When new streams are created we now send a message with a custom
markdown tag that renders a subscribe button.
(imported from commit 9dfba280b3b4ff4f32f6431ef9227867c8bf4b40)
Normally github gives us a past tense version of the action, but
not for "synchronize," so we fix up the tense.
This also adds zerver.GithubHookTests.test_pull_request_synchronize
(imported from commit ef69467ed4a02dbfa94c8215fb9043b668d1dec9)
When folks closed issues or pull requests on github, we were
using the wrong field from the github payload. Now we
correctly use the "sender" as the person doing the action.
(imported from commit 82989ab19b32f8e3f0bbff9b305a7cb2673d99e9)
Added a default_desktop_notifications boolean to userprofile with a UI
in Zulip Labs. This flag is used to default the notification flag on new
subscriptions.
(imported from commit a25223cc5ecf09980cf877991e25034bb3fd4046)
Note that this doesn't actually restrict anybody yet, but it
makes it so that UserProfile.can_create_streams must return True
for a user to create a stream. We can modify that in the future
to have special behavior for realms that want more restrictions.
(imported from commit 432e85b1ca86aaee4a6bd1d4a6d0b2c78ecb0863)
Add back end for admins to assign/remove admin permissions for other users.
The /json/users/<email> endpoint allows you to PATCH is_admin.
(imported from commit bb5e6d44d759274cc2a7cb27e479ae96b2f271b5)
Previously we only disabled it for 'is:starred'. This caused a backtrace when
someone searched for, say 'stream:test is:mentioned', because we weren't joining
on zerver_usermessage, which meant the flag wasn't available to filter on.
(imported from commit ba19f8a74b21d60b89dfc8dbe9c8458ed86b423b)
Cross-realm private messages are only used to respond to support
requests. So now cross-realm private messages are only allowed if
exactly two realms are in the private message and one of them is
zulip.com.
(imported from commit f01a2824e214682acb22a6995714a9d1b0d0c66f)
Zendesk works a lot like desk.com, it has triggers which use targets.
The triggers have a user defined template. Targets can also have place
holders that are posted, we add the ticket id and title here so we can
always construct the message subject.
(imported from commit 04e8e5c7c0fc5568201f252546f6ed42f282fd00)
Image and video links in the twitter API are media and need to be
handed on separately. We also include a preview image if the media link
is a to a picture.
(imported from commit 2bd00d267e51b29ad0ba681195b2bfea9b991d8c)
This converts links in tweets to a tags. We also convert the displayed
text to the target of the twitter short URL. Mentions are linked to the
users twitter page.
(imported from commit 192d5546a7eea82759f9ae30d82c102aed15ff71)
NarrowBuilder.by_stream and NarrowBuilder.by_topic for mit users uses a
regex to search by stream and topic. Python's re.escape escapes unicode
in a format that postgres can not parse. We escape unicode as '\uXXXX'
for postgres.
(imported from commit d2c27d4514c31fdc6ef1fea898fe721a6f0ab069)
Two tests were added.
1) That that name of the stream is changed.
2) That realm admin is required.
(imported from commit f8fd482c653c983182b96d53c30d731e272f96cd)
deactivate_stream_backend was untested now we test
1) That subscriptions are removed
2) That the realm admin is required
(imported from commit eedb1c4fc0e363df58721302e9f8fbedf78389a9)
While it does work, it's more an accident than intentional behavior
and not something we want to be encouraging (and it's messier code).
(imported from commit 3797147fc21836135a6304412bd3f958873a0576)
This shows the number of messages sent by humans for the last
eight 24-hour periods, for each realm. "Messages sent" isn't a
perfect metric of activity, but it's easier to query with our
current data model than certain other statistics.
(imported from commit 9de3c479640a0b9dbc017b245dda21d951f4efa4)
Validators are similar to converters, but they don't have
to parse JSON, and they are told the name of the request
variable to help format error messages.
(imported from commit 3c33e301892519c67e70675006d5686d9f013353)
Make sure that principles is a list a of strings (unless it
is None). This includes a unit test.
(imported from commit c2e3f1c0cafc207ceca67d5a174ef4e29a32c6ca)
This sets up a scheme to validate complex data structures and
give specific error messages for improperly typed parameters.
(imported from commit 33b2f070d993da4ee929119dd41503bd0128c8eb)
* Deal with shorter tweet IDs
(some old tweets don't have a full 18-character ID)
* Allow trailing slash
* Deal with old-style #! syntax
* Deal with links that link to a photo
(imported from commit 008a98c806f3b8dddd9e2f18a8f002af6932766f)
These images at least load now, but that's because Camo redirects
the browser to the origin server, so the only effect is an extra
round-trip time.
(imported from commit 0d6b9c888a5cdfaa9299272d74a085e872dfa434)
This will allow us to substantially decrease the server-side work that
we do to support our Mirroring systems (since the personal mirrors can
request only messages that user sent) and also is what we need to
support a single-stream Zulip widget that we embed in webpages.
(imported from commit 055f2e9a523920719815181f8fdb44d3384e4a34)
Now that we support email aliases, we have to be careful when going from
an email address to a domain that we assume we can use to get a Realm
object for. When we care about the Realm's domain, we want to follow
any RealmAliases that exist for a certain domain.
When we just care about the original email address domain itself,
for comparison or other purposes, use split_email_from_domain
This removes the ambiguity of having to decide when to use
email_to_domain + RealmAlias or just email_to_domain
(imported from commit 0e199495502d946ce2e1aae56263e7e8665be4ed)
It's a little weird that these still open in a new tab, but it might
be best to keep them consistent with all other links?
This is a first pass on Trac #1927.
(imported from commit 390bdef790a83af4240ad5f5a82e572ef5824756)
Now we can nest fenced code/quote blocks inside of quote
blocks down to arbitrary depths. Code blocks are always leafs.
Fenced blocks start with at least three tildes or backticks,
and the clump of punctuation then becomes the terminator for
the block. If the user ends their message without terminators,
all blocks are automatically closed.
When inside a quote block, you can start another fenced block
with any header that doesn't match the end-string of the outer
block. (If you don't want to specify a language, then you
can change the number of backticks/tildes to avoid amiguity.)
Most of the heavy lifting happens in FencedBlockPreprocessor.run().
The parser works by pushing handlers on to a stack and popping
them off when the ends of blocks are encountered. Parents communicate
with their children by passing in a simple Python list of strings
for the child to append to. Handlers also maintain their own
lists for their own content, and when their done() method is called,
they render their data as needed.
The handlers are objects returned by functions, and the handler
functions close on variables push, pop, and processor. The closure
style here makes the handlers pretty tightly coupled to the outer
run() method. If we wanted to move to a class-based style, the
tradeoff would be that the class instances would have to marshall
push/pop/processor etc., but we could test the components more
easily in isolation.
Dealing with blank lines is very fiddly inside of bugdown.
The new functionality here is captured in the test
BugdownTest.test_complexly_nested_quote().
(imported from commit 53886c8de74bdf2bbd3cef8be9de25f05bddb93c)