new version which
throws an error if an incorrect number of arguments (as determined by
the function prototype) are passed.
(imported from commit 20e69a6dc7b6f8455726ab4fae8d5b7b04dc4103)
Our API documentation says that we do, and it seems like it could be
useful to clients, so we might as well do it.
(imported from commit c391e4952a09d41df4dc06e3dc6ee094f774822b)
The main changes are:
(1) Changing the input format for the example response so that it is
human-readable and editable
(2) Updating it to use the events API
(imported from commit 308fade9595d6877836d343d2307e3fceff3e7d4)
The e-mail forwarder will use this. Set it to nullable temporarily to
accomodate existing streams; later commits will a) provide a script to
give all streams a token, and b) make the field non-null.
Realm administrators will eventually have a UI to regenerate stream
tokens.
(imported from commit a084d0a7012eb9665e4da095cbc46aa9ef354eaa)
The test-all script now calls the symlink, and the run script
has been cleaned up to be symlink friendly.
(imported from commit 8abb5c1e5744416e94ff843e50c53e0d0f7e1316)
This fixes trac #1660. A deactivated user may still have the
active flag set to "true" on their subscriptions, but this is
just to help future reactivations; they are not actually
valid subscribers while deactivated, so we add UserProfile.is_active
to our filter in the query in get_subscribers_backend().
(imported from commit 8598b2e180faea618371293e42b794898e645004)
We need to be able to let a user through if they are trying to sign up
for a completely open realm like CUSTOMER3.
(imported from commit 1e33ab0ce94545f217739d501e9227dfb48e1123)
It will have new callers soon and that's as fine a place as any to
avoid circular imports.
(imported from commit 089a724e9ad06cb5a51ffe80f1729d789238e5f6)
This includes a hack to preserve humbug/backends.py as a symlink, so
that we don't need to regenerate all our old sessions.
(imported from commit b7918988b31c71ec01bbdc270db7017d4069221d)
When you read messages in a narrow and then un-narrow, collapse
adjacent messages read in the narrow into a summary row that can
be clicked to expand those messages.
Scoped to staging with feature flags.
The implementation of this within our current MessageList is rather ugly.
(imported from commit bcb3a39d8c0c334136fe86318f18ead03f0f50bf)