We now complain about programmers who don't use
4-space indents in template files, rather than
letting the pretty printer fix them.
This is partly just to simplify the pretty printer
code (in future commits), but it also makes the
symptom more obvious to newbie developers. They
are probably just as able to react to the direct
error messages as they are able to figure out how
to read diffs from the pretty printer and grok
the --fix syntax. And once they learn the convention
and configure their editor, it should then be a
one time problem.
We now create tokens for whitespace and text, such that you
could rebuild the template file with "".join(token.s for
token in tokens).
I also fixed a few bugs related to not parsing
whitespace-control tokens.
We no longer ignore template variables, although we could do
a lot better at validating them.
The most immediate use case for the more thorough parser is
to simplify the pretty printer, but it should also make it
less likely for us to skip over new template constructs
(i.e. the tool will fail hard rather than acting strange).
Note that this speeds up the tool by almost 3x, which may be
slightly surprising considering we are building more tokens.
The reason is that we are now munching efficiently through
big chunks of whitespace and text at a time, rather than
checking each individual character to see if it starts one
of the N other token types.
The changes to the pretty_print module here are a bit ugly,
but they should mostly be made irrelevant in subsequent
commits.
This tool has been unmaintained since our initial code
sweep to fix templates, and it has possibly bit-rotted
during unrelated code sweeps like introducing mypy, etc.
It's not documented anywhere.
The preferred method now is to run:
./tools/check-templates --fix
String 'Here are a few messages I understand:'(next commit) was failing
./tools/check-capitalization check because of the capital I. I added
'I understand' to the IGNORED_PHRASES list in tools/lib/capitalization.py.
Adding "I" was working as well but didn't seem to me as a very great fix.
Strangely enough, adding " I " to the list made the test fail again
(With a lot of failed strings this time) as mentioned in the following
CZO thread.
Relevent CZO chat -
https://chat.zulip.org/#narrow/stream/49-development-help/topic/capitalization.20confusion.2E
In https://github.com/jorisroovers/gitlint/pull/246 I split the
gitlint package into gitlint and gitlint-core, where the latter avoids
pinning exact versions of its requirements so we can use it again.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
The main focus is on improving the instructions around claiming issues
to try to create less issue claiming spam.
Additionally, we haven't done a detailed update in a few years, and
some of the content is stale/irrelevant.
I rewrote most of tools/lib/pretty-printer.py, which
was fairly easy due to being able to crib some
important details from the previous implementation.
The main motivation for the rewrite was that we weren't
handling else/elif blocks correctly, and it was difficult
to modify the previous code. The else/elif shortcomings
were somewhat historical in nature--the original parser
didn't recognize them (since they weren't in any Zulip
templates at the time), and then the pretty printer was
mostly able to hack around that due to the "nudge"
strategy. Eventually the nudge strategy became too
brittle.
The "nudge" strategy was that we would mostly trust
the existing templates, and we would just nudge over
some lines in cases of obviously faulty indentation.
Now we are bit more opinionated and rigorous, and
we basically set the indentation explicitly for any
line that is not in a code/script block. This leads
to this diff touching several templates for mostly
minor fix-ups.
We aren't completely opinionated, as we respect the
author's line wrapping decisions in many cases, and
we also allow authors not to indent blocks within
the template language's block constructs.
In cases where an opening tag is so long that we stretch
it to 2+ lines of code, we should try to use block-style
formatting in the template code.
Unfortunately, we have lots of legacy code that violates
this concept, so this is a timid fix.
There are also legit use cases like textarea where we
probably need to keep the ugly template syntax for things
to render properly.
We disallow this HTML:
junk-text-before-open-tag<p>
This is a paragraph.
</p>
We rarely see the above mistake, but we want to eliminate
the possibility to be somewhat rigorous, and so that we
can eliminate a pretty-printer mis-feature.
Previously, running `./tools/run-dev.py` when provision was required
would lead to a warning along the lines of:
```
Before we run tests, we make sure your provisioning version
is correct by looking at var/provision_version, which is at
version 165.1, and we compare it to the version in source
control (version.py), which is 165.2.
It looks like you checked out a branch that has added
dependencies beyond what you last provisioned. Your command
is likely to fail until you add dependencies by provisioning.
Do this: `./tools/provision`
If you really know what you are doing, use --skip-provision-check to
run anyway.
```
The assumption that we're trying to run tests might cause some
confusion, especially if its the first time you're seeing the
provision warning. Hence, we reword the first paragraph to avoid
making that assumption.
The second paragraph has also been slightly altered, since (1) it's
possible that we didn't checkout a different branch, but eg just
rebased with upstream and (2) we might not be on a VM.
The warning you'd get after this commit would be along the lines of:
```
Provisioning state check failed! This check compares
`var/provision_version` (currently 165.2) to the version in
source control (`version.py`), which is 164.6, to see if you
likely need to provision before this command can run
properly.
The branch you are currently on expects an older version of
dependencies than the version you provisioned last. This may
be ok, but it's likely that you either want to rebase your
branch on top of upstream/main or re-provision your machine.
Do this: `./tools/provision`
If you really know what you are doing, use --skip-provision-check to
run anyway.
```
or along the lines of:
```
Provisioning state check failed! This check compares
`var/provision_version` (currently 165.2) to the version in
source control (`version.py`), which is 167.2, to see if you
likely need to provision before this command can run
properly.
The branch you are currently on has added dependencies beyond
what you last provisioned. Your command is likely to fail
until you add dependencies by provisioning.
Do this: `./tools/provision`
If you really know what you are doing, use --skip-provision-check to
run anyway.
```
The `current_queue_size` key in the queue monitoring stats file was
the local queue size, not the global queue size -- d5a6b0f99a
renamed the function, but did not adjust the queue monitoring JSON,
despite the last use of it having been removed in cd9b194d88.
The function is still used to mark "we emptied our queue," and it
remains a reasonable metric for that.
It's better for this to catch all exit(...) calls with non-zero exit
code, given the purpose is to catch all exits with failure, as opposed
to only exit(1).
Unhandled exceptions propagating to process_queue were not caught there,
causing improper logging - errors didn't land in errors.log as expected.
Exceptions should be caught and explicitly logged by the process_queue
logger. Exceptions occurring during consuming events are caught and
handled inside the worker's logic - however those that happen while
setting up the worker were not addressed at all, and that's the core bug
we mean to address here.
Furthermore, in multi-threaded mode we want the autoreload mechanism to
be working - which it doesn't without catching the exceptions. The
correct approach is to - again - catch the exception, log it and then
send SIGUSR1 signal to trigger exit and autoreload.
Unless this was working around a specific bug that has somehow
persisted for eight years, this was just pointlessly defeating
Python’s bytecode cache every time you started the dev server.
This reverts commits deffda072f,
59228f7458, and
ae45217671.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This tool helps catch common typos in code and documentation, which is
particularly useful for our many contributors who are not native
English speakers.
The config is based on the codespell that I ran in
https://github.com/zulip/zulip/pull/18535.
CircleCI expected 3434; GitHub Actions expects 1001. This is the
reason zulip-ci.yml currently needs to mess with the permissions in
/__w.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This will be useful to let users enable/disable
sharing read receipts once we add that feature.
Note: Added "I've" to IGNORED_PHRASES in
tools/lib/capitalization.py to avoid capitalization
errors for the label text of this setting.
We make zero invalid value for message_content_delete_limit_seconds and
for handling the case of "Allow to delete message any time", the API-level
value of message_content_delete_limit_seconds is "anytime" and "None"
as the DB-level value. We also use these values for message retention
setting, so it helps maintain consistency.
On a 2 GiB, 1 CPU system, webpack would hit the Node.js heap
limit (which is half of physical memory up to 4 GiB, on 64-bit
systems).
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
gitlint has a bunch of pinned requirements that hold back important
upgrades and conflict with other packages’ requirements. The gitlint
author has rejected proposals to unpin them because it might increase
the amount of maintenance he needs to do
(https://github.com/jorisroovers/gitlint/pull/133). That decision is
his to make, but _somebody_ needs to do the maintenance, so we
delegate it to Debian and Ubuntu. If that means using a significantly
older version of gitlint, that’s a tradeoff we need to make to keep
the rest of our requirements current.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
The semgrep --dangerously-allow-arbitrary-code-execution-from-rules
flag is deprecated and no longer used.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This commit adds a new module settings_defaults.js which calls
the functions in settings_display passing appropriate container
element and settings object as parameters.
We also add one more parameter for_realm_settings to some of the
functions in settings_dislay to differentiate between the user
and realm-level settings.
When the upstream provides a chunked response, proxying this header
causes a protocol-level miscommunication.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This environment variable is not a thing and has never been a thing,
while the path it purportedly pointed to does not exist and has never
existed. It appears to have been inexplicably both cargo-culted and
renamed from test-js-with-casper.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
We will use this modal for any narrow / hash or other UI element that
requires an actual account to use, to provide something reasonable to
occur when a user clicks on those things.
This adds the X-Smokescreen-Role header to proxy connections, to track
usage from various codepaths, and enforces a timeout. Timeouts were
kept consistent with their previous values, or set to 5s if they had
none previously.
This was originally meant to fix the emoji mapping conflict during a
Slack import. In Slack, 🎉 and ㊗️ have different
symbols, but they both map to 🎉 in Zulip prior to this commit.
㊗️ now refers to the Japanese character version, as is
observed in Matrix and Slack.
I expand the fix to include all other Japanese characters. Matrix.org
and Slack already have those characters in their symbol section, and so
this is to reach feature parity.
See the discussion thread in https://chat.zulip.org/#narrow/stream/9-issues/topic/duplicate.20emoji.20in.20data.20import
These changes are all independent of each other; I just didn’t feel
like making dozens of commits for them.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
None results in an uninitialized image (that happens to be transparent
most of the time); we want to explicitly initialize the image to
transparent.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
We rework the landing page for companies in the same way we've
recently revamped the landing pages for other use cases.
This implementation unfortunately duplicates a lot of content from
/plans; we should clean that up at some point.
We recently added a lot of new pages to our top navigation and
restructured top-navigation in general. This commit updates the
footer to reflect the recent changes to our top navigation.
Partially reverts commit cc55393671.
mode="r" cannot be combined with buffering=0.
This is not a correct thing to do, since a multibyte character might
get split between two binary reads and cause UnicodeDecodeError, but
it’s good enough for a known-broken test we don’t run.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This removes some steps which are no longer necessary to be run
in the production upgrade script. The steps were used due to
errors related to supervisor failing to restart which was resolved
in the commit 08c39a7388.
This removes a bunch of non-functional duplicate JavaScript, HTML, and
CSS that was interfering with maintenance on the functional originals,
because it was never clear how to update the duplicates or how to
check that you’d updated the duplicates correctly.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This API change removes unnecessary complexity from a client that
wants to change a user's personal settings, and also saves developers
from needing to make decisions about what sort of setting something is
at the API level.
We preserve the old settings endpoints as mapping to the same function
as the new one for backwards-compatibility. We delete the
documentation for the old endpoints, though the documentation for the
merged /settings endpoint mentions how to use the old endpoints when
needed.
We migrate all backend tests to the new endpoints, except for
individual tests for each legacy endpoint to verify they still work.
Co-authored-by: sahil839 <sahilbatra839@gmail.com>
We move templates related to listing streams in left pannel of
stream settings overlay to stream_settings folder by making
following changes:
* Rename `subscriptions.hbs` to `browse_streams_list.hbs`.
* Move `settings_stream_list.hbs` to stream_settings folder.
* Rename `subscription.hbs` to `browse_streams_list_item.hbs`.
* Move `settings_stream_list_item.hbs` to stream_settings folder.
This makes several changes:
* Fixes a bug where the help text explaining our policies was not displayed.
* No help text was defined for many organization types.
* Copy-edits the help text somewhat.
* Offers all of the organization type options.
* Removes the 100% coverage requirement because it's annoying to test
the e.currentTarget click handler.
This commit changes the bot-edit modal to use dialog_widget instead of
edit_fields_modal.
This commit also removes edit_fields_modal module as it is no longer used.
This commit adds a new dialog_widget.js file containing most
of the code of confirm_dialog.js with some minor changes and
changes confirm_dialog to be a wrapper around dialog_widget.js.
We pass 'is_confim_dialog' as true in dialog_widget for a
confirm_dialog modal. This commit also renames confirm_dialog.hbs
and confirm_dialog_heading.hbs to dialog_widget.js,
dialog_widget.hbs and dialog_widget_heading.hbs respectively.
We currently configure ‘APT::Get::Assume-Yes’ in our custom Docker
image, but this is the only place we rely on it (outside of the
Dockerfile itself), and it’s better not to.
Also ‘apt-get remove && apt-get purge’ is the same as just ‘apt-get
purge’.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This commit adds a check to avoid the use of assertTrue
for cases like: assertTrue(len(data) == 2).
We should use assert_length, assertGreater, or
assertGreaterEqual, whatever suits, in cases like these.
We use subs as a common variable name for a collection of stream
data structure used in settings, in lot of modules. So this
rename clears a bunch of related shadowed variables.
This commit migrates the `navbar.html` Django template
to handlebars by creating a new file as `navbar.hbs`
within `/static/templates` which is then rendered
using `ui_init` module.
As a part of migration, we also remove the `search_pills_enabled`
and `embedded` parameters from the context attribute as they
are no longer needed now.
Fixes part of #18792.
Now that we are starting to link this pages from the landing page's
top navigation, it makes sense to have proper backlinks to the
homepage so that there is some continuity when the user clicks on
a link that takes them to a ReadTheDocs page from the main website.
This commit first moves the compose.validate() function out
with the functions that are needed by it. Then one by one
checked for which function is now not needed in compose.js.
This moves all validation related functions out of "compose.js"
to "compose_validate.js".
Splitting compose announce variables out of compose.js.
This commit moves the "user_acknowledged_all_everyone" and
"user_acknowledged_announce" out of compose.js to reduce
cyclic dependency of compose_validate on compose.js.
Moving wildcard mentions to compose_validate.
The wildcard mention settings are mostly used while validating.
Also to reduce the cyclic dependence of compose in
compose_validate, the related wildcard mentions are moved out to
compose_vaidate.js.
This also converts reset_acknowledged functions to set values
by passing values.
Mypy can’t follow absolute imports based on directories other than the
root. This was hiding some type errors due to ignore_missing_imports.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This is consistent with how we handle JsonableError and friends; it
doesn't make sense for translators to spend time on strings only
visible in a development environment.
Even though this looks like an independently runnable script, it
should not be run independently: a SHA-256 mismatch will fail to stop
the script, unless it was sourced from another script that has ‘set
-e’.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This commits ports the `keyboard_shortcuts.html` file from
using the Django template to handlebars, essentially creating
a new file as `keyboard_shortcuts.hbs` within /static/templates
which is then rendered using info_overlays.js.
Fixes part of #18792.
We create a new widget edit_fields_modal such that this common
framework can be used in bot-edit modal, linkifier-edit modal
and user-edit modal, which have very similar implementations.
The "edit-fields-modal-status" is used only for edit-linkifier
modal and remains empty for others, so this change does not
cause problems with other modals.
We had a lot of functions and click handlers that were only
involved with user profile modal and were not related to
popovers logic in any way. So we extract these functions
into a separate module `user_profile.js`.
We turn off the eslint no-use-before-define for TypeScript files
because it does not work correctly for types. There is already
a typescript-eslint version of it that is enabled for TS.
We also update the error handler on window to use instanceof check
for ErrorEvent instead of checking the error property.
The plan for type annotating the page_params is to set it to
Record<string, unknown> for now and then annotate individual
properties on it as we use it in typescript modules.
We add a exclude pattern that makes sure we don't catch two edge
cases: a variable declaration `const style =` and setting a
variable ending in style such as `require_cmd_style =`. We don't add
and exclude pattern for let declaration because it will catch lines
that modify it later in the code.
(Removed other files from exclude list that no longer needed to be
excluded from this lint rule.)
Moved `subscription_invites_warning` modal to `confirm_dialog`
folder and renamed the modal to `confirm_subscription_invites_warning.hbs`
to follow the naming convention.
Generally, we never want to recommend sudo for an operation that can
be done as a non-root user, and it's normal to configure Docker to be
usable by normal users.
We currently have created a copy of the
`clean_unused_caches.main` function in
`provision_inner.py` to clean the unused caches. But as
we have now converted the script into a python file we
can directly call that function.
This commit replaces that function (introduced in adc0ed4206) with
`clean_unused_caches.main`.
We split recent_topics module into recent_topics_(ui + data + util).
This allows us to reduce cyclical dependencies which were
created due to large list of imports in recent topics. Also, this
refactor on its own makes sense.
It's sufficiently tiny that the shared code benefits don't justify the
cost, given that we plan to move index.html to a different templating
system soon.
The current linter disallowed the pattern
where multiple refs were present without
an additional parameter in allOf, which should
be valid.
Fixed the condition to allow the change.
It appears that some server-side change to Transifex resulted in the
"onlytranslated" mode deleting some (all?) strings from django.po files that
were not translated.
Testing determined that the "translator" mode appears to now be the
only mode that works with both our django.po and translations.json
files (We want to avoid both copying the English strings and deleting
strings), so we're switching to that.
Background is available here:
https://chat.zulip.org/#narrow/stream/3-backend/topic/4.2Ex.20branch.20translations.20sync/near/1187324
Using puppet modules from the puppet forge judiciously will allow us
to simplify the configuration somewhat; this specifically pulls in the
stdlib module, which we were already using parts of.
We now organize the pygment language codes into meaningful categories
- default, custom and aliases.
Further the `lang.json` list now contains a dataset extracted from the
"language" section of https://insights.stackoverflow.com/survey/2020
and is prioritized based on current language trends.
We failed to update this fork for the Django 3.2 upgrade. Unfork it
so that’s not something we need to remember to do.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
This ensures that we exercise the fact that the Zulip installer may be
unpacked to a directory that may not be world-readable.
bc45525369 fixed a recent regression in
this behavior that would have been caught by this commit.
We record Git details about the merge-base with upstream branches in
the zulip-git-version file, if the upstream repository is available.
Note that the first Git upgrade after merging the parent commit will
not include the merge-base details, since the upstream repository will
not have been available.
Co-authored-by: Tim Abbott <tabbott@zulip.com>
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
New bot avatars are generated with this tool. Having the avatars generated,
we can run generate-integration-docs-screenshot to generate the doc
screenshots.
Fixes: #17792
Non-webhook integrations should have fixtures containing mock messages
in json format with fields "subject" and "body" indicating the topic
and content respectively.
Thumbor and tc-aws have been dragging their feet on Python 3 support
for years, and even the alphas and unofficial forks we’ve been running
don’t seem to be maintained anymore. Depending on these projects is
no longer viable for us.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Currently users that try to deploy Zulip through docker has errors
because LDAP group search configuration can't be automated.
Reverts a hunk of f5197518a9.
The design of the form is similar to the linkifiers page
and is styled similarly.
The introduction text for "Code playgrounds" is improved
with more details and examples.
Also, we can remove the hardcoded playground and the fix
we had previously done to prevent breaking the hardcoded
playground.
The `en_US.UTF-8` locale may not be configured or generated on all
installs; it also requires that the `locales` package be installed.
If users generate the `en_US.UTF-8` locale without adding it to the
permanent set of system locales, the generated `en_US.UTF-8` stops
working when the `locales` package is updated.
Switch to using `C.UTF-8` in all cases, which is guaranteed to be
installed.
Fixes#15819.
This is a straightforward upgrade in terms of changes needed.
Necessary changes were:
- Set `DEFAULT_AUTO_FIELD`
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/3.2/releases/3.2/#customizing-type-of-auto-created-primary-keys
- `The default_app_config application configuration variable is deprecated, due
to the now automatic AppConfig discovery.`
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/3.2/releases/3.2/#automatic-appconfig-discovery
To handle this one, we can remove default_app_config from
zerver/__init__.py because it satisfies what release notes describe in
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/3.2/releases/3.2/#automatic-appconfig-discovery:
"Most pluggable applications define an AppConfig subclass in an apps.py
submodule. Many define a default_app_config variable pointing to this
class in their __init__.py. When the apps.py submodule exists and
defines a single AppConfig subclass, Django now uses that configuration
automatically, so you can remove default_app_config."
An important note is that rebuild-test-database needs to be run after
this upgrade in dev environment - if tests are run with test db that was
built on the previous version, they will fail due to a mysterious bug
(?), where changing attributes of a user and .save()ing after logging in
in the test via self.login_user, causes getting logged out - the next
requests via self.client_get etc. are unauthed for some reason,
unless self.login_user is called again. This behavior is no longer
exhibited upon rebuilding the test db - and I can't reproduce it in
production or dev db. So this can likely be reasonably dismissed as some
quirk of the test client system that won't be relevant in the future and
doesn't impact production.
Currently only enabled in development, since the exact details don't
seem right..
Co-Author-By: Signior-X <b19188@students.iitmandi.ac.in>
Co-Author-By: Aman Agrawal <amanagr@zulip.com>
Implements UI for #8005.
This is a feature of GNU readlink that isn't in the BSD readlink
found on macOS.
For using this and other GNU coreutils features in our scripts in
general, we could use a solution like mobile's tools/lib/ensure-coreutils.sh
to get GNU coreutils on the PATH -- check if it's there already,
if not then try to find a Homebrew install of it and use that, if not
then print a helpful message.
But even then there'd be a bootstrapping problem of how to find
ensure-coreutils.sh . That involves exactly the same problem as we
have for finding git-tools.sh in these lines. So in fact in mobile
for the task of finding ensure-coreutils.sh in the first place, we
do without `readlink -f` anyway.
The one consequence of this behavior-wise is that if you make a
symlink somewhere that points directly at that script (say in your
`~/bin/`), and try to run it using that symlink, it won't work.
(It'll still work just fine if there are symlinks somewhere higher
up in the paths involved -- just not for the script itself.)
An ideal CLI program really should support that, I think, but
lacking a better idea, this seems an acceptable compromise.
Currently the tools/build-docs was slow
because the clean option was rebulding everything.
But this is only required if one wants the left
sidebar to update.
So now set the default to exclude clean and
add clean option only if --clean is passed.
Also a warning is displayed if clean option is
not passed that the left sidebar won't update.
Fixes#17961.
Change the script to python. This is done
for the following reasons.
* It enables us to use the sanity_check.
* Later when we add warning to include
--clean flag we can use the pre-existing
WARNING from zulip_tools rather than using
terminal color codes.
TODO: Currently this script is slow as the
clean option is expensive so instead use only
html by default and clean only if --clean
option is passed.
Part of #17961.
Fixes#17795
In PR #17014, we added support for deactivate-own-user.
And while doing so, we first deactivated the client and
then reactivated it. But this implementation is a bit
hacky.
So, to fix this, we're now deactivating a test_user so that
we don't have to reactivate it. We did so by changing the value
of authentication_line.
As we want to keep endpoint code out of the
“test_curl_examples”, we changed the value of
authentication_line in `curl_param_value_generators.py`.
To work this out, we create a new global variable named
AUTHENTICATION_LINE in “curl_param_value_generators.py”
and change its value in function “deactivate_own_user” and
to use this change in “test_curl_examples,” we import
AUTHENTICATION_LINE.
AUTHENTICATION_LINE is of list data type because we want a
pointer to original mutable object so that changes made during
run time show across the module. Another way to do this is to change
the way we import variable, but that will be inconsistent to
the way we had in all other files.
To remove confusion between AUTHENTICATION_LINE and
authentication_line we renamed authentication_line
to default_authentication_line.
3f4d0f72fd adjusted the types in
preparation for extending the functionality, but only in later commits
that are not merged yet did it make these updates to the types.
In general, `./scripts/restart-server` will already work in any
circumstance where the server is already stopped and needs to be
started. However, it will output a couple minor warnings, and it is
not readily obvious that it *will* work correctly.
Add an alias for `restart-server` named `start-server`, for
parallelism with `stop-server`, which omits the steps of
`restart-server` which would stop the server first.
Using `supervisorctl stop all` to stop the server is not terribly
discoverable, and may stop services which are not part of Zulip
proper.
Add an explicit tool which only stops the relevant services. It also
more carefully controls the order in which services are stopped to
minimize lost requests, and maximally quiesce the server.
Locations which may be stopping _older_ versions of Zulip (without
this script) are left with using `supervisorctl stop all`.
Fixes#14959.
This reverses the policy that was set, but incompletely enforced, by
commit 951514dd7d. The self-closing tag
syntax is clearer, more consistent, simpler to parse, compatible with
XML, preferred by Prettier, and (most importantly now) required by
FormatJS.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Adds a setting UI to list all configured playgrounds
in a realm. The filter functionality can be used to
search playgrounds by its name or language.
Default sort is provided on the 'pygments_language'
field.
Front tests added to maintain server_event_dispatch
coverage. The `settings_playgrounds.js` file is added
to coverage exclusion list since it is majorly UI
based and will be tested using puppeteer tests (in
following commits).
To prevent breaking of the hardcoded playgrounds, we resort
to checking if realm_playgrounds is empty and falling back
to the hard-coded list if so. This logic is removed in the
followup commit which introduces the UI to add a playground.
I have added support for generating integration screenshots remotely by
adding a `realm_uri` parameter to `tools/message-screenshot.js` which we
then pass `realm.uri` to from within
`tools/generate-integration-docs-screenshot`.
I have made `tools/setup/optimize-svg` do the SVG optimization
automatically rather than just telling you the command to run if they
need optimizing. This included adding a `--check` parameter to use in
CI to only check as we previously did rather than actually running the
optimization.
I have also made `tools/setup/optimize-svg` execute
`tools/setup/generate_integration_bots_avatars.py` once it has run the
optimization to ensure it is always ran.
This makes it one less command to run when creating an integration,
but also means that we catch instances where a PNG has just been
copied into the `static/images/integrations/bot_avatars` folder as the
only instance where this won't be run is if `optimize-svg` has not
been run which would be caught in CI.
Fixes#18183. Fixes#18184.