static/ serves static files which get copied around per deploy. Since
the webpack stats files need a consistent name and change per deploy,
they can't live in static/.
This fixes a bug that preventing downgrading a Zulip server to an old
version.
I pushed a bunch of commits that attempted to introduce
the concept of `client_message_id` into our server, as
part of cleaning up our codepaths related to messages you
sent (both for the locally echoed case and for the host
case).
When we deployed this, we had some strange failures involving
double-echoed messages and issues advancing the pointer that appeared
related to #5779. We didn't get to the bottom of exactly why the PR
caused havoc, but I decided there was a cleaner approach, anyway.
This is mostly straightforward moving of code out of compose.js.
The code that was moved currently supports sending time
reports for sent messages, but we intend to grow out the new
module to track more state about sent messages.
The following function names in this commit are new, but their
code was basically pulled over verbatim:
process_success (was process_send_time)
set_timer_for_restarting_event_loop
clear
initialize
All the code in the new module is covered by previous tests that
had been written for compose.js. This commit only modifies
a few things to keep those tests.
The new module has 100% node coverage, so we updated `enforce_fully_covered`.
Prior to this commit, 7 megabytes of images (through 253 individual requests)
were heavily slowing down the initial load. With this commit, we load only the
logos (60 or so images).
Documentation and images for the individual integration sub-pages is requested
separately using the /integrations/doc/ endpoint, which returns HTML.
This redesigns the /help/ page sets to be a single page app that uses
history.pushState to work the same as the old app.
The big new feature is that now we have the index in a nicely designed
left sidebar.
Django 1.11 adds the ability to pass context processors in Jinja2
backend. Django also sends template_rendered signal in tests.
These two issues were the reason why we added Jinja2 backend, but
after upgrading to Django 1.11 we can remove it.
We still need jinja2/__init__.py, which modifies the environment,
and jinja2/compressors.py, which adds minify_js compressor.
Django started supporting context processors from version 1.11; as
a result of this, we can get rid of some of the code which is now
being taken care of by Django.
This system hasn't been in active use for several years, and had some
problems with it's design. So it makes sense to just remove it to declutter
the codebase.
Fixes#5655.
This commit removes the ability to configure different validity durations
for different types of confirmation links. I don't think the extra
configurability was worth the extra complexity, either for the user trying
to understand the settings, or for the developer trying to understand the
code.
The commit replaces all confirmation validity duration settings with a
single setting, settings.EMAIL_CONFIRMATION_DAYS.
The only setting it removes is settings.EMAIL_CHANGE_CONFIRMATION_DAYS,
which was introduced in 5bf83f9 and never advertised in prod_settings.py.
This will allow for customized senders for emails, e.g. 'Zulip Digest' for
digest emails and 'Zulip Missed Messages' for missed message emails.
Also:
* Converts the sender name to always be "Zulip", if the from_email used to
be settings.NOREPLY_EMAIL_ADDRESS or settings.ZULIP_ADMINISTRATOR.
* Changes the default value of settings.NOREPLY_EMAIL_ADDRESS in the
prod_setting_template to no longer have a display name. The only use of
that display name was in the email pathway.
This old third party library added support
for a "mousewheel" event to detect scrolling.
However, it is not compatible with jQuery 3
and is obsolete now that there is a standard
"wheel" event that accomplishes the same thing.
Guardian adds functionality on top of Django auth system to set
per object permissions. Its problem is that it is has poor performance.
So we decided to remove it in release 1.4.0, but we still kept the
option to revert back to an older version which used Guardian.
See commit 49799440a4 for more details.
This commit is the final piece in the string of commits which move
us towards completely removing guardian from our codebase. The way
we do it as follows:
If you are upgrading from a version <= 1.3.10, you first need to
upgrade to 1.4.x (we recommend 1.4.2). The reason is that we
deprecated Guardian in this version. Once you have upgraded to
1.4.x we can be sure that your Zulip installation doesn't depend
on Guardian and all the data has been successfully migrated away from
Guardian. The second step is to upgrade to latest release which will
not include any reference to Guardian in the codebase. After this
commit migrating directly to the latest release will not work because
in that case Guardian data will not migrate.
The backward incompatible change that this introduces is that
we have squashed all the migrations till version 1.4.0. This was
necessary to remove Guardian because it was needed by the reverse
migration. These migrations were from 0001 to 0028.
Fixes#5420
This isn't very slick, but it should get the main points down,
and it's past time we got something like this up. Definitely
needs in the future another pass at the text, and also some images
(screenshots, etc.) and styling.
This makes our `zproject.jinja2.backend.Template` compatible with
Jinja2. After this change we don't need to override __init__ function
in Template class.
The only reason we now need to create our own Template class is that
we need to send template_rendered signals.
We need our own Jinja2 class because we need to maintain backward
compatibility with Django 1.10 and we need inject `debug` parameter.
- Remove `perfect-scrollbar` from `static/third` and fetch it from npm.
- Upgrade `perfect-scrollbar` to 0.7.1.
- Bump up the `PROVISION_VERSION` to 5.6.
Changed `wheelSpeed` in "static/js/scroll_bar.js" to 0.5, because when it
20, the scrollbar scrolls very fast.
Changed 'wheelSpeed' in "static/js/emoji_picker.js" from 25 to 0.68
(based on tabbott's testing of scrolling through the emoji list).
Part of #1709.