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)
If authoritative data is available from say the LDAP database, we now
ignore the POSTed user name, and don't offer it as a form field.
We fall back to giving the user a text field if they aren't in LDAP.
If users do not have any form fields to fill out, we simply bring them
to the app without the registration page, logging them in using a dummy
backend.
(imported from commit 6bee87430ba46ff753ea3408251e8a80c45c713f)
The latter doesn't depend on the former; we can still fill in your full
name even if you didn't authenticate via LDAP.
This commit requires django_auth_ldap to be installed. On Debian
systems, you can do so via APT:
sudo apt-get install python-django-auth-ldap
On OS X, use your favourite package manager. For pip, I believe this
will work:
pip install django_auth_ldap
django_auth_ldap depends on the "ldap" Python package, which should be
installed automatically on your system.
(imported from commit 43967754285990b06b5a920abe95b8bce44e2053)
This fixes a small memory leak in our queue workers, where we don't
reset the accumulated times contained in our query logging data.
Longer-term, we may want to make something mergable for mainline where
we only store on the connection object the totals; that would be a
fixed amount of emmory per connection and thus not have this problem.
(imported from commit 914fa13acfb576f73c5f35e0f64c2f4d8a56b111)
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)
This should address user reports of huge bankruptcy counts even when
they are relatively caught up. The root issue is that we sometimes
don't mark messages as read for some reason.
(imported from commit 8799305a8665f9ee239575e6e95f603f89c1d427)
This reverts commit 1147814b22fb9737a807057ddbdbe0e9554086e0.
This seems to with some probability screw up our Zephyr mirroring
script.
(imported from commit 4f82452f1b0ca98e6b895db020e071d2daa325e4)
This requires a puppet apply on each of staging and prod0 to update
the nginx configuration to support the new URL when it is deployed.
(imported from commit a35a71a563fd1daca0d3ea4ec6874c5719a8564f)
Client objects are immutable and there are very few of them, so caching them in
memory is cheap and saves a trip to memcached.
(imported from commit 300b9b402f4e509f86a7fd86b5f898dc3f43738f)
UserProfile.show_admin was intended to be a check for users that have
administrative rights in other realms, which we've harmlessly but
erroneously been using to check if they are an admin in their realm.
Use the more straightforward check instead, with a more intuitive
name.
(imported from commit d81050c7dbbb19e59c5e31750be303a4630e1456)
There will be browser errors on staging when this is deployed due to the socket
protocol changing.
(imported from commit f1eda5b5c2ec9c60c23b3ca96277a61debadf5bb)
I believe there may also be others. I'm still not sure why clients would be
sending open requests without session or csrf values in their cookies, though.
(imported from commit 7e9660c1c4d5c2abf55ff21b433ba0117180eb82)
Previously, we counted not just the time required to process a
particular request, but also the time required to import+find the view
function via urls.py. The latter is usually fast, but when a new
Django thread starts up, it can take significant time, resulting in us
flagging slow requests on each server restart and also when a new
Django thread starts up on prod to handle requests.
This change means that we no longer include that startup time as part
of request processing time -- but we still log it in the case that it
was more than 5ms, so that we can identify why a particular request
was slower than expected if high startup times become a problem. We
annotate the time in log lines as "+start" rather than just "start" to
make clear that it's not counted in the total.
(imported from commit c677682e23b26005060390d85d386234f4f463ad)
This is useful for the occasional case where we cannot figure out what
is causing a particular problem, but it can be easily reproduced on
staging.
(imported from commit 8b51184a8b686814f2c6ff103ba355538463ceb0)
CUSTOMER13 doesn't want it, and there's currently no nginx config
or configurable Camo URI, so it wouldn't work if image preview
were enabled.
(imported from commit 615d4a32acbc4d4d590f88cf4e7d45d8f49db1d3)
This fixes a problem where the desktop app would attempt to load
https://zulip.akam.ai:8888/ after authenticating the user, which fails
with CSS issues.
We should probably, separately, change our Django-under-apache to only
serve the one URL that it needs and redirect the rest back to
Django-under-nginx.
(imported from commit 3e3251863618269790f61b371e88af57b6cfb272)
The problem here is that some error-related templates render without
the context managers that we specify, and so we want the handling of
"the context was not set" to default to the enterprise case (because
the enterprise version will work basically fine on !enterprise, but
the opposite is not true because the enterprise distribution doesn't
even have the templates for certain !enterprise pages that may be
linked to).
(imported from commit 7547311d87e048d33221587f44b82fe0ba320ca1)
This command should be run continuously via supervisor. It periodically
checks for new email messages to send, and then sends them. This is for
sending email that you've queued via the Email table, instead of mandrill
(as is the case for our localserver/development deploys).
(imported from commit a2295e97b70a54ba99d145d79333ec76b050b291)
ScheduledJobs with type Email displace the usual mandrill codepaths
in the Zulip Enterprise deploys
* Email-specific helper functions will appear in deliver_email.py
* 0058_auto__add_scheduledjob.py
(imported from commit 8db08d8a279600322acfdbed792dc1a676f7a0ab)
In particular, EXTERNAL_HOST doesn't specify the protocol, which gets
coerced to HTTPS.
(imported from commit 53f2e8106cf33114dcdd2ad17e09b41609641e71)
Errors are sent to a queue processor that posts them to staging,
just like the feedback bot.
(imported from commit 4a8d099672a1b3e48a8bc94148d8b53db73d2c64)
The !gravatar markdown no longer hard codes to Gravatar, but
instead it serves up our generic avatar URL.
(imported from commit 4e3e2baeb3374bcf025a18ff27a8452b975c22b7)
The /avatar/<email> URL redirects to the appropriate
avatar URL for an email, whether it's hosted by Gravatar
or Zulip. (This will work even for external users, as
it falls through to Gravatar.)
(imported from commit 7e6f226659cb2e5a7f6426da0be8aa9bae9cff14)
We also now separate out the times for the socket overhead, the
request service time, and the queuing delays.
(imported from commit e1683f7f28b968b86ebb701b0ac29b00ac6d67c3)
One quirk here is that the Request object is built in the
message_sender worker, not Tornado. This means that the request time
only counts time taken for the actual sending and does not account
for socket overhead. For this reason, I've left the fake logging in
for now so we can compare the two times.
(imported from commit b0c60a3017527a328cadf11ba68166e59cf23ddf)
If a user types "/me runs to the store", we put "runs to the store"
in bold after their name.
(imported from commit fbc11e99244e1c8fa1c03e4753e706957fcd449e)
The Freshdesk API is bonkers, but we do the best we can with it to
support notifications on ticket creation and ticket updates.
(imported from commit 2023622b274ef83f4e1544d0df286fe2e68581b3)
Add a method that lets us know what percentage of a huddle is
present. (We can use this later to set the opacity of huddles
in the UI.)
(imported from commit 8a2383951807d7bfbf9d730a8980d977cf23b379)
This logging is kinda excessive since it adds like 4 log lines per
recipient, so I expect we'll end up reverting it once we've debugged
the proximal issue.
(imported from commit 5e6ab3e230f32b65ad9cf0d95f20ffbc0fe7397e)
This will hopefully help with the send dialog being stuck on
"sending" as well as allowing us to not show errors to the user on
reconnect.
(imported from commit 31ee889853f348e486863073dc130cdfb4e1338d)
Clients can only have one connection at a time, anyway, so we can
just keep track of a client id, instead. This makes reconnections
easier.
It's a little funny to use queue ids for the client id, but we know
they should exist by the time the client is connecting and they are
guaranteed to already be unique and authenticatable. We will also
eventually be integrating the event system and the socket code closer
anyway.
(imported from commit 1f60e06fb16d31d6c121deafd493fb304d19a6c2)
This reverts commit c10d9c1a0d23891acce88bf8d79866c08cb75681.
This reverts commit 9259a246946cd968a8725c38ff5ef2d4b4793717.
(imported from commit 50e9e0136c2487cc63d75ae2b78df0c70a1b0be1)
This is the amount of time between when it is sent, and when it is
rendered into the user's home view.
(imported from commit 468c28e77ba16c7256c359e90ab5aacf9d497585)
The simulated people_dict in the activity.js test was not
matching the production code, and going forward, we'll want to
share the people_dict setup for all of our tests.
(imported from commit fc21a02216b9422130b9fe9c11bcf80590612844)
Activity.js now has the capability to track huddles that
come through in loaded messages and return them in reverse
chronological order by their most recent message. Right
now this only connected to a unit test, not any production
code.
(imported from commit 59957086fa2e454e5711472df091f178217aed2b)
The main Activity page counts users as active if they have either
sent a message or updated a pointer. In the unlikely event that
somebody sent a message but never updated their pointer, we were
undercounting them, if they went through send_messages_backend.
(imported from commit 5f112be87a239980c38a18c13f9cd68e90d2e905)
This should help with determining the prevalence of slow sends as
experienced by users.
(imported from commit f00797679315c928af3c87ad8fdf0112f1dfa900)
The "desktop" counts aggregate all desktop clients, but on the
Clients tab, we are only interested in specific versions.
(imported from commit eea2d8da584a6fa32fa1f3a2bae71ef5daaba738)