Manual deployment steps: The same Nginx reload as for "Get rid of the
static-access-control mechanism". If deploying both commits at once,
just do it once.
(imported from commit dd8dbbf14b95fce0a4b6f66f462fa0a6b50bfb8c)
We will minify our code, rather than trying to restrict who can see the
un-minified code. Removing access control first simplifies things.
Manual deployment steps:
scp servers/puppet/files/nginx/humbug-include/app root@staging.humbughq.com:/etc/nginx/humbug-include/
ssh root@staging.humbughq.com service nginx reload
and then the same for app.humbughq.com once deployed to prod.
(imported from commit 63788aa3fa7ba5fd97fcf85b05760abb5e7cae4b)
Previously, our database was cleared between tests but the cache wasn't,
so old database data would end up in the cache and cause unit test
failures. This replaces our cache with a dummy that doesn't actually
cache any data. In the future, if we decide that our tests require an
actual cache, we can return to LocMemCache and simply empty the cache in
the tearDown method of our tests.
(imported from commit 9f4603789a225673a8394614416f201919710261)
Django doesn't use this setting, but South consults it when
inspecting tables for their constraints. The fact that we store our
tables in the 'humbug' schema was causing South to fail to find our
table constraints (it was looking in the 'public' schema) and
therefore throw an exception when we try to remove the unique
constraint in migration 0002.
(imported from commit 4230338a7b78329a759339b2f9fcd277137b7f32)
This was to support get_updates sharding, which we never fully
implemented. We can recommit this change later if we choose to bring
the feature back.
This reverts commit fda2d99d9e9a07951d11fcd9fc61cf229988f471.
(imported from commit aec8203c8d8a94dd6f30089aeee22814d1595fc5)
As a side-effect of customizing the e-mail, this also makes the host
on which the error happened a part of the subject line.
(imported from commit 7d5e9ad108b48fd34528512c5955567119935d4e)
We need this so that we can safely expunge old events without interfering with
the running server. See #414.
(imported from commit 4739e59e36ea69f877c158c13ee752bf6a2dacfe)
Before this is deployed, we need to install rabbitmq and pika on the
target server (see the puppet part of this commit for how).
When this is deployed, we need to start the new user activity bot:
./manage.py process_user_activity
in the screen session on the relevant server, or user_activity logs
won't be processed (which will eventually result in all users getting
notifications about how their mirrors are out of date).
(imported from commit 44d605aca0290bef2c94fb99267e15e26b21673b)
This commit has the effect of eliminating all of the non-UserActivity
database queries from the Tornado process -- at least in the uncached
case.
This is safe to do, if a bit fragile, since our Tornado code only
accesses these objects (as opposed to their IDs) in a few places that
are all fine with old data, and I don't expect us to add any new ones
soon:
* UserActivity logging, which I plan to move out of Tornado entirely
* Checking whether we're authenticated in our decorators (which could
be simplified -- the actual security check is just whether the
Django session object has a particular field)
* Checking the user realm for whether we should sync to the client
notices about their Zephyr mirror being up to date, which is quite
static and I think we can move out of this code path.
But implementation constraints around mapping the user_ids to
user_profile_ids mean that it makes sense to get the actual objects
for now.
This code is not what I want to do long-term. I expect we'll be able
to clean up the dual User/UserProfile nonsense once we integrate the
upcoming Django 1.5 release, with its support for pluggable User
models, and after that I change, I expect it'll be fairly easy to make
the Tornado code only work with the user ID, not the actual objects.
(imported from commit 82e25b62fd0e3af7c86040600c63a4deec7bec06)
Previously it wouldn't work due to using the wrong port numbers.
This commit also has the side effect of fixing the fact that our
frontend tests would send real emails and log events to the real
message log.
(imported from commit f2cf400e6061c089627acba2759d588981ecf5bb)
CasperJS can't handle them; window.webkitNotifications.requestPermission()
throws a type error. We can revisit this when we want to write tests for the
notification code.
(imported from commit 90f4d6ac3ddb387e74051b9af2c230698fa94479)
This was done using instructions provided by the South authors:
<http://south.readthedocs.org/en/0.7.6/convertinganapp.html>
This adds a dependency on python-django-south >=0.7.5. Now when you are
reinitializing the database, you need to run "./manage.py migrate --all"
before running populate_db.
When deploying this commit onto existing servers, you need to run these
commands manually:
./manage.py syncdb
./manage.py migrate zephyr 0001 --fake
./manage.py migrate confirmation 0001 --fake
These do *not* need to be run on new databases, only on existing ones.
(imported from commit f24cff421a6be9ab9cf4c4342565c484ac336e2d)
This view lives at /accounts/accept_terms, and (after getting an acceptance
from the user) sends an email to all@ documenting the acceptance.
(imported from commit 8f64286ab02887fd6544fa274b2967f6499b6dbc)
This fixes a problem where if you were 1) running in development
mode, 2) had populated the database from production data, and 3)
tried to log in with an account that had changed its password, you
wouldn't be able to. The problem was that the password change
created a password change record with a PBKDF2 hash, not a SHA1 hash.
This change lets the dev server accept PBKDF2 hashed passwords, but
still use SHA1 password hashes for creating test users for speed.
(imported from commit 2840d266f93add1edbba7f93a7f1491372fc8cf1)
This is an interim strategy for user education that'll be a stopgap
until we build something in the app itself.
(imported from commit 9022d4ceffca98e127f7045f73c012857fe6fc54)
Per Django docs, these are used to set an alias for use by reverse(). We
mostly don't use these, and they clutter up the file. We do use
reverse('send_confirm') so it stays.
(imported from commit 7789e588e187fae71638bd77a553801c48fa8818)
Previously if you hit /accounts/logout with no ?next=... parameter, you would
see a broken version of index.html missing dynamic content.
(imported from commit d9bca92d1c3c82893524ba69b132d59c48aa34c9)
External people won't be able to register unless we initiate the action
and send them an email, because the confirmation token generation code
is in the still-protected accounts_home view.
(imported from commit 8985257576d3dff5b0cad9d4b0ae213f18528865)
If we have other pages that require login, we might want them to redirect to
the login form. But the root of the site should take you to /accounts/home --
but only after we launch the product.
(imported from commit b5d10e1c908f1ffe1ee68c2689691ca66c896786)
This new call only allows fetching of existing messages. The idea is
to remove this functionality from get_updates to simplify the backend
code.
(imported from commit 1345db2f1707e208e7c0bd08b7d444932c68b6a2)
The client may now optionally send its current pointer during
get_updates and the server will return the latest pointer if it
differs and was updated more recently by a different session.
(imported from commit e43b377d7dfb52f83cefb0b1003863d5407caf80)
Mobile clients need it.
We are going to need to sit down and think about how much power we
want to give our API users, though. For example, should they even get
to know about your absolute pointer value (maybe they should only be
able to make requests relative to your pointer), or be able to request
very old ranges of messages?
(imported from commit 1680655f0d9a670bc0da0ddb92fbbd5cf851d3dd)
Without this change, one can only create a few users per second(!),
which really puts a damper on quickly importing old messages.
(imported from commit 26daf61b57154daa067db3daf8254c12d23da353)
This makes it easier for mobile clients to use the API by enabling them to
present the user with a familiar username / password prompt, rather than
by asking them for their API key.
(imported from commit 6ed06cfe86f87e7aef54a4be7835fb7bf8d7f209)
The key property is that we never reveal the non-public directory name
4nrjx8cwce2bka8r to a not-logged-in user. This makes it less likely that
random people from the Internet will download all our client code while we're
still in private beta.
(imported from commit 7428e847e0a1a34152cb6dc2b677c1b47290c202)
Previously if you tried to send to "a b", we actually ended up trying
to send to "a%20b", since we were url-encoding the stream name and
then not properly decoding it.
(imported from commit 307d2999bd309e47fc654ae4422ab4372edde064)
This broke the test suite, which expects all settings to exist in this file. Whoops.
This reverts commit e4108333c53afb0caf55348837b739cb7e5510dd.
(imported from commit e6b58004059e834d4e30ea9c63463eb84179cc1e)
We add a few templates for django-confirmation. We define a
"PreregistrationForm" which is validated by accounts_home, which then
generates a confirmation object and emails the user. This required creating
a new table for a PreregistrationUser with an email and status (confirmed)
field.
The register function now no longer accepts a "email" field in the form
and deals only with confirmation IDs to determine the email used to sign
up a user.
(imported from commit 4fcde04530aa7ad4de84579668daee7290b424ac)
Put all the 'API'-ish URLs in the /json/ namespace so that
/subscriptions and /subscriptions/add, etc. can be real
user-facing URLs if we want them to be.
(imported from commit 1455a32d27e44547ab1874b6289243cb40c85dde)
Now that 'manage_subscriptions' only removes subscriptions,
let's name it that. Also, since both functions now only
act on one subscription at a time, use them in the singular.
(imported from commit 52cfc7b36eb1533da7aec1bc3a6e460151a56da8)